“Theodore, you need to get out of my bar.”
It was a simple enough request, one that Elijah Krum had been trying in vain to impress upon his friend for nearly an hour, more than four after closing time. Theodore grunted, though the words seemed to have gone unattended to as the man continued to keep his head buried in his arms, the shirt sleeves sodden with a mixture of alcohol and tears. He’d gone to Elijah first, to drown his sorrows in the usual manner purebloods had the habit of doing. Elijah, upon the intelligence being muted to him sorrowfully, closed his restaurant early and the two commiserated.
He’d not wanted to relive his own personal tragedy in trying to get to the bottom of Theodore’s. But he had. As Theodore spoke, his lips moving uselessly over pained sounds, Elijah felt the loss of warmth in his arms and he poured the whisky a little more liberally. Katherine. Kitty. His baby girl. She was like smoke to him. He could perceive her in the finest corners of his mind, imagine her face, see her smile and feel the down of her scarlet hair. Yet she was gone. Snatched from him and none of the revenge the world could provide could console him.
Mira did. Mira consoled him. He loved her, still, even though they were long finished. Their daughter was the light of his world. Whilst he had his other children, nothing compared to the feeling of his own infant in his arms and he loved Alice dearly, passionately, madly and he did not think in a million years he would be able to come back from that if he was to lose her – if he was to lose any of his other children. It wasn’t something easily lived through. Indeed, he doubted Theodore was going to make it through the night if he continued down the road he was going.
Elijah resolved to write to Keiran and Millie. In the end it was the blonde woman who turned up, arms crossed over her chest as she entered in through the back door. Elijah embraced her tightly, kissing her temple fondly as he commented on how lovely she looked, a customary thing to fall from the artist’s lips, and she returned that he was merely drunk and he laughed a barking guffaw that agreed with her but he was not nearly as inebriated as Theodore who fell from his stool and into her arms, slopping a kiss over her cheek and expressing glibly how much he loved her.
“I love you too, Theo,” she winced, taking a step back with one foot to brace his weight on her thinner frame. “C’mon you great arse, stand up.”
The two battled for a while, Theodore bursting into a fresh round of tears which made Elijah wince and Millie entirely lose her easy, mocking tone. She embraced him tightly, the man finding his feet and lifting her up off of the floor. He spun them for a few moments before setting Millie down, muttering quietly that he’d like to go. She nodded, smoothing her hands fondly across his cheeks as a mother would their child and she looked to Elijah, inquiring if he’d be alright. He’d be alright, he assured her. He would kip in the back room. With a crack the other two left.
And Elijah was alone to finish the whisky.
The Bulgarian man woke to the sound of tapping on the window in his office. He’d passed out on the chaise couch and had been dead to the world until an owl came in search of him. Hung over and decidedly irritable he lifted his wand and set the window flying open, causing the owl to flop into the room. Elijah turned over, tossing his wand away, and groaned, throwing his arm over his eyes. He was bitten then, by the livid being and the post was dropped on his chest. He flipped it away and shouted aimlessly at the bird before dropping his arm, his hand groping out for the post.
An hour later and Elijah had managed to go home, found everything safe and secure at home with his old nanny, Stelladora, having elected to take care of the children and he changed, made the breakfast for them and, crucially, sobered up. He promised to be home early, having no intention of going back to the bar, and apparated from the parlour after kissing his eldest daughter goodbye. Then he found himself outside of Grimmauld Place, much as it upset him, and from there it was only a stone’s throw to the fast food restaurant he’d been summoned to.
Elijah loathed being summoned yet with his hands in his pockets he found himself entering the restaurant, his nose wrinkling at the less than pleasant smells that emanated from the kitchen behind the counter. Deciding to order something, Elijah lifted his gaze up to the board as he entered the cue. In the end he purchased a couple of blueberry muffins and a cup of coffee, decidedly unimpressed with what was on offer. It was decided then that Elijah preferred his privileged pureblood life. He’d shirked the pureblood part but he liked the money and he liked the nice restaurants. He hadn’t realised how distasteful he actually was of such establishments until he owned a restaurant of his own. This certainly was not a place he wanted to go with anyone.
It was easy to find Hallie, sat in a booth nursing a cup of tea which looked about as appetising as his coffee and the offering he’d gotten from the counter. Nonetheless, after pocketing his Muggle money he sat down opposite her, putting his coffee down and reaching into the bag to supply her with a muffin, setting out his own in front of him.
“A little birdie told me something and personal experience tells me you’ve not been eating a whole lot lately.” Elijah began gently, tapping the table in the direction of the muffin. “If you only pick at it, sweetheart, at least have something.”
He had a feeling that Theodore shouldn’t have told him. He had a feeling he shouldn’t have told Hallie he knew. Elijah wasn’t going to scrimp over what was what, however. He knew how to look after people. Granted, he wouldn’t have done it with a muffin and a cup of tea atypically but it was a start.
“I would have gotten you something else,” Elijah added after taking a mouthful of his coffee. He glanced at it despairingly and set it down again. “But the coffee is shite so I don’t expect the food to be much better. Muffins are generally safe, aren’t they? I’m more of an eggs and bacon kind of bloke, I fear.” He sat back and looked at her expectantly, wondering idly what this was all about.
“We’re not here for any other reason but the fact that you want to know something, aren’t we?” He inquired interestedly. “Now what, pray tell, pretty lady, would that be I wonder?”