Caleb Flint was in need of a reason to waste away the ever turning hands of time, and the adjustment and readjustment of his cuff links seemed as good an excuse as any. He stood in the doorway, shoulder providing relief as it sagged against the frame, fingers moving in a fumbling fashion, having grown tired of the routine. He didn’t his head, just raised an eyebrow and peeked upward, chin still drawn towards his chest. He couldn’t have planned a better image. He was striking.
Camila was the complete antithesis to him. She was wearing yoga pants and a baggy Harvard sweatshirt, her hair pulled up in a messy bun, reading glasses perched carefully on her nose. Her bare feet stretched across the hardwood, her toes wiggling as they tapped the floor, a hum in her throat, her lips moving slowly as she read, deep brown eyes darting across the screen of her laptop. Her fingers paused, resting over the keyboard like a pianist waiting for musical inspiration to grip her. Her lips had frozen, slightly parted, and she turned her head, eyebrow rising in thought, searching for the word that would round out the sentence she was working with.
His picturesque stance looked planned and perfect. But Camila was an unplanned masterpiece, and she didn’t even seem to notice or care.
“Cam, we are expected somewhere.”
“Dubious,” she murmured.
He lifted his head. “Dubious. No, Mum owled, again, mind-“
She shook her head, tapping out the seven letters, and he realized his folly without any need for her to explain further. He sighed again, this time heavily and with eyes trained on her. She turned slowly, a dimple next to the corner of her mouth and raised eyebrows betraying her irritation for smug amusement. A second later and she turned her entire chair to face her brother, her head tilt growing dangerously imbalanced as she folded her hands into her lap, looking just a shade to sassy to truly be a teacher, though her tone was just so. “Yes?” she said, blinking.
He straightened up, shoulders relaxing as he did so. “Oh, come- Cami, we’re going to be late.”
She flicked her eyes skyward and turned back to her laptop. “It takes all of a second to apparate.”
He shifted with a sigh, again playing with the cuff links. “I hate apparating. I’d rather take a car.”
“Not very wizardly of you,” she said faintly, distracted but still willing to echo the sentiments of their parents.
He smirked, a snort of a laugh bubbling from his lips. “You’re one to talk. You know, no one in the Ministry checks email.”
“I’ll have an intern copy it.”
There was no winning. It was something he knew, something he was well acquainted with, but still just as frustrating now as it had ever been. His eyes glossed over the clock and she tapped a final key with a decisive flick of her index finger. She certainly looked pleased as she stood up, taking in the accomplishment. She turned to look at Caleb who looked expectant for an explanation. She let out a breath. “I need to get ready.”
His mouth tipped open in exaggerated shock as she turned on her heel and strode into her bedroom. He could hear the rustle of clothes and the dropping of her sweater, so he flopped himself into the cushy loveseat and rubbed his temples. Merlin, he hated apparating.
“We could have called a car if you weren’t so responsible and committed to your job!”
“I feel like I shouldn’t have to apologize for that!”
He lolled his head, reaching out to finger the edges of a vase, the flowers about a day away from wilting something badly. Who had gotten her flowers?
“What were you working on?”
She exited the bedroom, somehow already changed into a dress and looking near ready to go. She reached up to pull the tie out of her hair as she curved her path and headed for the restroom, presumably to finish her hair and makeup. “New legislation. Makes trade easier between magical communities through a relaxation of certain taxes. Could do wonders for the economy.” She poked her head out, mascara wand held like a conductor’s baton, glasses shed. “Not that you care.” She finally offered him a genuine smile and a crinkled nose, before disappearing.
“Excuse you, I care a bunch about the economy!” Caleb called back.
“A bunch, huh? Shuffling money between this company and that company, oh you’re a regular whiz kid.”
“I have my ideas.”
She hummed, probably too busy applying her classic dark shade of lipstick to say something snarky. Caleb stood and adjusted the vase’s placement on the table. “Sure. Get this. Great idea. A piece of legislation of my own.” He wandered toward the hallway, hands trailing over the walls, glancing at the hanging portraits. Everything about the house was so… correct. How was she always so right about everything? “When someone dies and all their assets and property begin to be dispersed, distribution is based first on blood. So a pureblood man marries a halfblood woman, dies. Property and assets first go through his pureblood siblings.”
He reached the door. Camila was staring at herself in the mirror, but didn’t seem to see herself. She noticed movement and her eyes darted his way. She immediately leaned forward and tapped a layer of gloss across her lips. “And what does that have to do with the economy?”
“Keeps money with the magic. Pretty soon, muggles are going to have all our money.”
“And this will stop that?”
Caleb noted the edge in her voice. He shifted his weight. “It’ll help,” he said, as though baiting her.
She flicked her eyes upward and passed over her eyelashes one last time. “Doesn’t seem to be that… direct. Or maybe too direct. Needs some refinement.”
Caleb cleared his throat. “Are you okay, Cam?”
She popped the lid on her mascara wand and dropped it into drawer, sliding it closed. She turned and looked at her brother, allowing a warm smile. She looked a picture, but that effortless glow was gone. “Yeah. Just dreading mum as usual.”
He smirked and they turned to head for the door.
Dinner was over and they were finally shedding their auras of chilled perfection that their parents insisted they wear on every family gathering. Satan’s was a bit too obvious for Camila, her words not his, so they found themselves slipping into a magical nightclub in the heart of magical London, a real high end place where the bouncers could eject you for the smallest digressions against dress code. Caleb checked his suit jacket and he watched as Camila reached up to unhook her pearls. In a twist of her hand, the expensive string had disappeared, banished somewhere infinitely more safe.
The pushed through the throng of people, the path to their favorite perch instinctual from their many nights of deciding they had been too good for too long. They slipped upstairs, following a metal spiral staircase and then turned out at the second landing, handing through a sliding glass door.
The balcony had music as well, but it was not nearly as devastating to the ears as it was inside. Here, people pulled out cigars and cigarettes, ordered from a small bar off to the side, and gripped at the elbows and collars of new acquaintances as they tried to draw strangers in to a sense of intimacy for the night.
Caleb glanced over at his sister who was smiling patiently at a man probably in his early thirties who was smoking a cigarette and looking her way. Caleb lifted an eyebrow. “First round’s on me,” he said, and made his way to the bar. There he ordered Camila her gin martini and some cognac for himself, feeling the eyes of the women who had gathered there for their third and fourth lemon drop shots. He turned his back on the bar to see Camila had joined the debonair gentleman and was now smoking one of his cigarettes, looking completely at ease. He flicked his eyes skyward and grabbed one of the women roaming with shots, asking her to deliver the martini to his sister.
He turned and rapped his knuckles on the bar. “A round of shots, all around,” he called, a smile playing on his lips. The women all gasped and ooh-ed with appreciation.
Yes, this more than made up for dinner.