“I can’t see,” she says.
This startles me. “Can’t see what?” I turn on the light, hoping it will help.
There’s a long silence. “Anything.”
I look at the octopus. “What have you done?”
The octopus looks annoyed. “Have you noticed there’s an emerging pattern in this household? I’m always the first to be blamed.”
“What have you done!”
“To her?”
I’ve resisted doing this previously, but since Lily is in a state anyway, I swat the octopus. Hard. I immediately regret it, but Lily remains oblivious.
“Ow!” One of his arms reaches up to soothe the spot where I hit him. “I released my ink sac. Satisfied?”
“She can’t see!”
“That’s really the whole point of releasing an ink sac.” The octopus’s ability to stay calm in the face of my rage is one of the things I hate most about him.
“And you wonder why you get blamed.”
“Oh, hey, look at that. Yeah, I guess this one is on me.” I loathe his epiphanies.
I wish there was a way to punch him, really deck him square in the jaw, but there isn’t. Not without also risking further harm to Lily. So instead I kiss her on the neck, on the far side, away from the octopus.
“Get a room,” the octopus says.
I imagine grabbing that arm of his and wrapping it around his neck and choking the life right out of him, much as Princess Leia did to Jabba the Hutt, until his obnoxious tongue hangs limply in death. But I don’t. I set Lily down on the ground and continue to stroke her back in a way that calms both of us. After a moment or two she gathers some initiative and takes three steps forward straight into the wall.
“Whoa. Take it easy, Monkey.”
Lily backs up, adjusts her course, and takes another few steps, again into the wall, but this time a little closer to the kitchen door.
“Where’s my water?” Lily asks.
I grab her around the middle and gently guide her through the doorway into the kitchen toward the water. Before I can stop her, she walks into the side of her bowl and water sloshes over the edge and onto her feet.
“Found it,” she says, lifting her paws away from the puddle, then thirstily lapping at the remaining water in her bowl.
“Aren’t you supposed to leave now, octopus?”
“I don’t think so,” he says as Lily continues to drink. “Why?”
“Releasing your ink sac is what you do so that you can make your escape. It’s what you do to cloud the water to evade a predator.”
The octopus shakes his head, which throws Lily slightly off balance, but she recovers easily enough. “Oh, so suddenly between the two of us you’re the octopus expert?”
“Don’t kid yourself into thinking that the instant you fall asleep I’m not reading everything I can about your kind so I can find a way to kill you.” I probably shouldn’t have said that, played that hand in so obvious a fashion, but since Lily’s usually in my lap when I’m doing my research, I figure on some level he already knows.
Lily finishes drinking and takes a few steps toward her bed and I almost yell at the octopus don’t you walk away when I’m talking to you before remembering he’s only a passenger, and I want Lily to move around to help her orient herself. She knows where her bed is in relation to the water bowl, and she makes it there without incident.
“Well, I wouldn’t exactly call this thing a predator,” the octopus answers. He shakes his head in pity as Lily turns her usual three times before lying down.
“Why don’t you crawl down off her head and see how long you last against that thing.” This may be the only moment that I’m not horrified by Lily’s hunting instincts, her skill in eviscerating plush prey, her innate Germanity. If only she could grab the octopus by his squishy flesh and shake until his insides decorate his outsides.
“That’s okay. I’m fine where I am.” He smiles a crooked smile. Lily settles her chin over the side of the bed. It’s probably the best thing for her to do, sleep. But part of me wishes she was not giving in to the blinding. Part of me wishes she was charging, head down, at the walls of the kitchen full speed, that she would ram the octopus into submission, making him choke on his hubris.
“So if she’s not a predator, and you’re not scuttling away, why release your ink?”
The octopus rolls his eyes. “I thought you were the octopus expert.”
We glare at each other and I know neither of us is going to back down, just as he knows it, so I answer my own question. “Because sometimes you get bored.”
The octopus looks surprised, maybe even a little impressed, but he tries to mask that quickly. “Very good.”
“How long will the ink last? When will she be able to see?”
The octopus shrugs. I don’t know how he manages it, because an octopus doesn’t have shoulders, but that’s exactly what he does—he shrugs. “I don’t know.” He sounds genuinely baffled.