Walks around the deck for an hour and gets somewhat sweaty. Apparently, nobody is to speak to him or interrupt him or wish him good morning unless, like, an admiral is coming aboard. I mean, a lot of times, Bush is standing on the quarterdeck, and Horatio comes up to him and says, "Good morning," at the end of the walk like he's just gotten out of bed. *_*
Other weird morning quirks: he likes to have that pump thingy with the bath every day and not just on special occaisions, and Horatio likes coffee every morning, sweetened until it's almost like syrup.
And daslkjg;lkdjf. Ahaha. I'm so glad that somebody else is even vaguely interested in Bush's family history because, really, it's just an interesting problem to pick through. Bush might not be a very good mathematician in Horatio's opinion, but he's got to have been at leat competent. And he's good with his hands, so why didn't he choose to go into being a blacksmith?
*chews lip* I mean, as you point out, he's not exactly comfortable in regular society, but is that a product of him being at sea or was it what drove him out to sea? And it's true that he does really, really love adventure and yet -- man, I mean, in both the book and the movie, we see him stalking around Portsmouth in rather terrible hungry straits, and yet, we know that he has family that draws half his pay. Why doesn't he go live with them?
<333333333333333333333 bush's queue omg. <3 <3
Other weird morning quirks: he likes to have that pump thingy with the bath every day and not just on special occaisions, and Horatio likes coffee every morning, sweetened until it's almost like syrup.
And daslkjg;lkdjf. Ahaha. I'm so glad that somebody else is even vaguely interested in Bush's family history because, really, it's just an interesting problem to pick through. Bush might not be a very good mathematician in Horatio's opinion, but he's got to have been at leat competent. And he's good with his hands, so why didn't he choose to go into being a blacksmith?
*chews lip* I mean, as you point out, he's not exactly comfortable in regular society, but is that a product of him being at sea or was it what drove him out to sea? And it's true that he does really, really love adventure and yet -- man, I mean, in both the book and the movie, we see him stalking around Portsmouth in rather terrible hungry straits, and yet, we know that he has family that draws half his pay. Why doesn't he go live with them?