Keiran wasn't confused about what had happened. Honestly, he wasn't. He was just confused about what was going on with his students. As far as he could understand, the train had been attacked during his trip back to the school to teach. He really should have apparated to the school, and was having trouble understanding why he hadn't done so. He wasn't even in his quarters at Hogwarts, which was all the more confusing. Indeed, he opened his eyes, and found a different room surrounding him. Across the room, large brown eyes were watching him. Keiran blinked in surprise, pushing himself up very suddenly.
"Careful," the brunette warned, sitting up straighter in reaction to his strong wince.
"Adrienne," he started, brows pulling together, "What are you doing here?"
What on earth? His student should not have been able to get into his rooms, nonetheless be sitting there watching him. She may have been something of a Transfiguration nut, and he understood her mindset when it came to that. He honestly did. But he was staring at her like she was insane, and Adrienne seemed to be waiting for him to fall apart before her eyes. Yeah, okay, he was kinda hurting just then, but he wasn't entirely sure why. It was probably because of the train.
"Look, you were really.... out of it, Keiran," she replied, clearly not expecting him to lift his eyebrows when she addressed him differently. "Oh. Um. Right. So, Baldric and Millie brought you up here a while back and you just... you didn't have a clue what was happening. See, there are some things that you'll need to understand before you leave this room."
Keiran shook his head slowly, trying to figure out what exactly she thought he wasn't privy to. "I'm sure it's fine, Miss Reynolds."
Adrienne frowned, her expression immediately becoming one of sorrow. "See, that's what I mean, Keiran. That's what you called me earlier."
"That's your name..." He replied slowly, giving her a look that clearly said she was acting mental. "Why wouldn't I call you that?"
"It's not my name anymore. It hasn't been for... almost a year now," she attempted to explain, pushing herself forward in her chair to rest her elbows on her knees. "Tell me what today is."
Keiran scoffed, pushing himself up against the backboard and crossing his arms over his chest. "September first, twenty twenty-six."
"Wrong."
He blinked, shoulders relaxing. "What, I've been out for a few days? That makes sense. I didn't miss class, did I?"
"Kieran, you're not teaching this year," she began slowly. "I am."
He grew angry then, uninterested in arguing with a student who was clearly messing with him. He rolled his eyes, throwing off the sheets and moving to stand. "Keiran-" she started, standing immediately. He passed her a confused look but quickly found out what she was upset about. His left leg gave out, and he sank back onto the bed. His eyes shot to hers, lost and confused.
"What happened to me?" he asked immediately, tone short and aggressive. Adrienne looked torn, her eyes darting towards the door and then back to him. "Adrienne. Tell me."
"It's a really, really long story, Keiran." She attempted, shaking her head slowly back and forth. "I think you need to talk to Millie."
"Excuse me?" Keiran asked, once again unsure of what was happening. He only knew of one girl with that name, and she was one of his students - though, really, she wasn't often in class, so he wasn't even sure about that part. "The... Gryffindor, is it?"
Adrienne bit her lip before pouting to some extent. "You don't remember the Ministry's law, do you?"
"Why wouldn't I remember that? It only just happened. I may have been in an accident or something, but I'm not that ridiculous that I'd forget something so recent."
Why couldn't she just be straightforward? Why could she just tell him what the problem was instead of hedging things? Reaching to his bedside table, Keiran took up the glass of water there, looking over the rim of the glass at Adrienne, a little too obvious in his wish that she would leave and leave him to his own devices.
"Keiran, just... You're right about the day. It's the first of September. But it's twenty twenty-seven." Adrienne paused, watching him hesitantly. "I tell you this as someone who cares about you: There are some things you need to know before the opening feast tonight. And I'm going to lay it down, and then get Millie in here to talk to you. Because it affects her just as much as it affects you. See, the train accident was a lot worse than you believe it was. You nearly died, and it definitely seems like you lost about a year of time somewhere in that whole deal. See, last year, you were matched for the Marriage Law with Melissa Finnigan. You've been married to her for almost a year now. The Ministry calls you their first success story, because while you weren't the first ones married, you were the first who seemed to work. The first to publicly stand together without fighting.
"So you two were brought back to help with counseling the students going through the law and those looking for apprenticeships. See, you resigned at Christmas when the Ministry passed a law saying that half-breeds, for lack of a better word, were no longer allowed at Hogwarts. And you started up your own school," she explained, admiration evident in the tone of her voice and her expression. Keiran could see it staring back at him as he watched her, eyes wide with confusion and fear. "It was this huge secret and not many people knew about it. You had it at your mum's house and took such good care of those kids. My husband and I helped after coming into it as students, and you're the one that taught me how to be the professor I'm going to try to be this year."
Keiran blinked at her, the let out a confused huff of breath. "You're married, too?"
"Yeah," she laughed, finally seeing some of the tension leave him. He was starting to get it. He had lost a year, but he was starting to get some of the pieces. Soon, hopefully, he would be able to add it up for himself. Things would start coming back. "Now, we've got a couple hours before the feast starts, but you need to talk to Melissa. She's a professor, too, for Divination. So she'll be around all the time, and hopefully you'll just go right back to loving her as you so clearly... um, did. Do, I'm sure. I'm gonna go get her, yeah?"
Keiran looked conflicted for a moment, but nodded far quicker than she had expected him to. Giving him an encouraging smile, Adrienne stood once more and moved to the doorway. Closing the door behind her, Adrienne looked up at Melissa with a grin. "I've given him a bit of a rundown, but he wants to see you."