Sybil Crawley (
adifferentlife) wrote2014-05-22 10:25 pm
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Home Plot - Part 2
Sybil's day has been nerve-wracking. Her fainting went over well, in that it had distracted her family and the staff, which was precisely what she's wanted. Unfortunately, her mother had insisted that she not go to work at the hospital and instead spend it in bed. There was nothing to be done about it and no argument on the Earth could have dissuaded her Mama from telling her she must rest. Even if Sybil wanted nothing more than to go to work and see if Henri had made it. She'd fretted most of the day, and when it was finally time to get dressed for dinner Sybil felt sicker than if she actually had fainted.
When Anna mentions that Doctor Clarkson and a new, young, French Doctor are coming for dinner she holds her breath. It seems too much to hope for that it might be Henri, but who else might it be? She has to stop herself from running down the stairs, restraining herself and going down with Mary and Edith, barely paying attention to what they say. When she sees Henri seated between Edith and herself she cannot help but smile. Edith asks him about his work, and she forces herself to turn away, and tell their mother than indeed she does feel much better.
When Anna mentions that Doctor Clarkson and a new, young, French Doctor are coming for dinner she holds her breath. It seems too much to hope for that it might be Henri, but who else might it be? She has to stop herself from running down the stairs, restraining herself and going down with Mary and Edith, barely paying attention to what they say. When she sees Henri seated between Edith and herself she cannot help but smile. Edith asks him about his work, and she forces herself to turn away, and tell their mother than indeed she does feel much better.
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They were short-staffed, and thankfully, work had distracted Henri enough to keep his mind away from thoughts of his precarious situation. Only when, as evening fell, Doctor Clarkson had called him over and asked if he would like to meet the Lord Grantham and his family, who would certainly be pleased to hear about the visitor’s travels, that he was once again forced to dwell on his predicament. He must have stammered out some sort of affirmative answer, for the doctor had assured him that he would find the proper evening dress and said they would depart at seven.
Which was how he had found himself here, in a grand dining room, much too far away from Sybil and struggling not to look in her direction, with servants deftly refilling his wine glass and disappearing before he even had the chance to thank them. “Merci,” he managed to one of them, though he received not even a look in return. Sybil’s sister was speaking again, he realized belatedly. “You must have had a terrible journey. I cannot imagine traveling on the continent with this war on."
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