She explained, as she passed him the coffee, “I just keep dreaming that I am a couch” His eyebrows lifted, a smirk played on his lips. Asked her if it was the couch they were sat on now, Crushed green velvet and endearingly hideous. She glowered, said She wished he’d take her seriously. “But your body writhes in curious convulsions, You fill the cottage with ear piercing screams- Can it be that bad, being a couch?”
She declared that he would not understand, Could not see what was worse than his dreams of combat; gunshot night terrors she’d never hear.
He insisted, “explain”. So she told of the aching void beyond her couch-body. How paralysed, she would flail vainly Cushions muffling her hungry screams of longing for oceanic adventures. He watched the sun through the sway of the trees, form a moving lattice upon her shoulders, Mused of his cravings for their living room from his bunk at sea.
She watched him, watching her, and knew, He’d never understand her couch-dreams. They sat in silence, holding their coffee, And accepted their anharmonic lives.