Does the "he" refer to the object or the subject?

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Mark Richards

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In the sentence - Bill could hear the nervousness in Jim's voice as he stepped forward to pick up the sword. - I wanted the "he" to refer to Jim, and it did in my brain when I wrote it. But on rereading, I heard it as Bill stepping forward.
Is there a way to force the meaning so that Jim is stepping forward?
I can completely pull it apart and write it as three sentences mixed with other elements to ensure my meaning, but this flowed so nicely with what comes before and after, I wanted to keep it as close to this as possible.
It's not exactly the classic "he saw a refrigerator running down the street" but it does seem to suffer in the same way.
Thoughts?
 
It's unavoidably ambiguous. But does the narrative of the story make it clear who is picking up the sword?
 
Bill could hear the nervousness in Jim's voice as [STRIKE] he[/STRIKE] the latter stepped forward to pick up the sword. - I wanted the "he" to refer to Jim, and it did in my brain when I wrote it
 
You could write "Bill could hear the nervousness in his voice as Jim stepped forward to pick up the sword."
 
"The latter" does not work well for me.
 
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It is not a natural sentence.
 
So, you think Bill heard the nervousness in his own voice?
 
That's possible.
 
But not likely.
 
Oh, I don't know. If I were speaking and someone near me picked up a sword, I'm pretty sure my voice would start to reveal a hint of nervousness if I continued speaking.
 
I think we need to wait for the OP to answer Barb's question.
 
I suppose if the context made it clear who was speaking, we could rewrite as mike suggested. That had been my first thought until I read it back and didn't know whose voice it was.

There are things you can do, like "Bill could hear the nervousness in Jim's voice as the boy/the older man/his friend/his rival ..." depending on the circumstances.
 
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