There was only one hour left to eleven, when Albus had remembered that Lily was going to be coming home.
He had stilled for a second, staring into space, eyelids still weighing down on him blearily. The shock filtered in for another second: him, Albus Potter, who had never forgotten a single birthday, who remembered that Victoire loved coffee, and Roxanne liked her Quidditch pages early in the morning, and sent Aunt Audrey her favourite records of Muggle music every Christmas till he was sixteen. Him, Albus Potter, who had been the first to hold Lily, even before James; staring in awe at that chubby face, that wispy tuft of black hair, those bright eyes; warmth blooming in his stomach every time she clutched at his thumb, or pouted plaintively and called "Al-by, phood." Him, Albus Potter who had thrown a ridiculous tantrum inside his head and had remained scowling the entire evening, when Lily had insisted on being taught flying by her eldest brother. Now that little sister was here to stay, with him. Not James, not Sawyer. And he forgot.
There was nothing to clean up, his house was always clean. There simply weren't enough things in it for it to get cluttered. He set to breakfast- pancakes, bacon, a side of fresh greens. Searched for the jar of black maple syrup for a solid twenty minutes, then stopped, jaw muscles tightening, muttered a curse then Accio'd it. Hesitated, then threw two eggs into the pan, extra cheese in the second. Put a vessel of water to boil, started reaching out for the tea leaves before he stopped again.
He....didn't quite recall what Lily had liked for a morning brew. She had just.....always been so young, and somehow all that he could remember was her seven-year old voice pleading with their mother for raspberry tea. Of course she didn't want that now. Maybe coffee....it was what they mostly had in America.
His hand hovered in mid air for a moment, before tightening and falling back to his side. Levitated all the dishes to the dining table, being careful not to drop or bump anything. Took out a chilled Coke can from the fridge, and pushed it by the first plate. It was a ridiculous combination for breakfast, but Lily had always liked the eccentric mashups as a kid. Maybe she would remember how addicted he had always been to the drink- and he squashed that thought at the back of his head, before it could fully form.
Stood in the room, motionless, looking at the bright, varied spread. It smelt nice. Albus thought of smiling, if only for a second.
Then the door-bell rang.
It was too long, and too fast: the minute between the time it rang, and the time his hand wrapped around the doorknob, pulling the door open. He didn't recognize the pale, gangly, dark-haired girl standing on his doorstep.
"Lily." Albus said, perhaps for the sake of saying something. He should tell her how much he missed her. "Let me get your trunk."
A hug maybe, or a kiss on the forehead was in order. Or, atleast a pat on the shoulder. He bent, hand fastening around the trunk-hold and turned around, walking inside.