May 10, 1895 — Bartonburg & English Countryside
Ford had hemmed and hawed for weeks leading up to their anniversary over how, if at all, the event ought to be celebrated. Obviously he and Jemima both knew the event itself had been less than celebratory, and he suspected she might view it even less fondly in hindsight given what she knew now, but it seemed callous to let the event go entirely unremarked upon. There was also the issue of the other people in the house; even if Jemima didn't appreciate a gesture at all, he didn't want to let on to his mother or to Clementine that they were unhappy. Clementine was liable to gossip about it, he feared. His mother, worse, might try to help. So he had carefully picked out some flowers for her, based on some of the things Mrs. Grimstone had been sending earlier in the year that she had seemed to like, and he had asked the cook to make a special dessert for dinner. He had planned perhaps to ask her to eat in the garden with him, just the two of them, if it was warm enough, and maybe to say something heartfelt and sentimental if he could mange it... but that morning a stray comment from her over breakfast had left him with the unshakable conviction that she wanted nothing to do with him that day, so he had aborted those plans. The flowers were snuck onto her bedside table while she was out of the room, with no note, and he had dallied on his way home from work so that there was no time to ask about alternative dinner plans. Conversation over dinner had been stilted. Ford did not draw attention to the dessert.
For the week following he bounced between these convictions: that Jemima was simmering with disdain and only barely concealing it behind politeness and he had been right to avoid her; that he had imagined the malice in the comment from that morning and he ought to have kept up with his original ideas for the day; that Jemima was disappointed that he had made no attempt to do anything special; that Jemima knew precisely what he had planned and how he had failed to follow through and recognized the cowardice in his retreat; that he might be able to salvage things with another attempt to do something caring; that a second attempt could only possibly make things worse.
But they were going to have a baby together, so they had to actually talk to each other eventually. Really talk, not just passing comments or dinner-table niceties. So although it had taken weeks to scrap together enough courage to attempt planning something again, he was committing to it this weekend. There was nothing on their calendar for social events so theoretically there was no way for her to have any serious conflict, but even so when he approached her that morning he was anxious that she would invent one to avoid spending time with him. "Jemima, I was thinking," he began, tentative and hopeful, "We might go out for a bit, today?"
For the week following he bounced between these convictions: that Jemima was simmering with disdain and only barely concealing it behind politeness and he had been right to avoid her; that he had imagined the malice in the comment from that morning and he ought to have kept up with his original ideas for the day; that Jemima was disappointed that he had made no attempt to do anything special; that Jemima knew precisely what he had planned and how he had failed to follow through and recognized the cowardice in his retreat; that he might be able to salvage things with another attempt to do something caring; that a second attempt could only possibly make things worse.
But they were going to have a baby together, so they had to actually talk to each other eventually. Really talk, not just passing comments or dinner-table niceties. So although it had taken weeks to scrap together enough courage to attempt planning something again, he was committing to it this weekend. There was nothing on their calendar for social events so theoretically there was no way for her to have any serious conflict, but even so when he approached her that morning he was anxious that she would invent one to avoid spending time with him. "Jemima, I was thinking," he began, tentative and hopeful, "We might go out for a bit, today?"

Set by Lady!




