20th Spring, 510 A.V.
Nel let Murdoch sleep through the day, and into the night.
He would come awake to a lowly lit room, candlelight tossing shadows across the walls to cloy in corners, the fire crackling lowly as though it had not lately been stirred. Her traveling bag was tucked beneath the table, still packed, but her boots were set side-by-side next to it. The rapier was lain carefully atop it, its blade shimmering brightly when firelight licked across its edge.
Nel was sitting on the bed, by his feet, her back against the wall, legs slung out across the mattress, ankles crossed. At least three different maps of the continent were piled in her lap, circles and arrows and little notations littering their faces. Her fingertips were smudged black with charcoal. She'd fallen asleep where she sat, her chin lulling forward towards her collarbone, the long, pale, slither of her hair a curtain of seashells and braids that obscured her face.
She'd spent the day trying to figure out where she wanted to go, and how to get there. Down to the docks, where she'd determined which ships were going where, and then she'd gotten herself the maps to try and determine where everything was, which places she'd already been to. It was a big continent, there were bound to be people somewhere that would help her figure out what to do next, that wouldn't seem pained just by the idea of trusting her. She didn't want to stay, not if it meant destroying both of them. Maybe she'd try to find out who her real family was, who they'd been before they'd been slaves. Those memories were so distant, and so ghostly, trying to summon up what little she remembered proved nigh impossible.
So eventually she'd exhausted herself over the maps, but she'd been afraid to crawl into the bed beside him. Sleep took her where she sat, then, because sleep wasn't overly concerned with her fears, or her dreams.