June 21st, 1891 — Jesse Hatchitt's flat, London
The title of fiancé was an odd one when mixed with mourning. Fallon didn't relish discussing wedding preparations on a typical day, but planning and dreaming of a wedding when one of her closest relatives wouldn't be there made it an even more daunting prospect. In fact, if the decision were solely in her hands Fallon would opt to elope instead. A quick ceremony, a quicker honeymoon, and then back to the daily grind.
Jesse's family was expecting a wedding, though. (Jesse too, most likely.) They wanted the white dress with the breakfast reception and all the trappings that felt odd for someone of Fallon's upbringing. She made enough now to not be considered impoverished by any means (how long that would be true for was questionable with his insistence of her leaving the aurors when they eventually had children) but to spend a month's salary on anything other than the bare necessities alarmed her. Sure, they were both well off now. That could always change, though, and she would sooner remain a loveless widow than be anything like her mother.
They had spent months now dancing around the topic of their marriage. Not because of Daniel's death, either, but because of the argument they'd had shortly beforehand. Fallon didn't quite remember how or when she informed him of her compromise (either whilst terribly hungover or tripping over herself drunk) but she knew he knew she would retire once she hit eight years as an auror. Ideally, she would prefer ten as that would give her more options as an instructor (any hopes she had of becoming Minister died when she realized to marry Jesse meant saying goodbye to her ambitions). However, Fallon knew she was already pushing her luck by asking for another four years. Any further leeway and Jesse might walk away, as was his right to do.
(Sometimes, in the dead of the night when she was buried under a mountain of paperwork, Fallon wondered if Lachlan would have pushed the same ultimatum. Then, just as soon as the thought came it was banished by the remembrance of how terribly incompatible they were and how miserable they'd both be.)
Tonight was no different. Jesse had mentioned his mother was asking about the wedding over dinner and, like always, Fallon nodded and offered some bland pleasantry in response. Their wedding would come this winter, the ins and outs of the planning wasn't something she much wanted to discuss. Especially not with someone as seemingly extravagant as his mother. Dressed in only her underthings and one of his spare pajama tops, Fallon leaned against the headboard with a case file opened upon her lap. Part of being home for dinner more often than not meant working before bed, even at the expense of casual intimacy.
"Gabe mentioned a case of ours is heating up," Fallon mentioned to Jesse as she scrawled another note. "I might not be home much next week." If at all. This case was likely to require traveling to northen Ireland. "He was grumbling about it all afternoon. Can't say I blame him. Camping isn't my favorite thing either."