April 26th, 1888 — Black Home, Cumbria
Some and now none of you
Take me back to the night we met
Hannah wasn't here. Thom didn't know where she was, but he knew where she certainly was not, and that was at this damned party. He'd even arrived relatively late after seeing through some last minute additions to the first advertisement for Quaderash, and he had even had the presence of mind to feel bad about leaving his antisocial depressive of a wife alone at a house party for a few hours to fend for herself, only to discover upon his arrival that she had not come, and no one seemed to have any supposition that she would.
He was, to be brief, not pleased. But he could hardly be obvious about that. It was embarrassing enough to be here alone; to be here alone and surprised by it would be a social blow from which even a charismatic gentleman like himself might spend a month or more recovering from. He didn't have a month to waste lying low, like Hannah was doing. The social season was almost upon them, and Quidditch would start up in a week. He had a gala already scheduled, and a new sport in the process of being launched. He didn't have the time or energy to deal with still more whispers of marital troubles. Merlin, why couldn't Hannah just be like every other society wife? It wasn't as though he was making inconsiderate or unreasonable demands on her time. Chastity had never struggled to do the bare minimum required for a woman of her status, and she had been raised by a bloody map maker.
Now that he was here, though, leaving would have been akin to flying a white flag admitting to the embarrassment he had tried, so far, to at least disguise. He'd put it about that his wife was very ill (which, for all he knew, might have been the truth; it wasn't as though the two had spoken in the month prior to this) and tried to divert the conversations, whenever possible, to other matters. Of course, it was inevitable that sooner or later he would find himself engaged in a conversation with the hostess, though it made him feel the slight of Hannah's absence all the more keenly. Ursula, he assumed, would not believe the lie that Hannah was simply home sick. Maybe she would be kind enough not to bring it up, but after how they'd parted ways last summer he wasn't sure he'd earned any kindness, in her eyes.
"Mrs. Black," he greeted, formally but pleasantly enough. "Many happy returns."