“What does this say?” Cattail Reeds held out a warm gold to him.
“Each color has a name. That one is,” he paused a moment to translate into Elvish. “Happily ever after.”
“Happily ever after.” Baby Duck echoed and took the chip from Cattail.
“But what kind of name is that?” Cattail protested. “It doesn’t tell you anything.”
Oilcan waved a hand at the large section of yellows. “We ran out of names and started to make up new ones.”
“I like this.” Merry held out a chip of pale buttery yellow. “What’s it called?”
He translated the name. “Pure joy.”
Merry did a little dance. “I love it.”
Cattail laughed dryly at Merry and drifted toward the reds.
Rustle of Leaves picked out a deep green called Paradise Valley and Barley chose a warm tan called honey oak. Oilcan found a rich brown called weathered oak for his bedroom and paired it with a cream.
“This one.” Cattail held out a strong purplish red called raspberry truffle. “And this one.” A warm dark gray called stardust. “And this one.” An off-white called mannequin cream. “And this.” A lighter gray called sandlot gray.
Oilcan laughed. He had no idea how she was going to use all four, but he trusted that she would figure it out. The four chips harmonized in his hand. “Okay.”
Cattail and Barley started into a debate on colors for the foyer. Oilcan deposited the chips with the paint mixer, ordering three five-gallon buckets of every color that the kids picked out. After the “family” bedrooms, they would need to paint the guest bedrooms too. It would cost over a thousand dollars in paint, but it would be another step closer to opening the enclave.
Paint ordered, he went in search of drop cloths, paint brushes, rollers, paint pans, and ladders. The tile section reached out and took hold of him as he pass through it, reminding him that he needed to start on the bathing room on the third floor. They were doing bathing out of the sinks. There was a marvelous iridescent glass tile of blues and purples that whispered to his soul. Of course it was hideously expensive, but it would be beautiful.
“He shapes stone with coarse hands, rough as rock, unyielding.
Builds a palace to capture light, a stolen gem, an artist’s restless eye.
She illuminates his silent walls and empty rooms, fills the lonely
Corners with impossible color, paints a secret language
Only he can read; every word fractures the jewel of his heart.”
He realized he was singing and laughed at the tune. It was the song about the quirky romance between Forge and Amaranth. The male had loved the painter Amaranth on first sight, but for some reason, didn’t think his love was returned. He hired her to paint the palace he’d built, and then to be sure the task would take as long as needed to win her heart, he’d added rooms and wings and outbuildings to it. The chorus was an urge to build faster, as Amaranth had nearly finished painting.
Oilcan tore himself away from the tile and moved on to the painting equipment. The bathing room would have to come later.
“
“Where did you find those?”
“Upstairs.”
Oilcan sighed. He was going to have to have a long talk about privacy with her. “I’ll see if they’re for sale.”
Arron Wollerton laughed as he explained the situation. “We’re about drowning in cats, so she can have them.”
They started with his room; his theory was that he liked to repaint often anyhow. It wasn’t so much he grew tired of the old color, but that he enjoyed trying new colors. If the children messed up painting his room, he would only have to live with it for a short time.
He taught them how to prep the room, taking covers off the light switches and electrical boxes. He showed them how to tape off the areas that were going to be painted later. He trained them on cutting in with brushes and rolling with rollers.
“Please, no painting each other,” he said as he stepped back to let them work.
“Why would we paint one another?” Merry asked as they all stared at him in confusion.
“I’m not sure.” He and Tinker had done it when they painted for the first time; he could no longer remember why. He was sure it made sense at the time. “Just don’t.”
They were neat and careful painters, if painfully slow. He’d never realized that living forever meant there was no rush to get work done quickly; apparently their whole lives, they’d been taught to do things right, however long it took. They kept stepping back and frowning at the coverage. For having paint brushes in their hands for the first time, they were doing a wonderful job. If they expected perfection, though, painting the entire building could take forever.
“Sometimes it takes two or three coats for complete coverage,” he cautioned them. “Just be as neat as you can and keep working. Trust that the end product will reflect the care you put into it.”
“