19th Spring, 510 A.V.
She was pacing from one end of the meager apartment to the other, furiously pacing, her bootheels scuffing across the hardwood floors. Arms folded neatly beneath the subtle swell of her breasts, expression an inscrutable mask of anger, she paced.
Nel had scoured the gambling houses she knew, trying to find him. She'd gone to the docks, to the market, in and out of every whore house from the castle to the gate; wherever he'd gone, she hadn't found him. Dodged knights and ladies, scrambled down alleys and in between bar brawls, spent hours trying to think like he did, but of course that had been impossible, because they were nothing alike.
At the foot of the bed, she'd packed up her travel bag. Everything that was hers, anything that she could have claimed as her own, she'd stuff into the pack, leaving his apartment exactly how it had been on the first night she'd stumbled sleepily across the threshold. She didn't know, exactly, why it seemed to her the right thing to do, leaving. Had no experience with this sort of thing, no precedent to play the situation against, but it seemed to her like leaving was the thing to do. Like this had been the linchpin, and it had toppled. He'd had enough of her; she'd had enough of him. It hadn't been a good idea to begin with, and if she couldn't turn her back on him long enough to enjoy a meal, then what was the point?
Honor and decency and trust, those were things that Nel understood only in the simplest of scenarios. She'd been spoiled by the crew of the Mariner, but a part of her ached to reach out and trust people, to enjoy people, to be able to rely on someone, anyone. But that anyone was not Murdoch, and she mentally shook herself for being stupid enough to think it could have been.
When she heard the key turning in the front door, she stopped pacing and straightened up, watching to see what sort of state he would be in when he entered.