DeadManTyping
Really Really Experienced
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2016
- Posts
- 401
"You don't want to live this life ... It's long days and long nights."
Jason couldn't help but smile, thinking You've never run a farm, have you?
"You work to entertain people who would sometimes rather see you dead."
That, however, led to Jason simply listening on in silence. He'd never understood how one culture of people, in this case his own, could look so horribly upon another's, in this case Inga's, that they would wish to cause them such harm, including fatal harm. He could still remember reading the articles in the weekly newspaper about the war in Europe that had concluded less than a handful of years ago. The death and destruction that had resulted from hatred between so many different nations and cultures had been horrific ... and unbelievable to Jason.
"It's been this way my entire life."
The table went quiet for a long moment as they concentrated on the meal Jason had cooked. He tried to imagine the life Inga had lived. He couldn't. Oh, he could picture this and that and the other thing. But putting it all together into an actual way of living...? That was something he knew that only a Romani who had lived it could do.
Inga explained about her parents and Papa Don, as well as her commitment to him. Jason would never ask her to give that up, of course. He was quickly coming to realize that he only had three avenues with which to follow when it came to he and Inga: give up and now and tell her if was nice to have met her; try to bed her during her time here and then -- as with the other -- tell her it was nice to have met her; or establish a permanent Romani town in his field to give Inga and Papa Don -- oh, and the other gypsies -- the ability to remain here for as long they wished.
Inga broke his train of thought with her observation of his relationship with Jake. She was a very perceptive person, likely the reason she made such a good living telling futures, he knew.
"Yes," he said simply, unsure of what else to say. He asked if there was anything more she wanted -- meaning her breakfast -- and told her, "I have a pie Grace brought over yesterday. Peach."
He sat back in his chair and set his gaze upon Inga. He could sit here and stare at her all day ... and if she did nothing to prevent that from happening, he would happily do nothing more.