Lorcan was usually at Slugs and Jiggers but he had merchandise arriving here today that he needed to take personal charge of. He had arrived early, grateful to get out of the mansion for the moment. The new baby, Xavier, had been irritable all night. The baby had Zada's blond hair and Lorcan's dark eyes and deep features. He also had the tendency of both of his parents to develop early. He was just over 4 months old and was just starting to get a swollen puffy gum where his first tooth would no doubt soon come in.
Zada was not exactly the most maternal woman Lorcan had ever know. She was a good consort for him, though, so as much as he hadn't ever truly embraced fatherhood, unless he could find competent staff, he did have to, periodically step up. It had been awkward at first, but the boy did seem to be bonding--or at least that was what Lorcan supposed it was--to him. Lorcan didn't really know what baby bonding looked like. He hadn't needed to experience it before now, odd as that would sound to some other man in love with fatherhood. Lorcan preferred taller, verbal children. He understood them better. He didn't understand babies. Hadn't wanted to.
He had a miserable headache and felt like the bones in his spinal column were still clanging together from the whiny shriek that had come out of the nursery by the hour all night. Lorcan had dressed in a rare quiet moment and had zipped out of the mansion, leaving Zada no choice but to step up.
Or so he thought. He heard someone in the front of the shop and was about to look to see who it was when he heard a crack of someone apparating in. And then it began again. The high pitched drone of a wailing baby. He whirled around to see his house elf standing in the front of the shop, with a blanketed bundle--his screaming son. He could tell by the shellshocked look on his house elf's face that Zada had threatened the life out of the elf if he didn't deliver the baby to Lorcan in about a nanosecond.
He sighed, rolling his eyes. He started towards the front of the shop and then saw who had been there ahead of the elf. Raine. That made him smile through his fatigue and pounding headache. She was a sight for sore eyes. Then, a second, more selfish thought entered his head. Did she like babies?