March 4, 1891 — Alfred's Flat, London
After his surprisingly encouraging talk with Ari Fisk, Alfred had set to work. He made his own schedule as a ship captain, so it was easy to push everything aside to make the right arrangements. He'd talked to Herbert Fudge, who had tentatively approved the idea. He'd strode down the dock at the Sanditon and made mental notes about what could be improved, and he was going to pitch it to Fudge again next week, this time with a tour of the sailboats so he could point out exactly what he meant. He'd gotten Mrs. Fudge to show him one of the houses on the terrace, too, maybe not exactly the place he'd be living with Zelda but the same sort of set-up. She'd pointed out the amenities of the accommodation, first in the same superficial and over-bright tone she might use when selling them to a potential guest, then, as he walked through the space and settled into the idea of it, in a softer, more personal way. If you're living here long term, you could make whatever changes you like to make it feel more like home. That sort of comment was gently welcoming, and he felt himself relaxing into the notion. He'd told Ari Fisk that he would have been happy anywhere if Zelda was there, and he believed it, but now he was actually starting to be able to picture himself living at the Sanditon, and working there. He could do it. Those boats could be his boats, not in legal fact but in that sense of ownership that he had felt with the Voyager even before he'd had the deed to her in his hands. He could live there, and he could be happy there.
And just as this thought had occurred to him, Mrs. Fudge had opened up a door and said, this room could be a nursery.
It caught him off guard. He hadn't explicitly stated his reasons for wanting to switch to a more stationary career part of the year, or upgrading his living situation from a flat to a small house, but he supposed the Fudges must have guessed. It wouldn't have surprised anyone, really — he had been 'courting' Zelda for eight months, which was already too long — so he should have been expecting it, but he wasn't.
The next day he'd spent two hours trying to draft a letter to Brannon Fisk, asking permission to come speak to him. Everything he said sounded wrong — too formal or too informal, giving up too much or being intentionally obscure, emitting too much confidence or too much self-deprecation. He didn't even know if her father would agree to talk to him, while he still had a feasible excuse to be too busy (Zelda's sister marrying that month), and it wasn't the right time to talk to him anyway. This wasn't the plan he'd told Ari — he was supposed to wait until the Fudges had agreed, and he had everything lined up. A flawless plan, with predetermined answers to all of Brannon's questions. He needed to wait, but after that meeting with Mrs. Fudge he had too much restless energy to just wait. He needed to do something that felt productive, so he went to the docks and set his hands on half a dozen wooden crates that had been discarded. Back at home, he started packing. He took his things down off the bookcases and lined them up in the boxes. He started making notes about things he'd need to buy, to make the cottage into a fully furnished home before he approached her father (unlikely as it seemed that Brannon Fisk would demand proof of his adequate living arrangements, he had not discounted the possibility entirely and was going to be prepared to offer the man a tour if requested). He was starting to gently remove the maps and charts that lined the living room walls, being careful not to tear the paper at the pin holes and rolling them delicately before he placed them on the sofa, when the floo lit up green.
He hadn't been expecting anyone, and when Jo Smith walked in she caught him standing on the arm of a chair to reach the top of one of the maps, with an assortment of tacks held between his teeth. "Hey," he managed, voice muffled by the tacks.
Jupiter Smith
MJ made the most Alfredy of sets and then two years later she made it EVEN BETTER