James Potter’s jaw fell slack. Something in the back of his mind, a muscle memory if you will, conjured the voice of his mother, urging him not to gawp like his Uncle Ron. James felt his stomach twist uncomfortably inside of him as the association with his mother drummed up the usual images – ones that had taken months to regain, ones that he wished he hadn’t bothered to try so hard to retrieve. He snapped his jaw shut and bit the inside of his cheek, urging himself to gain some semblance of composure. Semblance being the accurate term, of course, because total composure would never be something James Potter could attain.
“Sloane,” he repeated dumbly, somehow enjoying the way her name rolled around his mouth, smoothing over his tongue before breaking the pink barrier of his lips and condensing on the crisp air.
A face to the name helped, in a way. In truth, James had not been sure who he was expecting to move into his spare room. He’d known a woman and he’d supposed young because it was rare for women verging into their late twenties and thirties to be rootless, regardless of whether they were tourists or not. There was a slight … well, there was something in their gait that suggested assuredness, assuredness which did not mean they necessarily needed to rush anywhere, or even rush at all. So young, he’d had pegged. That didn’t mean he was necessarily prepared for the woman on his doorstep, though.
“I was meant to pick you up at the station,” he lifted his right arm, which had fallen slack by his side, and squinted through his glasses at the time. She was early. Moreover, she was here.
James couldn’t prevent a flush of embarrassment reaching the surface of his cheeks. He stepped back from the door and opened it wider, urging her to come inside with a cock of his head and a bright smile.
“I am sorry. I promise I’ll be a little bit more eloquent in a second. I fear you’ve caught me rather by surprise. A good surprise but, um … entirely unexpected. Oh, ah! Here comes Alfie!”
Sure enough, the dog was returning with a rather large stick between his teeth. James brought his lips together, a disapproving look turning them down at the sides, and he could only watch as Alfie deposited the stick with the others that were piled on the front grass – part of a strange collection that the dog was creating. He then wound himself past James and Sloane, sniffing briefly at the latter, and padded back upstairs, leaving small, muddy paw prints in his wake.
“And that’s Alfie.” James shut the door behind her. “He’s … one of a kind.” James chuckled, shaking his head.
“Would you like to come up?” He gestured to the staircase. “It’s tidier than it usually is, I fear. It’s all a mirage.” He laughed again despite himself and hopped up onto the first step.
The living room was, as promised, much tidier than it normally was. It was a long, rectangular room that was personalised in a way that showed the Potter man to be much more sentimental than he liked to paint himself. Photographs harking back to a happier past were littered across the mantelpiece, the fire crackling pleasantly within the hearth. The colours and furniture were also reminiscent of home. Home-home. Although this was a fact that James had yet to truly recognise. He had the usual modern accompaniments, a television, etc., although his bookshelves were dominated by magical books and there was a perch by the large, bay window that his owl would have been on had she not been out, sending a letter to Teddy that inquired after his health.
Through an archway was the kitchen and dining room, done up in a similar fashion. There was a cookbook open on the countertop, that page and many others stickied in order for James to remember to cook something from within. The washing up, regrettably, needed to be done but was waiting in an orderly pile next to the sink. James also noted with a wry smile that there were two cups waiting for them, filled up to the top with tea. He took his, casting out a hand for Sloane to take hers if she so wished, adding in a soft tone that the landlady-cum-housekeeper who lived below him was very good at doing a disappearing job despite not being a witch herself. Or, well, James didn’t think she was, anyway, but who knew?
In the dining room, a door led off to what would be Sloane’s room if she so wished and that was where James led her, opening it up so that she could see for herself.
And blessedly, that room was pristine. The window was open, letting in a faint breeze that ruffled the beige curtains. A bed dominated the room, covered in a pale yellow bedspread that James had been assured was tasteful. There was a chest of drawers, a wardrobe, and a desk complete with a chair and a lamp. There was everything she needed, really – or James hoped so, at least. He’d tried to make the room functional and homey and had even found some art depicting the seaside to go on the cream coloured walls.
“I don’t think interior decorating is my bag,” he admitted bashfully, reaching up to rub the back of his head, only serving to muss it up even more than it already was. “I wanted to make it nice, though. Hopefully it’s, um… done the trick. How… how are you liking London so far?”