25 May, 1888 — Oakshire Hall, Study
Under pressure
We're breaking
To say that Tiberius had been rattled by his wife's revelation a few days earlier would have been an understatement of the most dramatic kind; he was utterly shattered. He had built his entire life around the premise that he was not just different from the masses but also better; that sense of superiority was closely tied to his own sense of self-worth. A challenge to the idea, no matter what quarter it came from, left him more or less a man in crisis. Accordingly, he hadn't slept in the past five days — not more than a quick hour-long nap here or there, at any rate — and was pushing so hard to try and finish all of the preparations he needed to before beginning the next phase of the animagus study on the upcoming full moon.
It wasn't going to happen. He'd know that, really, from the moment that he'd looked up exactly when the next full moon was in his lunar almanac. Five days was not enough time to turn lazy, half-assed studying into an actual dedicated approach, no matter how little he slept, and he was very quickly approaching the full moon. Although it was full enough to affect lycanthropes for a full three days, it was only technically full for a much shorter period — less than one full night — and while nothing explicitly said the window was only open on the actual full moon, he didn't want to waste over a month on the off-chance that it might work if he was starting the process when the moon was almost full. He wanted to do this (now, anyway; he'd never taken a particular interest in it before his wife had humiliated him), but he wanted to do it right; he had no interest in ending up with a pair of goat legs or some hideous deformity or, worst of all, dead.
He watched the clock. There was no way he was going to finish, but he wouldn't let himself stop until he'd actually missed the moon. The minutes ticked by. The last wakefulness potion he'd taken was wearing off, and he could feel his mental capabilities starting to slip into sluggishness. He glanced at the clock again. It was over, now; the sun would be up in an hour. He'd need to drag himself about his bedroom after that, putting on fresh clothes and shaving, then report in to the Ministry — though he had abandoned all of his other tasking and projects in favor of continuing to prepare for the Animagus transformation there, as well. Another day — or really, another month. He couldn't move forward now until the next full moon. Exhausted, he closed his eyes, folded his arms across his desk, and laid his head down.
Merlin take her straight to hell, he thought angrily, and fell asleep.