The weather had not decided what it wanted to be all week but had finally decided on one of those perfect rainy days. The patter of the rain beat their windows at a steady pace, and every once in awhile a roll of thunder would shake their garden fence, rattle the panes of the greenhouse, make the house creak and moan as it stretched its beams. The grass and the odd plants that filled up their yard drooped beneath the weight of raindrops.
The day had started perfectly - Coach cancelled practice. Neither shop needed her, and she had not planned on going into work, as the kids had a holiday, and she wanted to arrange their day. With absolutely no commitments, now, she could spend the day spending time with the little people she loved most.
She had still woken up early - as Sunny had awoken them all to announce that it was, indeed, raining. Her rain boots on her hands she had not left the room until Jack had rolled out of bed, yanking a sweater on.
Breakfast made. Max was seen off. She double and triple checked that Goose and Sunny were dressed for cold weather, and then they were released. For a good hour or so, she sat on the small porch with a mug of hot tea, swathed in a blue sweater and a beanie, watching Goose and Sunny play knight and dragon - in which the dragon was the good guy, of course.
She should have relaxed during that hour, let her mind rest, should have just enjoyed watching her kids, her family, play and be merry on a day where her only obligation was to enjoy them. But as she watched them, her heart ached with the love she had for them. And it felt somewhat akin to another ache, an ache she had finally recognized and owned up to. Because it wasn't just the sickly boy and the feisty girl who occupied her heart. Her bedmate had rented space there as well.
It had been a week and not much had changed, except for the tone of the house. Somehow it was sweeter and tenser. As fortune would have it, work had called them both to work late that week and neither had seen much of each other, and when they did, they were both exhausted and unable (and secretly too scared) to break the silence on the topic of their feelings. Because Dyllan-Morrisons didn't talk about feelings. Dragons, werewolves, Quidditch, muggles, and mac n' cheese... sure. Love and family and not-divorce... no thanks.
All of that thinking was much earlier in the day. Night was falling now. Charlie was holed up in her room as well, probably nursing her newest weird plant that had not taken so kindly to the rain. Lize had come over and she and Sunny were building a fort, while Goose read aloud from his favorite book of medieval poetry. Jack had been attempting to fill the house with the smell of a gourmet apple pie... that had been charred to a crisp. She masked the smell with brownies and began working on a pork stew that Goose particularly loved and seemed right for a rainy night.
It had been a long day full of nothing. It was just what she had needed.