June 13th, 1888 - Magdalena's on Diagon Alley
How long has this been goin' on?
You've been actin' so shady
I've been feelin' it lately, baby
-Charlie Puth
You've been actin' so shady
I've been feelin' it lately, baby
-Charlie Puth
Maggie had been busy since the grand opening. Not to mention, things had been awkward with Lorcan since that first night. And that kiss. She hadn't forgotten it. If anything, it was one of the only things that she thought of beyond the happenings at the bakery. It haunted her almost nightly but the night had crashed all around them that night and she'd avoided it as best as she could. It was easier to throw herself into her work, heading down into the bakery early in the morning to get things started before Lorcan was even up and then remained there late into the night. It was working. Sort of.
But then she'd received a letter from her mother. Some mysterious fog had started spreading and it had hit Wellingtonshire. There was talk of it spreading further and she wanted to know if Cane could come and stay with her at the new shop over the summer to be away from it. Maggie had been hesitant at first but she still hadn't managed to hire someone else to help work in the shop so his help could certainly be used. She'd quickly penned back a letter to her mother to say he was welcome to come. Then it had dawned on her that they only had two bedrooms. She couldn't very well make her little brother share a room with Lorcan, could she? And it would be even more awkward to have him share a room with her.
Damn. She'd asked Burt to take over the front that afternoon and had headed back upstairs to the apartments and gone straight into Lorcan's room. She'd have to tidy his room up and move his things into her room. It was the only feasible option she had. They'd have to share a room for the time being. It was only a summer after all. She could handle it. But amidst her tidying up, she came across a handful of letters with very obvious feminine handwriting. She made the mistake of sitting on the edge of his bed to glance through them. She could hardly believe what she was reading.
Anger flared up almost instantly along with pain. Pain that caused her eyes to burn with tears but she refused to cry over him. She had thwarted his advances after all, right? She was surely the one to blame but she could hardly believe that he had actually sent an ad into that awful magazine as a result! She'd been slandered by them. He had, too! She finished what she was doing and gathered up the letters and threw them onto the kitchen table before making a quick trip downstairs to tell Burt he could leave for the day and putting a closed sign on the shop doors and turning the lights out.
When it was all done, she made her way back up to the kitchen and sat down at the kitchen table to wait.
But then she'd received a letter from her mother. Some mysterious fog had started spreading and it had hit Wellingtonshire. There was talk of it spreading further and she wanted to know if Cane could come and stay with her at the new shop over the summer to be away from it. Maggie had been hesitant at first but she still hadn't managed to hire someone else to help work in the shop so his help could certainly be used. She'd quickly penned back a letter to her mother to say he was welcome to come. Then it had dawned on her that they only had two bedrooms. She couldn't very well make her little brother share a room with Lorcan, could she? And it would be even more awkward to have him share a room with her.
Damn. She'd asked Burt to take over the front that afternoon and had headed back upstairs to the apartments and gone straight into Lorcan's room. She'd have to tidy his room up and move his things into her room. It was the only feasible option she had. They'd have to share a room for the time being. It was only a summer after all. She could handle it. But amidst her tidying up, she came across a handful of letters with very obvious feminine handwriting. She made the mistake of sitting on the edge of his bed to glance through them. She could hardly believe what she was reading.
Anger flared up almost instantly along with pain. Pain that caused her eyes to burn with tears but she refused to cry over him. She had thwarted his advances after all, right? She was surely the one to blame but she could hardly believe that he had actually sent an ad into that awful magazine as a result! She'd been slandered by them. He had, too! She finished what she was doing and gathered up the letters and threw them onto the kitchen table before making a quick trip downstairs to tell Burt he could leave for the day and putting a closed sign on the shop doors and turning the lights out.
When it was all done, she made her way back up to the kitchen and sat down at the kitchen table to wait.