December 2nd, 1894 — Early — Greengrass Home
Ford had been sitting in the hallway between his open bedroom door and Jemima's closed one for more than seventy-four minutes. He didn't know how much more. Seventy-four minutes ago was when he'd gotten up to retrieve his pocket watch; the night before that stretched timeless. He was watching the hands tick as he leaned against the wall beside Jemima's door and thinking. Most recently he had been debating the merits of fetching some kind of breakfast before he knocked on Jemima's door. Not for himself, but for her; his stomach felt as though it would never be ready for food again, but he could put together a tray to present to her without much time or effort. He had gone through pros and cons. In the positive category, it might demonstrate some degree of thoughtfulness; and having food available might prove a suitable distraction if the conversation they needed to have turned uncomfortable. On the other side: it could come across like he was trying to buy her trust, or her love, or her silence, and whichever she interpreted it as, a breakfast would have been a cheap price indeed.
The second hand ticked around and completed another circuit. Ford decided against breakfast. He suspected this was not the right decision. Probably both options were the wrong decision. Every choice he'd been thinking about, all night long, was like that.
He ached for Tycho, who would probably never want to talk to him again. He wanted to sleep, or better yet to crawl into his bed and then suddenly cease to exist, subsumed in pillows and sheets. Obviously neither was an option. He had responsibilities; things he'd broken which could probably never be fixed, but which he still had a duty to stitch together as best he could.
He watched another minute tick by on his watch. An earlier point of consideration had been when do I go in? It was a complicated question. He didn't know what to say yet; he never would. He wanted to let Jemima sleep, if she was sleeping. He didn't want to make her wait too long, if she was fuming. Plotting. Climbing out the window. He had eventually decided on a time that seemed reasonable enough and had been watching the pocket watch count down towards it ever since. He still wasn't ready to face her, but according to his watch it was time.
Ford stood up, feeling sore from sitting so long in one position, and knocked lightly on the door. "Jemima?"
The second hand ticked around and completed another circuit. Ford decided against breakfast. He suspected this was not the right decision. Probably both options were the wrong decision. Every choice he'd been thinking about, all night long, was like that.
He ached for Tycho, who would probably never want to talk to him again. He wanted to sleep, or better yet to crawl into his bed and then suddenly cease to exist, subsumed in pillows and sheets. Obviously neither was an option. He had responsibilities; things he'd broken which could probably never be fixed, but which he still had a duty to stitch together as best he could.
He watched another minute tick by on his watch. An earlier point of consideration had been when do I go in? It was a complicated question. He didn't know what to say yet; he never would. He wanted to let Jemima sleep, if she was sleeping. He didn't want to make her wait too long, if she was fuming. Plotting. Climbing out the window. He had eventually decided on a time that seemed reasonable enough and had been watching the pocket watch count down towards it ever since. He still wasn't ready to face her, but according to his watch it was time.
Ford stood up, feeling sore from sitting so long in one position, and knocked lightly on the door. "Jemima?"
Set by Lady!