Siena
Muse Hunter
A Study in Steel
Time was a peculiar entity. Never stopping, never moving faster than its established pace, it could render people mad with its trudging toil and pass everyone by within the blink of an eye. In many ways, the city had come to mirror it. Slow one moment yet alive with commotion the next, London was a facsimile of events playing on repeat, a continuous story told upon a stage of stone and industry and modernity. There were new actors each day, new takes on plight and plot, but the same tale to be told. Over and over and over again, like the cogs of a well-greased machine forever in motion, events played out. London, like Time, was ceaseless. One simply had to acknowledge his or her part in the play.
Jane H. Watson, despite her M.D. and newfound ownership of a home, was only partially satisfied with her own. Boxes littered the floor around her, the collection of her life and worth stuffed neatly within flimsy contours of cardboard and left for the world to see. Minimal, exiguous, plain - just like her. Beryl eyes narrowed and fingers tapped against a jean-clad thigh. Perhaps she should have taken Mrs. Hudson up on her offer for help after all. Hindsight, it truly was fickle. The trek from the moving van - a limited time resource and now missing component of her move - to the apartment she was renting had been a rather taxing affair; the familiar ache in her left hand told enough of its truth. It had been her pride and mulishness that kept the woman from accepting her elderly landlord's offered aid - that, and her inner doctor and ingrained manners - and now she ways paying for it. But what kind of person would she be - never mind the advancements in technology in this age and her gander of Mrs. Hudson's partaking in it - if she allowed an old woman to cart her meager, though no less heavy, possessions? One her father would have found more distaste in, for sure.
Jane sighed. New changes: they were hardly as satisfying as people would like her to believe. Blonde hair clinging to the traces of sweat upon her brow, the woman bent to retrieve the box nearest her feet. It was medium sized affair, large block letters reading "Decorations" atop it, though the doctor knew the description to be a lie. These boxes were borrowed from an old neighbor; her true decorations, limited as they were, had been placed inside her apartment two arm-loads ago. The rest of her possession would have joined them already had it not been for traffic and a wrong turn. How the man driving the moving van had managed to get lost within his home city, Jane would never know. What she did know, however, was that her paid for time and use of the truck included the driver's absence. She'd been forced to unload her boxes in the hall rather than the apartment as she had wished, fearing that the the driver would leave before she unpacked her load - or worse, getting stuck having to pay more for the fool's incompetence.
Thankfully the foot traffic to and from the building of her residence was minimum. The last thing she needed was to tend to an injury of her own making - intentional or not. Her own counted for naught, for the pain lacing her hand's tendons were but phantom in being. If she was lucky - which she hardly was - the doctor would be able to finish her manual labor before another tenant set foot in the chaos she'd made of the hall. Maybe, hopefully; all she could do was wait and see.
Case One
221 Baker Street, London, England 2049 ADTime was a peculiar entity. Never stopping, never moving faster than its established pace, it could render people mad with its trudging toil and pass everyone by within the blink of an eye. In many ways, the city had come to mirror it. Slow one moment yet alive with commotion the next, London was a facsimile of events playing on repeat, a continuous story told upon a stage of stone and industry and modernity. There were new actors each day, new takes on plight and plot, but the same tale to be told. Over and over and over again, like the cogs of a well-greased machine forever in motion, events played out. London, like Time, was ceaseless. One simply had to acknowledge his or her part in the play.
Jane H. Watson, despite her M.D. and newfound ownership of a home, was only partially satisfied with her own. Boxes littered the floor around her, the collection of her life and worth stuffed neatly within flimsy contours of cardboard and left for the world to see. Minimal, exiguous, plain - just like her. Beryl eyes narrowed and fingers tapped against a jean-clad thigh. Perhaps she should have taken Mrs. Hudson up on her offer for help after all. Hindsight, it truly was fickle. The trek from the moving van - a limited time resource and now missing component of her move - to the apartment she was renting had been a rather taxing affair; the familiar ache in her left hand told enough of its truth. It had been her pride and mulishness that kept the woman from accepting her elderly landlord's offered aid - that, and her inner doctor and ingrained manners - and now she ways paying for it. But what kind of person would she be - never mind the advancements in technology in this age and her gander of Mrs. Hudson's partaking in it - if she allowed an old woman to cart her meager, though no less heavy, possessions? One her father would have found more distaste in, for sure.
Jane sighed. New changes: they were hardly as satisfying as people would like her to believe. Blonde hair clinging to the traces of sweat upon her brow, the woman bent to retrieve the box nearest her feet. It was medium sized affair, large block letters reading "Decorations" atop it, though the doctor knew the description to be a lie. These boxes were borrowed from an old neighbor; her true decorations, limited as they were, had been placed inside her apartment two arm-loads ago. The rest of her possession would have joined them already had it not been for traffic and a wrong turn. How the man driving the moving van had managed to get lost within his home city, Jane would never know. What she did know, however, was that her paid for time and use of the truck included the driver's absence. She'd been forced to unload her boxes in the hall rather than the apartment as she had wished, fearing that the the driver would leave before she unpacked her load - or worse, getting stuck having to pay more for the fool's incompetence.
Thankfully the foot traffic to and from the building of her residence was minimum. The last thing she needed was to tend to an injury of her own making - intentional or not. Her own counted for naught, for the pain lacing her hand's tendons were but phantom in being. If she was lucky - which she hardly was - the doctor would be able to finish her manual labor before another tenant set foot in the chaos she'd made of the hall. Maybe, hopefully; all she could do was wait and see.