"I will try." Edmund promised. And try he would, though there wasn't certainty that he could avoid contention. It followed him like a shadow, and people had a way of stepping on it. Theo even dared to stand in it, defiant and brazen. He'd have to keep it close and in check. All lifted skirts and light feet. Best not to ripple the water.
When they reached Oliver's room, Edmund didn't know how to part. He still wanted to reconcile, assuaging his guilt in process. But Oliver seemed too drained and distant to do so. It would have to wait. Edmund hoped his physical pain and obligations would be distraction enough, because they'd have to be. Drinking before midday and provoking Theo into bludgeoning him would have compromised his promise of eschewing trouble. How confining.
"I'll be on my way, I suppose." Edmund paused a moment too long, telegraphing his reluctance, before slowly letting go of Oliver's hand. Heavy as lead, smooth as satin. "Take care of yourself." He meant it. It was hard not to dally, to linger with Oliver just a little more, but he didn't. Without looking back, Edmund left. There were things to be tended to, and it wasn't their weathered relationship.
* * *
"What on earth happened to you?" and "Y' look like hell, mate." were all Edmund heard in greeting as he went about putting things in order. It wasn't until he left that prat with a pigeon penchant at the mail post that Edmund actually saw the extent of Theo's damage. The bridge of his nose had swollen to a softer definition and there was bruising beneath both eyes, not just the right. He looked like a bloodhound, a raccoon, or like he hadn't slept in years. The color would likely only deepen within the next twenty-four hours. Edmund's only luck was that his nasal bones still seemed in place. Though it was hard to tell when palpating the area stung sharply.
A particularly sympathetic staffer offered to treat it. Reluctantly, Edmund complied. What medicine they provided took the edge off, and gradually tamed his hangover. He offered what money he was carrying in recompense, much to the staffer's delight. Overall, things were looking up. And without further conflict or delay, Edmund saw everything to completion.
After notifying Oliver, giving some rather exaggerated farewells, and loading the luggage, they were able to say the wedding was behind them. The event of it, at least. Its effects were yet to be addressed. Oliver and Geneva's wedding was the most prominent of them, followed closely by Edmund's lack of faith in their relationship, and just how deep Oliver's and Edmund's relationship went. It was a morass of psychology for them to wade through. And though Edmund wanted to be free of its weight, he couldn't say he was ready to open up again, and not completely.
Prepared this time for what had been otherwise unpredictable when they first set sail for the wedding, Edmund had made sure to procure tea with nausea alleviating properties. This would hopefully obviate any seasickness. A pot of it was prepared alongside a cup and saucer on a tray. Edmund carried it from the galley to Oliver's cramped quarters where it was then wedged onto one of the bedside tables.
"Are you feeling any better?" He asked, not specifying whether he meant in comparison to that morning, or to their trip to the wedding.