"I think it's easy, when you first arrive, to see the place as an inconvenience." What with the pamphlet, and finding a place to live, and finding a job to make rent. Especially for people with a bent for problem solving, it's a series of problems.
But Baedal is worse than not getting home, and it's easy to push that thought away. By design, Raylan suspects, but also by human nature.
(He's often tried not to think that, if time passes the same way at home, Winona would have had the baby by now. God only knows what she thinks happened to him.)
He's quiet, thoughtful as Rachel resettles against him. He wants something to do about it as much as she does. Like it or not, for him this is about more than getting himself out now.
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But Baedal is worse than not getting home, and it's easy to push that thought away. By design, Raylan suspects, but also by human nature.
(He's often tried not to think that, if time passes the same way at home, Winona would have had the baby by now. God only knows what she thinks happened to him.)
He's quiet, thoughtful as Rachel resettles against him. He wants something to do about it as much as she does. Like it or not, for him this is about more than getting himself out now.