Zivia "Cecilia" Birnbaum (
tehilim127_1) wrote in
ph_logs2024-05-19 10:44 pm
[OPEN] a beautiful day, don't let it get away
Who: Zivia (
tehilim127_1) & all comers (with prompts for Lev, Anzu, Ava, Dahlia, Tayrey, Degas)
What: Things resume after the flood
When: Late May and early June
Where: At work (Town Hall), at the beach, at the grocery, at an impasse
Warning(s): To be added as relevant
1. you love this town
Somehow -- magically? miraculously? Zivia feels like either of those could apply, and like neither is safe to use carelessly -- somehow the island and the town have been barely damaged by the floodwaters. Neither the plants nor the animals nor the works of human hands are any worse for wear than they might be after a heavy rain.
This does mean more work at Town Hall, as Zivia and Fever empty all the file drawers to make sure there's no water damage anywhere, and then have to put everything back. And simultaneously have to be available to answer any questions anyone has, though they agree to take turns being on call while all of that's going on. Maybe you'll show up with a question while it's Zivia's turn to address it? Or maybe, sometime during this month, you'll encounter Fever at Town Hall's booth at the job fair, and decide to follow up by inquiring within.
2. reach me, i know i'm not a hopeless case
One nice thing about living here, Zivia will readily admit, is being within walking distance of a beach.
She's out for a walk on the shoreline, some days after the end of the flood, feet bare in the sand and shoes tucked into a bag slung over her shoulder. As a wave recedes, a glint of silver catches her eye, and she breaks into a brief jog to get closer before the water comes in again.
Anyone who happens to be nearby at the time will see her drop into an unsteady crouch to pick it up, then press one hand over her mouth as though to keep from crying out in shock -- or maybe just to keep from crying.
3. see the bird with a leaf in her mouth
It is so good, after even that brief time spent scrounging things on board ship, to be able to walk into a shop and purchase things again. Whole wheat flour, honey, salt, oil, a form of yeast she isn't familiar with but is nonetheless confident she can figure out; dried spices, fresh herbs, a basket full of vegetables and fruit in season; a beautiful fillet of salmon, which she hurries home to stow in the icebox directly next to the ice. Milk, eggs, butter. A few bottles of wine, after some conversation with the shopkeeper not too dissimilar from the one she had with Dahlia on board the cursed ship.
She considers, briefly, giving Dahlia a bottle of wine in return, and discards that idea. Instead, Dahlia -- and a few other people around town who've been especially helpful in the last month or so, including Ava Starr, Arilanna Tayrey, Wilson Higgsbury, and Degas Clayton -- will receive a small loaf of home-baked braided bread by way of appreciation and thanks.
(Feel free to run into Zivia doing her grocery shopping, or to meet her delivering challah, whether to you or to someone else!)
4. after the flood all the colors came out (for Lev/Lyubov and Anzu)
One thing she can't buy anywhere here, she already knows, is kosher meat. Which leads to her picking up the sending stone to contact Anzu and Rov Morgenshtern, and asking if either of them knows how to perform shechita; the soaking and salting part she can do, she assures them, but she's never done that part.
And the thing is, she explains, she'd really like to be able to serve chicken if they would like to join her for Shabbos dinner, this or next Friday night.
5. it was a beautiful day
Wildcard!
What: Things resume after the flood
When: Late May and early June
Where: At work (Town Hall), at the beach, at the grocery, at an impasse
Warning(s): To be added as relevant
1. you love this town
Somehow -- magically? miraculously? Zivia feels like either of those could apply, and like neither is safe to use carelessly -- somehow the island and the town have been barely damaged by the floodwaters. Neither the plants nor the animals nor the works of human hands are any worse for wear than they might be after a heavy rain.
This does mean more work at Town Hall, as Zivia and Fever empty all the file drawers to make sure there's no water damage anywhere, and then have to put everything back. And simultaneously have to be available to answer any questions anyone has, though they agree to take turns being on call while all of that's going on. Maybe you'll show up with a question while it's Zivia's turn to address it? Or maybe, sometime during this month, you'll encounter Fever at Town Hall's booth at the job fair, and decide to follow up by inquiring within.
2. reach me, i know i'm not a hopeless case
One nice thing about living here, Zivia will readily admit, is being within walking distance of a beach.
She's out for a walk on the shoreline, some days after the end of the flood, feet bare in the sand and shoes tucked into a bag slung over her shoulder. As a wave recedes, a glint of silver catches her eye, and she breaks into a brief jog to get closer before the water comes in again.
Anyone who happens to be nearby at the time will see her drop into an unsteady crouch to pick it up, then press one hand over her mouth as though to keep from crying out in shock -- or maybe just to keep from crying.
3. see the bird with a leaf in her mouth
It is so good, after even that brief time spent scrounging things on board ship, to be able to walk into a shop and purchase things again. Whole wheat flour, honey, salt, oil, a form of yeast she isn't familiar with but is nonetheless confident she can figure out; dried spices, fresh herbs, a basket full of vegetables and fruit in season; a beautiful fillet of salmon, which she hurries home to stow in the icebox directly next to the ice. Milk, eggs, butter. A few bottles of wine, after some conversation with the shopkeeper not too dissimilar from the one she had with Dahlia on board the cursed ship.
She considers, briefly, giving Dahlia a bottle of wine in return, and discards that idea. Instead, Dahlia -- and a few other people around town who've been especially helpful in the last month or so, including Ava Starr, Arilanna Tayrey, Wilson Higgsbury, and Degas Clayton -- will receive a small loaf of home-baked braided bread by way of appreciation and thanks.
(Feel free to run into Zivia doing her grocery shopping, or to meet her delivering challah, whether to you or to someone else!)
4. after the flood all the colors came out (for Lev/Lyubov and Anzu)
One thing she can't buy anywhere here, she already knows, is kosher meat. Which leads to her picking up the sending stone to contact Anzu and Rov Morgenshtern, and asking if either of them knows how to perform shechita; the soaking and salting part she can do, she assures them, but she's never done that part.
And the thing is, she explains, she'd really like to be able to serve chicken if they would like to join her for Shabbos dinner, this or next Friday night.
5. it was a beautiful day
Wildcard!

See the bird...
"Would you care to come inside?"
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"I might insist on breaking out a jar of jam and sharing some of this with you. Or marmalade, if you prefer?"
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...there's something stagnant about the home. Not literal dust (though there's a decent amount of that too), but the decor suggests a woman's touch, as if Degas hasn't changed a single thing about his home since Melly died. Embroidery samplers on display, floral pillows on a loveseat in the living room. There are no covers on the mirrors, but this house still feels like one where shiva is being sat.
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Zivia doesn't comment on that, because what could she possibly say? Instead she says, possibly a little too brightly: "I don't know what's polite here. Do I sit down and wait for you to bring things out, or do I go with you to the kitchen to fetch things?"
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"Kitchen? Kitchen. We could just do eating there, perhaps. I don't know. I...don't entertain guests often. You're the third in about three years."
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It doesn't surprise her, somehow, to hear that he doesn't have guests often.
(Three years. How long did he say it was, since the barrier went up? Longer than that. And longer still, since the loss of his wife. It doesn't feel quite right to ask if there's any significance to three years, or if it was just random.)
"I like hosting guests, myself, but everyone's got different preferences on that. I've got one friend, I think he'd be perfectly happy if he never talked to anyone except over the internet."
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He leads her into the kitchen, which has the same impression as the foyer. The kettle has a floral motif. There's a vase sitting on the counter as if waiting for flowers to be put in it. He pulls out the butter and jam, setting them on the kitchen table, along with plates and butter knives.
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A pause, and a touch softer: "That's a pretty kettle."
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It all comes back to her. He doesn't know how to move on. Stuck, that's what it is. He's been stuck.
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Another pause. She could pivot this toward or away from talking about his late wife, and she doesn't know which would be better to do.
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"Could I use your sink for a moment?" she asks, as he sets down the last things. "We have a custom to wash the hands and say a blessing, before eating bread."
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There's a second murmured phrase as she sits down, and breaks off a corner of the loaf to take a bite.
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"You're a skilled baker. This is delicious. Is there a meaning to the braiding?"
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He's beginning to relax again, getting to show his curiosity.
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"So in our holy book, we have a story about how our God made the world. There's thousands of years of argument about how literally that story is meant, but the simplest form of it is: in six days he made the world, and on the seventh day he rested. And much later, he gave us a commandment to do the same thing -- to keep the seventh day holy for rest, and to not do any labor."
Glancing up toward him: with me so far?
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He's not very good at it!
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"Like, starting now, or when Angel fully takes on becoming a priest?"
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It's a matter he's not _actively_ panicking about.
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