Of course. I'll send a text an hour before I arrive.
[A day later, and after Charles has finished one of his night shifts at the hospital, he arrives outside the address Crozier had texted to him. He's carrying a tote in one hand, and raises the other to give the front door a few sharp knocks. He isn't sure what to expect when the door opens, but he's anticipating something along the lines of when worried family members would accompany their loved ones to the clinic in London: worry, and perhaps a little tension.
It's normal. Something to be expected when a friend or loved one is sick.]
It's Charles, [he announces.] I've brought the medicine.
text → action
[A day later, and after Charles has finished one of his night shifts at the hospital, he arrives outside the address Crozier had texted to him. He's carrying a tote in one hand, and raises the other to give the front door a few sharp knocks. He isn't sure what to expect when the door opens, but he's anticipating something along the lines of when worried family members would accompany their loved ones to the clinic in London: worry, and perhaps a little tension.
It's normal. Something to be expected when a friend or loved one is sick.]
It's Charles, [he announces.] I've brought the medicine.