Victor took the trowel from her hand with as much blithe enthusiasm as ever. His noble born fingers held the thing more like a paintbrush than a tool, reminiscent of amusing but ultimately pointless art lessons about which he remembered very little. His memory was filled instead with the faces of those who had hoped to teach him, men and women that came and went as they tired of his capers. He was secretly happy to observe that she did not recoil like so many others did, but even so he would not relent.
He bent to the bucket to scoop up some mortar and, displaced from her shoulder, his other hand dropped on the small of her back. He spread the stuff crudely beside the last laid brick, fingers edging just beneath the leather ties of her apron. Then he realized that he was without a brick to lay, and with both hands retrieved one, set it, and pushed it in. With a good hard tap from the butt of the trowel, it looked almost like the one beside it.
“Ha,” Victor huffed, smiling. He propped an elbow up against her nearest shoulder. “Perfect.”
After spending a long moment to admire his work, Victor flipped his tool in his hand and began again. He insisted on their proximity if only out of habit, releasing his latest mentor only when he was forced to set the brick. He moved systematically through the rest of the row, inevitably bumping her every time he returned the the bucket, and was going perhaps too quickly by the end. There Victor rediscovered his boredom. Looking up, he ran his fingers over his sweating scalp. “When can we do the roof? The kid can do the rest of the wall; the roof seems like it’s more important.”
Parting from her, he returned the pile of beams and wood sheets in the one corner. He grabbed one and dragged it across the room until he stood beneath the hole in the ceiling. The clouds were a respectable shade of grey, not a promise but a threat. “Looks like rain.”
He bent to the bucket to scoop up some mortar and, displaced from her shoulder, his other hand dropped on the small of her back. He spread the stuff crudely beside the last laid brick, fingers edging just beneath the leather ties of her apron. Then he realized that he was without a brick to lay, and with both hands retrieved one, set it, and pushed it in. With a good hard tap from the butt of the trowel, it looked almost like the one beside it.
“Ha,” Victor huffed, smiling. He propped an elbow up against her nearest shoulder. “Perfect.”
After spending a long moment to admire his work, Victor flipped his tool in his hand and began again. He insisted on their proximity if only out of habit, releasing his latest mentor only when he was forced to set the brick. He moved systematically through the rest of the row, inevitably bumping her every time he returned the the bucket, and was going perhaps too quickly by the end. There Victor rediscovered his boredom. Looking up, he ran his fingers over his sweating scalp. “When can we do the roof? The kid can do the rest of the wall; the roof seems like it’s more important.”
Parting from her, he returned the pile of beams and wood sheets in the one corner. He grabbed one and dragged it across the room until he stood beneath the hole in the ceiling. The clouds were a respectable shade of grey, not a promise but a threat. “Looks like rain.”