Benedict BancroftHe couldn't sleep.
That was the trouble with being old (and he was old now, no use in denying it if there were grandchildren about) -- the bones knew it too and were taking the time now in his sunset days to punish him for past crimes. The days of kneeling in the dirt and digging for hours and hours hadn't hurt much then, just the occasional soreness, but now the aches woke him, drove him to get up and stretch and move his blood around liver-spotted legs in the wee hours.
Even when he was young, it had never been easy for Benedict to get back to sleep, once awakened. He shuffled out of bed, slipping into a robe over his flannel pyjamas and into his slippers. He gave his wife a quick kiss on the head before leaving -- Melete, bless her, could sleep through anything. Had slept through a cyclone, once, notably, when they were newlywed and camping in the American prairies on a field expedition.
The thought of those days was tinged with angry regret. Of course, that thought lingered. Of course, he could remember those rejections like it was yesterday, and not the name of his grandchildren when they were standing in front of him.
Benedict scowled and swept out the door towards the greenhouse.
He knew his mind was failing, distantly, in his moments of lucidity. Other Bancroft men had gone this route before, some with more dignity than others. Benedict's own father had been one of the more painful ones to watch in his final days. Benedict tried not to think about it. The most important parts still worked -- the instincts to eat, shit, breathe, and drink. The encyclopedia of knowledge accrued on plants was mostly intact.
(He was writing it all down, finally, just in case.)
The enchanted lights in the greenhouse brightened as he entered, tracking snow into the carefully maintained warmth of this building. Someone had been in here, he couldn't remember who. The mandrake pots had been moved, as had the last of the dittany, and the paths between the rows had been carefully raked. Benedict frowned. Was that him?
No matter -- he could see some buds forming on the stem of the wartizomes and that was much more interesting. They were in the back, sheltered behind the shade of a few shrubby plants. Benedict knelt down, knees cracking, and pulled the woody stem towards him , rubbing the bud between his fingertips.
"Bancroft?" came a voice from the door. Benedict frowned. "Young men need their sleep," he said, not getting up from his spot but shifting, in a little crablike walk, to look at the next wartizome over. "You should be in bed." He peered through the leaves at Neville, watery-blue eyes blinking. "Ach, but come here then. The wee ones are budding."