#TimeTravelingGhost EP 7 Part 76: 12 May 1999: London
#Wss366 Cleavage #TimeTravelAuthors 03/03. Are your characters protecting anything/one?
Besides deciding where to go, we discussed how to protect ourselves from a bad-trip. That was my poor joke, but the discussion was anything but a joke. In the end, we couldn’t decide. We didn’t know enough about how phrasing our intentions works. We decided to keep it simple, but add provisos if it seemed warranted.
Upon leaving the pub, my first task would be to visit a bookstore. The proprietor of the Kensington Cascade was happy to direct me to one nearby, where I found the book I was looking for.
Next was the hospital.
I changed into an outfit that I hoped wouldn't draw attention, but would also seem trustworthy to a young girl. I consulted Emily, who suggested that I show less #cleavage in case the father showed up. It wasn't like I was dressed like a sex bomb, but I adjusted the bodice just in case.
Upon entering the hospital, I checked for my father and the doctor who had seen me. Seeing that the coast was clear, I sat down by the girl's side.
“I see you like time-travel stories,” I began.
The girl looked surprised. Then, in a voice tinged with a French accent, she replied, “They’re okay.”
“Here,” I said, offering her the book I had bought, H. G. Wells’s “Time Machine.”
She took the book hesitantly, and I had a brief flash of memory. I was sitting in the hospital, worried about my mother, when a strange woman came up to me and gave me a book. My younger self thought how the woman’s dress was almost identical to one her mother wore.
“You look like my mother,” she said, and I heard Emily snort.
“Oh, is she in the hospital?” I asked, ignoring Emily.
“She suddenly got sick.” A tear ran down the girl’s face.
“She’s going to be all right,” I said. “It’s appendicitis. But she’ll be fine.”
“Where were you born?” I asked. “I notice you have a French accent.”
“Normandy," she replied. "My mother just got married, and we’re moving to America.”
“He’s coming,” Emily called.
“I’m sorry. I have to go,” I said. “Keep reading about time-travel. I think you’ll find it fascinating.”
With that, I got up and hurriedly left.
H. G. Wells, “Time Machine”:
#TootFic #MicroFiction #NMFic