“Parvati’s pregnant, did you hear? Her days as a model are long over. It’s no shame, though. She wasn’t any good.”
From where he was stood on one of the struts of the ladder in order to reach the upper-most parts of the back kitchen wall properly, Seamus Finnigan turned to look at his young wife in dismay. She did not notice the look he shot in her direction; or perhaps she did but did not deign to dignify it with a response. No, she merely continued to unpack the cups and such from the boxes that had been delivered two days prior by a currier company that cost far more than they were worth when Royal Mail did an equally good job. Seamus decided to indulge his wife though, desperate to avoid any more arguments. Really, he was looking forward to going back to work. In years gone by he had enjoyed the time off that the Ministry afforded him with. Yet, in years gone by, he hadn’t had to do up his kitchen unnecessarily – or any other part of the house, for that matter. Well, not with his wife present, at least. Lavender usually busied herself elsewhere but this time she wanted to ‘help.’ Heaven forbid it.
“W-who’s the father?” Seamus asked tentatively, unsure whether he really wanted to know and regretting it immediately as his wife looked up to greet his gaze with her own, her eyes alight with the excitement of rumour and intrigue.
Lavender giggled and shrugged her shoulders, communicating immediately to Seamus that he knew but wouldn’t find out unless he paid the two Galleon and sixty-six Sickle fee for next week’s issue of Witch Weekly. The man merely shook his head and turned back to the wall, smearing more canary yellow paint on the wall – the same canary yellow paint that in the weeks after finishing the kitchen that she would come to despise. Seamus heard Lavender tut behind him and he turned, his patience wearing thin as his wife made her way patronisingly towards him through the bubble wrap before holding out her hand for the paintbrush which Seamus eagerly handed over. She then stepped up onto the ladder and set about painting the wall herself, narrating what she was doing so that Seamus could learn the error of his ways. In response, however, Seamus merely rolled his eyes and left the kitchen, trudging through the mess of bubble wrap and packaging until he was out into the hall where he was free from the suffocating presence of the woman he’d married.
“Daddy?”
The light bulbs suspended from the ceiling - that had yet to have the new lampshades that Lavender insisted on having - in the hallway flickered into life and Seamus turned from where he was stood facing the door, contemplating running through, down the road and into the sunset where he could live without Lavender for the rest of his days. But upon setting his eyes on the little girl stood at the top of the stairs, he knew immediately that he could never do it as much as he wanted so desperately to do so. With the lights on he could see her immensely clearly, the darkness of the day making it a requirement for those that lived in Greater London to function with the artificial yellow light from their lamps.
The little girl had been set down for a nap earlier that morning and so as a result she was still in her cotton nightgown that had a picture of Quidditch players on the front. Her dirty blonde, curly hair was left to spill over her shoulders, ending just above her bum, and under her arm was tucked a brown bear which was nearly bigger than her. She only just, though with the help of her tip-toes no doubt, reached the light switch that turned the ceiling. But on her face she wore an expression of anxiety and she looked at him with her wide saucer-sized eyes. Seamus stepped up onto the staircase and the pair met in the middle, the girl launching herself and her teddy into his willing arms.
Millie’s sobs broke immediately and Seamus cuddled her close, continuing his way up the stairs to take her back to his daughter’s bedroom. Lavender had been firm about the twins having separate rooms but Seamus wasn’t entirely sure if he condoned their separation during the night. Yet despite the insecurity he felt, he did not complain and so on the way to his daughter’s room, he stuck his head around the door of Elliot’s room, pleased to find that the boy was still asleep; unlike his younger sister. Seamus closed the door quietly behind him and padded down the hallway to his daughter’s room where upon opening the door he was assaulted by darkness that was not present in his son’s room.
Seamus looked down at Millie who was wriggling in his arms, her little hands balling his paint-spotted t-shirt in her even tinier fists as she struggled to move closer to him. Seamus’ hand began to rub circles into his daughters back and as he passed over the threshold, the girl began to wriggle more furiously in his arms as she grew desperate to escape from the room which had housed her nightmares. Seamus tightened his grip around her, whispering promises to chase those horrid nightmares away, and reached over for the blinds which he quickly twiddled, letting in the much needed light that made the little girl lift her head from his neck. Her eyes were red around the lids where she had been crying and Seamus reached for her cheeks where he rubbed away the tears that were drying there. He smiled encouragingly to her and set her down gently into her crib before lowering himself to the floor.
Sitting himself down on the fluffy carpet, Seamus leaned against the side of the crib before lifting the blanket over to cover his weary daughter with the woollen covering that bore an etching of Winnie the Pooh cuddling Piglet on the front.
“Now, let me tell you a story.” Seamus murmured quietly as she snuggled up with her bear. “When I was your age, I had the most terrible nightmares. I cried and cried and cried and my dad always used to...”
----
“..still don’t understand why this is necessary.”
Lavender looked up from the bright yellow raincoat that she was buttoning for her wide-eyed daughter and sighed dramatically at her husband who looked back at her plainly, without much feeling at all. Lavender rose from where she was knelt, leaving Millie with an only partially done-up coat, and breezed past her husband into the kitchen where she set about making up the fruit basket that she insisted on visiting their new neighbours with. Seamus meanwhile dropped his hands from his hips and knelt down to his children’s level, making short work of the yellow and green raincoats which he quickly buttoned up before helping them on with their wellies.
It was a dismal day. Somehow, the rain clouds had clambered across the sky in tandem with Lavender’s black mood. It was something that Seamus had sensed in her after he’d abandoned her in favour of their daughter whose nightmare was clearly not nearly as important as the way his wife was painting the kitchen walls. The rain had come just after twelve but so had the last of the removal vans, as Lavender saw fit to inform him, knowledge he sarcastically parroted to Millie who he had been struggling to get into the dress that he was forced to team with a pair of his wife’s brown tights in order to put something on the girl’s legs to keep her warm. Lavender was hardly practical with her clothing choices. She had no idea about the concept of practicality over image. Thankfully, Elliot was not wearing a suit and instead a pair of tan trousers, a button down shirt and a jumper knitted by his grandmother over the top. Upon seeing him in it, Seamus decided to dig out Millie’s jumper and pulled that over her head, deciding that even if it didn’t really go, at least she’d be warm, and set about combing her hair out once more while Lavender painstakingly fixed her own.
Half an hour after the initial dispute pertaining to intruding on the lives of their new neighbours, Seamus was heaving a more than willing Millie up onto his shoulders, ignoring the glares from his wife at his sense of propriety – or lack thereof – and eyeing nervously his boy who was the one to carry the basket of fruit because his errant mother didn’t want to wrinkle her own dress. And so down the road they went, Seamus being careful to keep Elliot on the inside of him despite Lavender’s pouting about not being able to hold her husband’s hand – as if she missed the sight of her daughter on his shoulders that clearly needed to have his attention, and the boy holding the basket that was larger – and no doubt, heavier – than him.
Thankfully, the foursome arrived at the house that was still abuzz with activity before the rain had begun. Boxes were strewn across the porch, the path and around the low brick wall and Seamus couldn’t help but have a glance here and there, towards the car that had its boot open, only half emptied of the boxes it housed. The front door was open – no doubt a result of the overwhelming activity – and that alone was encouragement for Lavender to just waltz in. Elliot made to follow her but Seamus leaned down, hastily tugging at the basket and hauling the boy back to stand next to him. Lavender could make a mockery of herself by all means, but certainly not his children.
“Hello?” She called loudly into the house. “Homeowners? Are you here?”
“Obviously,” Seamus muttered to himself with a roll of his eyes. Could she get any worse? Probably.