21 March, 1894 — Greengrass Home, Bartonburg
Four days back from their honeymoon, and four days since Ford had had a proper conversation with his wife. He was not avoiding her, by any stretch of the imagination, and they had interacted regularly in the house whenever he was home, but there were always so many other people in the house that it was hard to consider the words they exchange here or there proper conversation. If there had been anything weighing heavily on her mind he doubted she would have felt comfortable bringing it up over the dinner table or in the parlor, and they had scarcely been in private since their return from the Sanditon. Not from lack of desire on his part (though he suspected she might think so). He'd gone to work Monday morning and so had his suitcase still to unpack Monday night, while she had presumably already handled it during the day — and he had to write letters to all the usual shops and things to get an accurate picture of their accounts around town, which wasn't a quick or painless task. By the time he'd finished and peeked his head out into the hallway he didn't see light under her door, so thought it best not to bother her. Tuesday night was primarily spent going through the returns from all the letters he'd sent out on Monday, tracking them all down in the ledger and fretting over the ones that came back higher than he'd expected. Adding in a week's worth of missed wages while he'd been off with Jemima it put things in a less favorable position than he might have hoped for, and he'd spent a good deal of time sketching out plans for how they might recover the difference in the short-term. By the time he'd finished that he didn't bother checking for her light, because if she wasn't already asleep it would have been a bad sign, and he couldn't stomach any more problems for the night. Wednesday he'd stayed an hour late at work because one of the projects he'd left with a coworker while he was away hadn't been handled correctly and now things had come to a head and another department was ready to sit tapping their toe at the edge of his desk until it was sorted out — and after just had a week off, Ford was hardly in a position to bargain with anyone in his division to get off on time. When he'd returned home he'd been in something of a mood, antisocial and sulky, and had retreated to his room with a book (which, predictably, did little to help).
But today he'd come back from work on time and left the division's troubles back in the office; he'd left the desk drawer with the accounts ledger locked tight; he'd put the latest book of poetry back on the bookcase in the parlor. He had tried to teach Grace something about chess and he'd had a drink with Noble in the parlor for the first time since coming back home, and when he headed upstairs the light was still visible beneath her door. He knocked and waited for some acknowledgement before he entered, then shut the door behind him. He was still fully dressed and suddenly wondered if he ought to have stopped by his room to change first, in case she was already changed for bed and inclined to feel self-conscious about the disparity — but if that was the case he could undress here just as easily. They'd shared a room for a week at the Sanditon, after all.
"Hi," he said in greeting, then immediately continued, "I'm sorry I wasn't over sooner. I hope you don't think I've been intentionally neglecting you." He didn't actually know what sort of cadence these things usually happened on, with married couples, so maybe she hadn't felt that way at all — but after sharing a bed with her for a full week he certainly felt that he'd been neglecting her after four nights without so much as an embrace. "A week doesn't sound like such a long time to be gone, but it's long enough for things to pile up, I've found. But how are you?" he asked as he moved a little more into the room. This was the first time, he realized, that he had been in her room. He had been in this room before, but prior to her moving into it; now it had her things in it, and subtle evidences of having been lived in. The thought almost stopped him from taking another step — it seemed almost invasive, as though he ought to wait for more explicit permission to enter before he encroached on her space. He'd already taken a step, though, and couldn't backtrack now without making himself look foolish if this wasn't on her mind — and he did have a history of overthinking things with her (their wedding night, for one). He split the difference and hovered a few steps beyond the doorway. "How've you been settling in?"
But today he'd come back from work on time and left the division's troubles back in the office; he'd left the desk drawer with the accounts ledger locked tight; he'd put the latest book of poetry back on the bookcase in the parlor. He had tried to teach Grace something about chess and he'd had a drink with Noble in the parlor for the first time since coming back home, and when he headed upstairs the light was still visible beneath her door. He knocked and waited for some acknowledgement before he entered, then shut the door behind him. He was still fully dressed and suddenly wondered if he ought to have stopped by his room to change first, in case she was already changed for bed and inclined to feel self-conscious about the disparity — but if that was the case he could undress here just as easily. They'd shared a room for a week at the Sanditon, after all.
"Hi," he said in greeting, then immediately continued, "I'm sorry I wasn't over sooner. I hope you don't think I've been intentionally neglecting you." He didn't actually know what sort of cadence these things usually happened on, with married couples, so maybe she hadn't felt that way at all — but after sharing a bed with her for a full week he certainly felt that he'd been neglecting her after four nights without so much as an embrace. "A week doesn't sound like such a long time to be gone, but it's long enough for things to pile up, I've found. But how are you?" he asked as he moved a little more into the room. This was the first time, he realized, that he had been in her room. He had been in this room before, but prior to her moving into it; now it had her things in it, and subtle evidences of having been lived in. The thought almost stopped him from taking another step — it seemed almost invasive, as though he ought to wait for more explicit permission to enter before he encroached on her space. He'd already taken a step, though, and couldn't backtrack now without making himself look foolish if this wasn't on her mind — and he did have a history of overthinking things with her (their wedding night, for one). He split the difference and hovered a few steps beyond the doorway. "How've you been settling in?"
Set by Lady!