Will loved winter.
He loved big coats, chilly fingers and the long, dark days. His home was always warm, though. Decorated in a minimalist style with scrubbed floors, leather sofas, striking art, everything was cream with hints of navy blue. When he'd moved in not too long ago, he'd had to make sacrifices. He'd shifted things around around so he could have a bigger, brighter kitchen. He didn't regret a thing. The rain was pelting against the windows, drowned out by the sounds of gentle, folksy-type music that drifted in on the aroma of baking cakes.
Will wasn't stupid. He knew there was a reason Arden was here. She didn't need one to visit but he was the only one out of their family who truly understood her special talent. He often thought it was more of a curse. Her visions caused her nothing but stress and upset. Her break up with Sindri, the foresight of her strange hippie blonde friend's engagement ending, he couldn't see them bringing her any type of joy. She was suffering and he didn't know how he could help her. Apart from tea and sympathy. He was very good at that.
"Good," he said brightly as he took the tray out of the oven and rested it on the side, wiping his hands on a stripy tea towel and took off his apron. It was nice to be cooking with Arden again. They used to do it a lot together as kids when she'd had a particularly awful "nightmare" as their father had called it. Gingerly, he picked up two still warm cupcakes and tipped them onto a plate, cursing as he burned his fingers.
He carried the cakes into the living room and sat on the arm of the sofa, holding the plate out towards her. "They're still too hot to decorate but give it twenty minutes and we can get cracking." Will was dressed casually in a pair of snug fitting jeans, woolly socks and a cream coloured fair isle jumper that their grandmother had knitted for him. His dark eyes blinked as he laughed, low and deep at Dave, his aging ginormous dog who was curled around Dash, as though the was still a puppy. "You can push him off if you want to," he said, nodding to the dog. "He's got a perfectly good bed, he just doesn't use it. He much prefers to sit on and crush people." He sighed fondly. Dave didn't do too well in puppy obedience classes. He looked at Arden for a long moment. "Everything okay?"