@'Eilis Hooligan' @'Clarissa Cosgrove'
It was not the usual practice of the shop to go around searching out the various family members before they moved on for the day if they weren't in the shop at the time. All of the Khatris were adults, after all - and even when some of them technically hadn't been, they'd always been able to look after themselves. They had all (except Yasmina) found their way into the shop at some point or other, and could survive just fine on their own for a day if they missed its departure. Still, Rush liked to look out for his youngest 'sibling' when he could - mostly because of the stunts she'd pulled in Chicago a few years ago. He still worried, occasionally, that she'd up and disappear and not make her way back some day.
She'd been gone two hours, though, and the shop was going to leave in twenty minutes (according to the constantly-resetting pocketwatch that he was carrying), and he still hadn't seen hide nor hair of her. He was beginning to think that maybe she'd slipped out of London entirely, which would have been bad - or perhaps that she'd just made it back to the shop after he'd gone out looking for her, which was much less bad. He'd look around another ten minutes before heading back, he figured. At the end of the day, Yasmina would have to take care of herself just like the rest of them.
Still, it didn't sit well with him, leaving her to her own devices. He was relieved when he caught sight of a familiar-looking head of brown hair headed away from him down the street. "Yasmina!" he called, but she didn't turn. "Yas!" he said, picking up the pace until he was nearly jogging. Had she not heard him? She certainly wasn't running away, but she hadn't turned to acknowledge him either. He reached out to grab her elbow and slowed to a walk as he slipped his arm lazily around her shoulders, looking over at her with a grin - before realizing that the brunette he'd chased down was not, in fact, Yasmina.
It was not the usual practice of the shop to go around searching out the various family members before they moved on for the day if they weren't in the shop at the time. All of the Khatris were adults, after all - and even when some of them technically hadn't been, they'd always been able to look after themselves. They had all (except Yasmina) found their way into the shop at some point or other, and could survive just fine on their own for a day if they missed its departure. Still, Rush liked to look out for his youngest 'sibling' when he could - mostly because of the stunts she'd pulled in Chicago a few years ago. He still worried, occasionally, that she'd up and disappear and not make her way back some day.
She'd been gone two hours, though, and the shop was going to leave in twenty minutes (according to the constantly-resetting pocketwatch that he was carrying), and he still hadn't seen hide nor hair of her. He was beginning to think that maybe she'd slipped out of London entirely, which would have been bad - or perhaps that she'd just made it back to the shop after he'd gone out looking for her, which was much less bad. He'd look around another ten minutes before heading back, he figured. At the end of the day, Yasmina would have to take care of herself just like the rest of them.
Still, it didn't sit well with him, leaving her to her own devices. He was relieved when he caught sight of a familiar-looking head of brown hair headed away from him down the street. "Yasmina!" he called, but she didn't turn. "Yas!" he said, picking up the pace until he was nearly jogging. Had she not heard him? She certainly wasn't running away, but she hadn't turned to acknowledge him either. He reached out to grab her elbow and slowed to a walk as he slipped his arm lazily around her shoulders, looking over at her with a grin - before realizing that the brunette he'd chased down was not, in fact, Yasmina.
