Jane had gone home and worried that her mother or Cassandra would wonder about the bandage on her neck but Dr. Cullen did a good job and no one noticed
( Read more... )
Narrowly avoiding a collision with two wait-rats caught in a heated squeak-a-thon over a couple of dropped trays and spilled orders, Kate knocks into the brunette's shoulder and places a hand on the woman's upper arm to steady both of them.
"Sorry about that," she says with an apologetic wince.
She snags a clean towel from another passing tray -- this one bound for clean-up duty from the mess the other rats created -- and tries to soak up as much of the tea as she can.
"No, it's all my fault, I'm sorry; I'll get you another notebook to replace that one."
Here, the moon was nearly new so George's senses were around baseline. Otherwise his senses might have caught something. As it was, he needed his glasses to see, though he did recognize the struggling writer.
"Miss Austen, hullo. Working on a new story then?"
Comments 124
Narrowly avoiding a collision with two wait-rats caught in a heated squeak-a-thon over a couple of dropped trays and spilled orders, Kate knocks into the brunette's shoulder and places a hand on the woman's upper arm to steady both of them.
"Sorry about that," she says with an apologetic wince.
Reply
"I'm well, truly. Just a bit of a mess."
Reply
She snags a clean towel from another passing tray -- this one bound for clean-up duty from the mess the other rats created -- and tries to soak up as much of the tea as she can.
"No, it's all my fault, I'm sorry; I'll get you another notebook to replace that one."
Reply
"There's no need, I had not written anything of great worth on it."
Jane moves forward to help mop things up, at least she's wearing one of her home dresses so it will absorb the spill.
Reply
Naturally attracted to the pen (it's her vocation, after all), Melpomene drifts in seemingly Brownian motion towards the writer.
Reply
Reply
that sense of something just out of your grasp--
but she can still see the signs. She stops by Jane, and, without actually speaking, manages to convey a soft noise of sympathy at writer's block.
Reply
"Can I help you, ma'am?"
Reply
"Miss Austen, hullo. Working on a new story then?"
Reply
"Good evening, Mr. Sands."
Reply
Reply
Reply
Leave a comment