It was one of those rare smouldering days that gave leave to stuffy, intolerable evenings that riddled a persisting heat into the bodies of those resigned to work within the atmosphere, one that no amount of cool drinks or freezing showers could dislodge. In the end, the t-shirt that had grown uncomfortably sticky around the body of Baldric Wood had been abandoned, stuffed into his rucksack that was slung on one shoulder as he ducked back out into the sunshine, a white paper bag hanging loosely in his fingers, the sound of potions gurgling against their glass sides and pills shaking this way and that in their own little canisters accompanying the cacophony of sound made up of the clanging change in Baldric’s back pocket and the tapping keychain hanging from the zip on his bag.
St. Mungo’s would never be a place he’d be used to, especially not when he entered into the hospital for his own sake, not his mother’s. The morning and most of the early afternoon, leading into the evening, had been spent on an examination table getting prodded and poked at before being taken out into one of the gardens only to have Quaffles thrown at him to test his reactions. Baldric had survived on that front but what they were taking note of wasn’t his ability to catch but what happened to him after physical activity. Needless to say, there was plenty to write down. He mostly noticed the way his hands shook and the manner in which he struggle to twist and bend his arms or lift them at all. He could feel the eyes of the stoic, solemn healers on him and he said nothing. Felt nothing. Couldn’t muster it within himself to take their silent criticism. It wasn’t his fault.
The young man had been discharged again though his personal healer – Jeff Houseman – was truly considering not doing so. It had been months since Baldric had actually gone into St. Mungo’s and had an honest, candid talk to someone about, well, himself. The usual things were rattled off: drink less, quit smoking. The latter was something he was now being forced to do with the healer writing out a formal instruction. They needed, apparently, to test him without the nicotine dependency. Apparently, given the latter stages of puberty which were almost null and finished now, they hadn’t gotten any decent results as since he’d been fifteen or sixteen, Baldric had smoked. Everything they had one him from that point onwards was based upon his body with nicotine in his system. They wanted it out, totally and completely – at least before he turned twenty.
What they’d left him with, also, was a litany of potions which he had to start taking again. They all had familiar names, along with the pills whose little bright purple and yellow blobs were old friends of Baldric’s. Suddenly he was placed back into his younger self, a boy who was fed things to keep him level, stable, able to play sport. They put him into it because it did the job of a lot of the pills, got the blood pumping and all the rest of it. He played less sport now, something he’d also been instructed to rectify with the casual running to be dropped in favour of him picking up football again – and regularly, too – the running would return when he could show he’d do it religiously. On top of that, also, he’d changed. Some things didn’t do the trick anymore, or did, they didn’t know. He didn’t go to see them enough to be sure. But they had a game plan now. Baldric didn’t feel better for it but somehow it assuaged whatever fears played havoc with him during the small hours of the night.
He returned to the Hayes’ home in good time but he’d missed dinner, having elected to have a cup of coffee and a sandwich at a café in London, not moving from his place there until the sun had set fully and darkness began to rule the roost. He shut the door behind himself, announcing his entrance, and pulled his feet out of his shoes. Then he padded into the kitchen, pausing briefly upon seeing Bridget stood by the sink but he entered regardless, putting his things down on the kitchen island, unzipping his bag to retrieve his shirt which he quickly pulled over his head for decency’s sake. He’d sleep in nothing but boxers later, he promised himself, already beginning to feel uncomfortable with the cotton against his skin.
“I’m sorry I missed dinner,” Baldric expressed sincerely, sitting himself down on one of the stools. He dropped his rucksack down onto the floor by the handle but he kept the bag of hospital goodies on the table, his lips turning down as he opened it up again, taking out the instructions Jeff had written out for him. It was a reminder of everything they’d talked about as well as the when and where aspects of taking the potions and other titbits as though Baldric needed reminding. There were a few new additions to the menu, however, which absurdly, cynically, made him a little excited.
Baldric’s hand felt for the group of vials, kept together with an elastic band in their box, that were old, familiar friends. He unclipped the box and pursed his lips a little, his fingers touching at the glass, his gaze inspecting the bright pink contents. He swallowed, tucking the vials back into the box before setting them down on the side. Out came the rest until for some inexplicable reason, his portion of the counter was covered before him and the bag deflated sadly.
“God,” he murmured, turning around a conical vial of lime green potion. That was for tremors if he remembered rightly. The majority of them had to do with internal things, though, and because of the long-term disuse of many of them, the healers were astounded to find Baldric could walk, let alone sustain a cigarette habit and a semi-normal relationship with another human being – especially in the physical capacity Baldric had been forced to admit he enjoyed. Regardless of his assurances that he was fine, they knew quite a bit more than he did on the health front and the internal treatment needed to resume. If it didn’t, the healers were quite forthcoming about their anxiety about the ‘what ifs’ at the end of that sentence.
“Did you know that the Cruciatus Curse wasn’t made ‘unforgivable’ until 1717? It was after the Wizards’ Council actually became the Ministry of Magic.” Baldric fiddled with the vial stopper. “People still use it though, willy nilly. They used it on my mum… the Death Eaters, that is. While I was still… like, while she was pregnant with me.”
Baldric didn’t know entirely where this was coming from but he had felt it building up within him. Bridget was not a woman who he felt scared to talk to. In fact, her kindly face and gentle disposition made her a woman he desperately wanted to talk to. He was loath to let this avenue be pursued by the healers. He didn’t want to be someone they worried over. He was not the child that couldn’t walk properly anymore. He wasn’t the child whose speech was still slurred because of the infirmity of the muscles around his mouth. He wasn’t the child they had assumed wouldn’t live further than five or, if he did, never show magic. He was fine. He was normal. He was human. But of course, just like his mother who, equally as stubborn believed nothing was wrong, he was deteriorating too in that slow way they’d always threatened he would. He should have taken heed from the example she set but the arrogance in him was too much. The desire to just be normal was overriding. And now, it was having the opposite effect.
“They used to laugh and say they didn’t even know how I was alive. I wasn’t really sure either for a long time but it was these things…” Baldric lifted up the conical vial, inspecting it with a heavy sigh. “Sort of, helped… I guess. She got the Welsh Green Itch… and it, mucked her up. My mum, that is. It made everything worse. I mean, I got it too but I was still… I dunno, still taking these then I think. Stopped after when she really started to go… and now it’s like, we’re just waiting and waiting and the healers are beginning to worry about me because I’m now sort of… the same age she was, I guess and they’re scared and I’m terrified. I dunno what I’m going to do if it’s the same scenario for me. I mean, I know it’s not. I feel healthy but everything’s just been so bad now for so long that I’m beginning to wonder whether the icing on the cake of this terrible year would be that no, the muscle wasting is setting in, the erratic behaviour’s back and here to stay. My nerves are shot. The body is dying. That’s kind of … I dunno.”
Baldric rubbed a hand across his face and began to shove the things back into the bag. He needed to tell Ben. It had been nagging at him nearly as long as the need to take the man with him to see Alicia had been. But there was reluctance there for both of them, Ben too eager to indulge the part of Baldric that didn’t want to go at all. And Baldric, he was too eager to give up, too. Plus, there was the whole debacle of the pair of them being married, crucially not to each other. Nights of sneaking in and out of the flat were beginning to grate on Baldric’s nerves in a more emotional sort of way, not physically like the shaking hands post-Quaffle catching activity did. He was sick of it. He wanted to be free of the infernal law. He wanted his lover. He wanted to be able to explain on his own terms. He was desperate to. He wanted to be with that man. But life was now really getting in the way and Baldric was losing the good fight. He found it difficult to roll over and get up and face lessons. He couldn’t go on living in limbo land like this much longer. He couldn’t bear it.
“The other half … he, uh, doesn’t know.” Baldric pulled absently at his neck. “Stuff has kind of ruined everything and I’m … I dunno. I don’t even know what to say or what to do anymore and being here is… stupidly weird. I mean, it’s lovely, you’ve got a great home and your son is a brilliant teacher but I don’t’ know whether I’m coming or going and potions aside, Mrs Hayes… I don’t know what to do with myself. I just want to move back in with Ben and resume my life, do you know what I mean? Like… I’m not cut out for this. Because I can’t … I don’t want to be waiting forever. I’m not as patient as I’d like to think but I’m so done with sneaking about. I’d love to go on a date. Dinner. Movies. Walk in the park. Coffee before we go home. Like, that’s what I’d love but I can’t because this stupid law has ruined everything and now, it seems, I’m to be drugged up to keep level and sensible, too.”
Baldric put the vial down roughly, the sound of the glass hitting the granite top rumbling around the room. He rubbed his hands across his face again and growled into his palms, unable to focus his anger. It was muted, though. Weary. Weary anger. There wasn’t a lot left in the tank and he needed advice. What was he supposed to do?
“Do I try to make this work or do I just need to look after my own interests for the minute … finish my N.E.W.Ts. Apply to unis, all the rest of it? I could really, really use your help.”
And there it was, the whole terrible tale laid out before him. That was what there was to it. Already it was too much and he hadn’t even touched on his father. Oliver was now something of a nonentity though. There were bigger, more pressing matters at hand. But even without the involvement of his father, the situation was far, far from redeemable.