21st November, 1894 — Whitby & Co. Printshop
Yesterday had been long and emotionally draining, and Tess had tossed and turned even after everything had been decided. Sage would have it ten times worse than the rest of them, of course, so she couldn’t complain – but it was distinctly odd, waking up to a house that now suddenly contained a young child. Adorable, but unsettled by the upheaval to her existence, not to mention a haunting reminder of Sage’s past dalliance. (Their parents would have supported her through this too, Tess was sure, but still, she was a little relieved they were not here to deal with it.)
Declan had been there, though – Tess had not been able to discern what he thought about anything the day before, and most of today they had been catching up on printing a large order whose deadline was in. Prescott had taken the stacks down to Sam to be duly distributed, but while they were left to reset the presses and tidy up the mess of paper in the printroom, Tess glanced at him. Once, and then a couple times more before before she screwed up the courage. On the fourth glance sidelong, she commented, “You’ve been quiet.” And no wonder, really. Tess sighed. “Sorry about yesterday. I know it was –” she waved a hand, wordlessly. A lot.
Declan had been there, though – Tess had not been able to discern what he thought about anything the day before, and most of today they had been catching up on printing a large order whose deadline was in. Prescott had taken the stacks down to Sam to be duly distributed, but while they were left to reset the presses and tidy up the mess of paper in the printroom, Tess glanced at him. Once, and then a couple times more before before she screwed up the courage. On the fourth glance sidelong, she commented, “You’ve been quiet.” And no wonder, really. Tess sighed. “Sorry about yesterday. I know it was –” she waved a hand, wordlessly. A lot.
