“I’m not sure how to live with someone.”
The expression of sincere honesty was out before she could stifle herself, hanging in the air and no doubt making him wonder why. She’d never truly felt content in her home and as soon as her parents no longer cared about when she came home, only as long as eventually she did, she spent as little time in her childhood house as possible. She loathed the Gryffindor tower and the snippy, griping girls who she’d thought she’d left behind and, doubtlessly, the sentiment went both ways. She was careless, messy and had a habit of leaving her socks around the place, regardless of whether they’d been worn or not. Her ash tray, bought courtesy of Marigold Truman who’d gotten sick of the Marlboro ash on the window sill she liked to sit and read in, was always full and beyond that, the area around her bed was a tip. At home, whenever she was home rarely, it was even worse.
Millie felt her lips twitch at the sides. “Honestly, I think my roommates would be glad to see the back of me,” she confessed.
Habit from when she’d been in Jamaica during a gap year she’d hadn’t been authorised to take had followed her home and no longer did her roommates make an effort to wake her up. They’d seen enough of her body for one lifetime by the time they’d gotten round to figuring out she no longer bothered with much more than a pair of pants unless it chilled within the tower; in which case she’d go in search of some shorts and a t-shirt. Of course, she wasn’t going to tell Keiran that. She doubted highly they’d share the same bed unless, of course, he had no other place for her to go. She would’ve taken the couch quite willingly and though she would’ve been incredulous about its rumoured lumpiness, she doubted highly she’d be allowed if Keiran could help it.
“As it is, I don’t really have a master plan but to be frank I don’t want to go to Azkaban over something so trivial.” Millie brought her hands back onto the table, keeping them loosely clasped together as she weighed up her words. “If you have no objects I’m quite content to press on. I suppose it will be, what, the nineteenth? That’s our deadline, isn’t it?” Millie nodded after a moment’s thought and looked up at the sight of the waitress’s arrival. Certainly, being a witch of age had its perks and, most importantly of all, beyond Apparation, it meant she could drink; and Merlin, did she need it.
“A glass of red currant rum, please.” Millie ordered with a pleasant smile. “And, uh,” she faltered a little at the lunch before repairing her sentence smoothly with, “anything that’s good for lunch, please.”
The waitress hastily noted down Millie’s order and awaited Keiran’s. Once both were noted down, the waitress simmered away towards the bar, throwing a promise over her shoulder that the drinks would be brought to them as soon as possible.
“Perhaps we could try it,” Millie suggested hesitantly. “Four weeks is quite a while. If you’re not sick of me before then, I think we’re onto a winner.” She laughed a little and smiled, feeling her shoulders relax a little bit before deciding to press on. “Merlin, let’s just get all of this rubbish out of the way and then you can tell me about stamp collecting or something.”
She grinned impishly again and then mentally began to list off what they’d need to be talking about. Accommodation was dealt with, at least, well, sort of.
“Finances I guess...is a big thing, isn’t it? Uh, I don’t really need much and I generally pay for my, uh, habits, if you will, out of what I get working for the Ministry so that’s not really a problem. I suppose if we want to later we could merge our vaults. Um. I’m willing to let my mum battle it out with yours on the subject of the wedding, to be honest. I’ll turn up for the honeymoon,” Millie smirked, “because who doesn’t want a holiday? But, uh, well... on that front, the wedding front, I’m about as good as milking a sheep when you need a cow.”
Millie breezed over that and continued on, desperate to jump the difficult hurdles first and wipe away the awkwardness it brought.
“So, I’m pretty sure the Ministry are after offspring, right. Erm.” Millie felt her cheeks warm a little bit. “And while shagging one’s Professor is a delightfully exciting endeavour to embark on... having children with said Professor-cum-husband is not entirely what I imagined. I suppose we should just play that one by ear, hm? I’ll let you know if you strike my fancy, eh?”
Millie, despite herself, couldn’t help but laugh then and she shook her head happily before relaxing back into the chair, the waitress having returned for the briefest of moments to put their drinks down.
“Is there anything else, do you reckon? Home, finance, marriage, babies. That about covers it, doesn’t it? Now you have to tell me about you and I’ll then tell you about me because if I must marry you,” her eyes twinkled with mirth, “then I demand you tell me something interesting - anything, even! Just...just something.”