Where he hesitates, his twin is sure.
Their breath comes out in steaming puffs of desperate air, white, moist, and warm against the cold. They hold each other near by the hard knob of their elbows, panting together, and yet it seems to him a distance too far apart for what they are compelled to do.
His hair is a mess of tangling waves, curling and agitated by the steam of the waiting spring in the seething, roiling earth. The child eyes it uneasily, circumspect and favoring the shore. His brother watches him in turn: patient, knowing.
Stillness, inaction. It seems monumental, to peer through the hissing mists to the water below. But the cold bites at them, blistering their noses and cheeks and sensitive ears with uncompromising chill. In his hand, he fists a bundle of herbs; the last before winter claims what had not gone to ground. He senses a gentle urging of readiness in his brother, and he stares at his own white grip like an alien thing apart from him, red and pale and thin around the bone, skin marbled with a thousand minute lesions from the work of the land, from the life they have made together.
He opens his fist, flattens the plane of his palm, and throws them in to the stewing waters. And so does his brother mirror him, the bridge of their contact sliding as one to find the lace of waiting fingers. His brother upturns the crushed soaproot, sibilous and foaming as it strikes the tension of the water.
Both just stare down at the murky bath they have made of it, the bitter astringence of the soaproot curling the child’s toes in the ruined leather of his sodden boots.
He expects the gentle pull, his brother’s hand like a lead at the rein, and he lets himself be ushered forward, as proud and trusting of his brother’s assurance as he is still himself reticent and unsure.
But he is moved - he cannot help it - when his brother moves to help strip him of his clinging wet clothes, ravaged by the wild and half wild itself, repaired with reinforced plant fibers and patched with the skins of beasts he had never seen before. And he is shivering by the time they are done, teeth ground together to keep from chattering in his nakedness. But his brother holds him without words, sheltering him with the shield of his own body, though he feels so fragile, so impermanent and brittle beneath the desperate arch of his fingers. He works quickly, fingers fumbling in numbness despite the wards of warming to keep at bay the braying cold.
His brother pulls back, arms lifting in quiet obedience as his tunic is drawn over his boyish shoulders, and their eyes meet in understanding. In trust. His brother takes his hands again, gaze an enchanting blue calm, and the serene equanimity does not falter when he takes a careful step into the sludge of the spring.
The child feels the relief like a distant shadow - a creeping, golden warmth somewhere in a body not his own. He feels the heat spread through his toes, his legs, pooling around his navel, and it is such reprieve he aches for it all the more that he does not allow himself it.
His brother is half submerged already, hands still clasped together, beseeching and promising in only the devotions of their touch.
And the child trembles from the cold, biting him to his bone and knowing it hurts his brother, too - hurts him with the chill of it and hurts him in that he must watch. And if the child is to keep to any vow, it is that his brother should not know any more suffering, and want for nothing.
Although the waters, opaque and depthless, fill him with a churning uneasiness, he lets himself be guided down, but cannot help the hissing gasp of surprise at the sensation of hot water swallowing his feet, or the silty, mineral mud giving way between his toes. He squeezes his eyes shut and throws himself towards his brother, who expects this and holds him in fastness.
The child could squirm at the sensation of the disturbed water - so deep, spitting spray and froth. He feels overwhelmed by it, hating it around him, hating the mist prickling his face, hot and cold and altogether new all at once. His breath hitches from the moment of contact, and it burns his lungs and makes his arms tingle - but his brother breathes a sigh, and together they are of one breath. He exhales anxious air, worried wrinkles around the sweet ovals of his eyes smoothing to the fresh skin of a child.
He sighs again, and his brother nuzzles into his cheek, and he can forget the water lapping at his hips, his waist, his chest. He opens his eyes, and stares at love, and in being together there is no harm, nor force to fear. The child cups his hands, draws the water across his brother’s temple like a benediction.
And slowly, slowly, he unfolds like a lotus in spring of their tender restoration. As they bathe together in these rejuvenating waters, he grows bolder, and takes an adoring satisfaction in the ministrations to his brother, the sudsy mess of his dark curls and the fingers running through them. He ventures a cautious comfort, still hating the water yet loving the warmth, the gratitude, the joy.
His brother sinks low, eyes hooded and gleaming like a crocodile over the foamy water, and he utters a long and meaningful sigh.
And it bubbles.
And they stare.
The child’s eyes go wide, gawking and disbelieving. He has stilled, hair fanning out around him in black channels, writhing like streams - an ecosystem to himself. And his brother, careful, deliberate - sinks low to blow bubbles again.
And it is everything, everything. The child laughs and rushes to gather his brother into his arms, to kiss his perfect eyes and the perfect crown of his head. A gift, to be given this great and simple joy, this surprise and treasure.
And they remember, for a time, that they are children, and that in the smallest and sweetest parts of themselves they have not given up a love for play, and simple things, and they share in scales of shimmering laughter for a well-timed splash or the gulping pop of a bubble.














