There was an honest to God part of her that wondered if she should show up. How could she be certain if she showed up and he'd be there? She was oblivious. Did not have a clue in the world as to what could be going on, why he was gone, for how long, why she couldn’t go back to his apartment? She couldn’t even quite figure out how she’d ended up at an Aunt’s house that she had no clue she had up until the previous week.
Though it seemed like Mr. Tavers had decided her argument had had some kind of valid point. Though that could have been the guilt that had started to build, the epicenter of that guilt stemming from the fact that he hadn’t been there, not when Sage had truly needed him. There were whispers among his peers. Either way she’d debated for too long on whether or not to go to Grand Central Station. What if it wasn't Jack. She'd given herself a headache that would radiate throughout the rest of her day. At least it was public that was what she had kept telling herself, it was public. She’d shown up early, because this was Sage and if she wasn’t prompt she was always early. She liked to get the lay of the land, scope out what was going on, find a spot she deemed acceptable to wait for someone. It didn’t matter if she was going out on a date, meeting a friend for coffee, or the first day of school. She always did it.
This was no different. She had actually worried about what to wear. Though at the point that she’d found a bench and parked her ass there it was hard to tell since she’d settled on a pair of light blue jeans, that were fitted in the waist and hips but had a but loosened at the thighs and fit comfortably and a white ribbed tank top over a black ribbed tank top, for that kind of layered affect. That blond hair had that touch of; I didn’t do a damn thing to my hair that said she’d probably spent time making it look that way. A set of aviator glasses atop of her head, and a book in her lap. Though it was closed at the moment and face down, one leg crossed over the other, her foot bouncing just lightly. Most onlookers would just see a young woman, maybe enjoying a break in her day to take in the sights and sounds that was Chaos of the station, anyone knew her would take the bouncing of that foot as a nervous twitch. Those baby blue eyes of hers scanned left right, up down, and she occasionally glanced over her shoulder.
If Jacob Tavers had taught her anything in her 17 years it was how to observe, to keep track of anything or anyone suspicious and this had to be the ultimate test, because there were too many people and the noise level was near deafening. There really wasn’t any kind of distinct emotion in those features either, no smile, no frown, she did a great job at keeping her thumbnail out of her teeth, which was another nervous habit even though she was dying to fidget more all she allowed was that bounce of her foot. After sitting for fifteen minutes she pulled out the book. He’d be there. He had to be. Because she needed to see him, needed some kind of explanation, and because she needed it, it had to happen.