April 3rd, 1891 — Augurey Beak Cafe
Even after she’d written him the initial letter, Juliana wasn't convinced she’d go through with it. She wasn't even really convinced of it now, even as she checked the sign above the entryway and pulled the doors open. There were plenty of ways this conversation could go that didn't involve revealing herself, she had reassured herself. And so what if she hadn't thought of any, yet? She'd always been good at lying in the moment, and she could do it again to Mr. Abernathy, if she lost her nerve or changed her mind. There were plenty of reasons to back out: he could ruin her. If it became public knowledge that Forfang was an uneducated woman, her research would be worthless. If it became publicly known that Juliana Binns had been secretly writing to werewolves for years, her life in polite society was over. She might have known his greatest secret, but he could have still destroyed her easily, and could probably have found a way to do it without even risking himself.
That wasn't really her chief concern, although perhaps it should have been. He could have ruined her, but more likely (and, at least in her mind, even worse), he could reject her. Over the past year she’d come to think of him as a friend, even without knowing his name, and she valued his opinions. What if he wanted nothing to do with her, knowing that she wasn't a real researcher? What if he felt betrayed, taken in by the facade that she'd presented of herself? He might not have chosen to share any of those details about his life had he known that she was... just Juliana Binns, not some enigmatic academic.
So was she going to tell him? Maybe. Maybe. She hadn't committed. All that she had committed to for certain was meeting with him. It didn't take long to spot him, with the dark curls she remembered. She'd purposefully waited until the week of the full moon had passed so he might feel more himself. She hoped he was well. Hoped he was ready for this, though whether he was or not she would hardly be able to tell.
"Hi! Thanks for agreeing to be here so late," she said cheerfully. It wasn't really late, but it was nearly dinner time, and for a Saturday it seemed late. It probably didn't help, either, that she’d been anticipating this meeting all day, which had made the hands on the clock in Lytton's main room seem as though they'd never moved more slowly. "I don't usually have to stay so late on Saturdays, but with the Lyttons on their cruise there's a lot to be done. Not in the designing area, though," she added hastily, though this was entirely irrelevant to the conversation at hand and he did not seem like the sort who was particularly likely to care about the internal workings of the House of Lytton. "I don't have anything to do with designing. Obviously," she added, with a slightly self-deprecating smile and a vague wave towards her dress.
She was talking too much. Her nerves were getting the best of her. If Camilla had been in the country she might've told her this was a bad idea, but she wasn't in the country and it was too late to back out now.
Prof. Marlowe Forfang
Jules