Jonathan Emerson had never been much of a smoker, not any more or less than any man of his generation had been coming up, even without the changing attitudes towards the health of the products.
But tonight, he felt like he'd like one.
He sits on the porch, the cabin quiet behind him. The long day of rearranging furniture and clearing out the second bedroom ached in his shoulders and knees, and he was thankful it was soon to be the height of summer. If his daughter had waited any longer the damp of fall and winter would have slowed him considerably. He might still have to ask her, and his older grandson, to help him lug the heavier boxes out when they get here.
He fills the briar-wood bowl of his pipe. A gift, for his last birthday. She had been mighty generous lately, and he had to wonder if she knew something he didn't.
She always did as a matter of course, but maybe it was something specific this time.
The night grows around him. Clouds skudding in from the water signaled there was going to be a hell of a storm in a day or so, if not sometime the next morning, but for now, they show him a rainbow of reds and golds and pinks and purples in the last of the day's light. The sun dies with a last gleam.
He can't say he expected the footsteps as they move up his drive, but he also can't say he's surprised.
...It's the eldest. As far as he can tell, anyway. Looked so, turned in their mid forties, at the earliest. The skin lays over the muscles and bones like glove, rouge and warm enough. The hair lightly tousled in a style that might fit someone a decade or so younger, the middle-aged trying to capture what it had only just lost. The smile is white, wide, and fits into the face like it could make no other expression.
Fits better than the suit, in any case. Alive for who-knows how long, and still can't be bothered to look into a good tailor?
Jonathan watches it as it comes out of the gloom like a shadow itself, detaching from the darkness under the trees that line the road up to the yard. The yellow of the shed's security light shines off the edge of the glasses like a pale copy of the sun long gone behind the hills.
For a moment, it stops at the arch of the fence, the entrance to the property. Above, the name Emerson sits burned into ceder wood and wreathed with old barbed wire, an both sides of an elk jaw.
It steps forward and crosses.
Jonathan takes another long puff of his pipe. The tobacco was also a gift, given at the same time. It burns as bright in his lungs as the embers in the bowl.
"She said you tended to birth smarter whelps than you could afford for yourself," he says.
It stops just short of the porch steps. The shined leather loafers dusty from what must have been the short, performative walk up the road.
The smile doesn't leave its face when it tips its head to him.
Jonathan tips his head as well.