From the outside, it looked like a completely unassuming red brick cottage not all that far from Palace Green. Once inside, though, it was elegant and spacious, with a romantic courtyard in the back that was spectacular. Marcus hadn't actually had a place of his own since he had legally separated from The Harpy.
His children, all but one, lived with his parents. Ana, Marcus thought, was struggling to get Pavel out of her life. And then there was the whole issue of being a single working mom with two kids--both of which were in Hogwarts, but one of which was theirs--Marcus's and Ana's. It created a biological mishmash. In politically correct terms, a blended family that was complicated by the fact that Marcus and Ana were both still married to other people--people that neither of them wanted anything to do with anymore. Other than that, it was simple.
But, Poppy had thrown Ana back into his life suddenly, and all the feelings he had worked so many years to bury had resurrected with all the power they'd ever had. She was the woman he hadn't been able to get out of his mind, the one he hadn't wanted to let go of. He wanted to renew the romance. He wanted her back. But--his work demanded that he live, most of the time, with the Lupins. It was not conducive for going out to dinner and then whatever extracurricular activities that might lead through til breakfast.
He had considered simply, initially, dealing with a hotel suite on retainer, but that felt completely disrespectful towards her. She had been uprooted in her life enough. So had he. He hadn't really thought about having a place of his own again because he didn't foresee him using it much. He didn't consider himself having any one steady partner. Ana hadn't ever asked him to give up the impulsive one night stands, but he wasn't entirely unaware that if they got serious again, he might have to adjust.
And then there as the fact that between then, they had six kids, none of them under Hogwarts age, but, Merlin forbid, they were still at the age where Marcus's random impulsivity might, at some point, encourage activities that lead to more. So--a romantic nest for two--that had bedrooms for six offspring at least. How the hell did he do that?
Well, he decided it led to a sophisticated family home. A place where they could be a romantic couple of if they chose, or be a family if they needed to. He wasn't planning on swing sets and slides in the backyard, so the sophisticated courtyard suited him well. It was a five bedroom house. He had dedicated a room to his twin boys, a room for his youngest son and Ana's son to share, and a bedroom for Brooke and Poppy to share. That left a guest room--which, he figured would most likely go, most of the time, to providing places to sleep for squabbling siblings. He had decorated it as more of a den with a murphy bed, so that it could serve multiple purposes.
He'd made sure it had a decent kitchen with large commercial sized appliances. There was a family room with a large home theater, and a huge fully equipped gym with a lap pool. There were several luxurious bathrooms, and a large staff bedroom with an ensuite bath at the other end of the house. That space was large enough to convert into an efficiency apartment if the 'staff' wanted to do so. He'd simply hired someone he considered to be competent decorator, listed his needs, approved the sketches and the swatches and awaited the big reveal. He had requested it be fully equipped and he'd had boxes of some of his things and his children's things sent there and moved in already. He'd found out Poppy's sizes and he'd bought things for her and had taken great joy in doing it. He knew, unless Ana had changed much, what her sizes were. He had had, years ago, occasion to read the tags in her clothing. He remembered those details. And with three boys, he had a god idea what size Ana's boy was. He'd made sure they had all been remembered, and he had left plenty of space to bring in their own things. Groceries bought. Wine and the "important spirits" stocked in the wet bar in the family room. All essentials provided. Nothing left out.
What he wanted, tonight, was Ana. He didn't want to bring in the kids first until he and Ana had had at least one night of adult time in order to slow down and see where this would all lead. What he wanted, for certain, was to not lose her again. Not ever.
He had taken the weekend off and invited Ana for dinner Friday night, sent her roses with a romantic invitation, and a set of housekeys with the address. Then, he had asked Khaat's personal chef, Angus, to prepare a gourmet dinner for them. Angus was an auror who worked also for the Lupins, and, as part of his own personal interests, had gone to culinary school and was responsible for the top notch cuisine that fed the platoon that lived at the massive estate. Angus could more than take a cue. He was preparing a five star romantic dinner and then was going to disappear, literally.
With a little luck, she might still be here on Monday morning.