May 7th, 1891 — Rainbow Ball — Hogsmeade Ballroom
Alfred had planned to be engaged by now. The same could have been said for generally any point in the past year or so, but this was different — he'd had concrete plans this time, not just vague hopes. Things had started falling into place. He'd anticipated asking Brannon's permission sometime in mid-April, then again in late April if necessary. By the beginning of May, he'd thought he would have been proposing, and by now they'd be out of rough water and coasting ahead towards their wedding day — smooth sailing from here on out.
He was not engaged, obviously. A large part of the delay was the Santa Antonina. He couldn't furnish a house or start a new job while he was off the coast of Portugal, nor could he beg Brannon for his permission to marry Zelda. After the rescue effort, there had been repairs to see to — but that didn't fully explain it, because the Voyager had been back in the Thames with only minor repairs ongoing for the past two weeks, and he had yet to lift a quill to write her father and ask for an audience, much less go through the actual ordeal of trying to convince him in person. And he felt — off. There wasn't any other word for it... or rather, there were dozens of words for it, but none were entirely appropriate. None really captured it. He'd written restless to Zelda; he'd written out of sorts. He could have said untethered or adrift. Any of them were close, but none of them were enough. The best way to describe it, really, was through the effects: he'd gone two weeks without writing her father and he didn't know why.
And Zelda had been sending him letters wanting to talk about it, wanting to apologize, wanting to make up, and he didn't know what to do with them. He didn't want to talk about it. He didn't want to fight. He didn't want to explain anything else. He didn't want to take this out on her when he didn't really think it was her fault. He didn't want to be here, at a party with colorful drinks and a fashion show at one edge of the ballroom, but he didn't have any good reason not to come and he was afraid Zelda would read too much into it if he passed up an opportunity to see her. He didn't want to be out at all, not really, but he recognized that sleeping in his cabin on the Voyager despite having a furnished house in the Sanditon Terrace wasn't good, and letting every day slip by without writing her father even though he had no good reason to delay wasn't good, and staying onboard the ship every night with no company wasn't good. Maybe if he went through the motions things would kick back up again and he'd start to feel more himself. He hoped so, anyway.
He'd only gotten one glass of the drink they were serving so far and hadn't even tried it yet (it was currently dark green which was not a particularly encouraging shade) when he saw Zelda. Alfred forced a half-smile in greeting and shifted his weight from one foot to another, trying not to look as awkward as he felt. "Hi," he said simply. "You look nice."
He was not engaged, obviously. A large part of the delay was the Santa Antonina. He couldn't furnish a house or start a new job while he was off the coast of Portugal, nor could he beg Brannon for his permission to marry Zelda. After the rescue effort, there had been repairs to see to — but that didn't fully explain it, because the Voyager had been back in the Thames with only minor repairs ongoing for the past two weeks, and he had yet to lift a quill to write her father and ask for an audience, much less go through the actual ordeal of trying to convince him in person. And he felt — off. There wasn't any other word for it... or rather, there were dozens of words for it, but none were entirely appropriate. None really captured it. He'd written restless to Zelda; he'd written out of sorts. He could have said untethered or adrift. Any of them were close, but none of them were enough. The best way to describe it, really, was through the effects: he'd gone two weeks without writing her father and he didn't know why.
And Zelda had been sending him letters wanting to talk about it, wanting to apologize, wanting to make up, and he didn't know what to do with them. He didn't want to talk about it. He didn't want to fight. He didn't want to explain anything else. He didn't want to take this out on her when he didn't really think it was her fault. He didn't want to be here, at a party with colorful drinks and a fashion show at one edge of the ballroom, but he didn't have any good reason not to come and he was afraid Zelda would read too much into it if he passed up an opportunity to see her. He didn't want to be out at all, not really, but he recognized that sleeping in his cabin on the Voyager despite having a furnished house in the Sanditon Terrace wasn't good, and letting every day slip by without writing her father even though he had no good reason to delay wasn't good, and staying onboard the ship every night with no company wasn't good. Maybe if he went through the motions things would kick back up again and he'd start to feel more himself. He hoped so, anyway.
He'd only gotten one glass of the drink they were serving so far and hadn't even tried it yet (it was currently dark green which was not a particularly encouraging shade) when he saw Zelda. Alfred forced a half-smile in greeting and shifted his weight from one foot to another, trying not to look as awkward as he felt. "Hi," he said simply. "You look nice."
MJ made the most Alfredy of sets and then two years later she made it EVEN BETTER