And I don't have the right / to ask where you go at night
But the waves hit my head / to think someone's in your bed
I don't want you to get it on / with nobody else but me
But the waves hit my head / to think someone's in your bed
I don't want you to get it on / with nobody else but me
18th August, 1888 — Magdalena's, Diagon Alley
Everything in his life might be crap. That was true. But Lorcan Byrne was an adaptable being, and so he had made admirable moves towards being good with the fact that everything in his life was crap, if he did say so himself.
Sealing his status as the biggest disappointment in a family full of loons? That was grand. Eloping with a woman who didn't love him, maybe didn't even like him anymore? That was grand, too; that had always been part of the plan. Feigning to his wife's little brother all summer that everything was fine and dandy between them whilst he came home every night and slept on Maggie's floor because not wanting to sleep with him had naturally evolved into not wanting to sleep with him, even innocently, because nothing was right between them at all? Grand. Abso-fucking-lutely grand.
It was late when he made it back to Diagon Alley tonight, the shopfronts all dimmed, the bakery quiet too, crisp and clean in the shadow through the front window. There was a glow from the upstairs window, and the kitchen there, an echo of a laugh he could hear on the stairs. Maggie's laugh, an honest sound he hadn't heard in - well, longer than he cared to admit. Cane was probably entertaining her. Well, good. She could use some laughter in her life; it'd make up for all his misery.
The door of the kitchen was slightly ajar, and Lorcan had meant to sidle in with a smile, seeing what they were murmuring about in there, but as he glanced in he froze. It wasn't her brother - it was past his bedtime, probably - no, it was Beasley. Beasley, who worked in the shop for her, who had rubbed Lorcan the wrong way from the beginning and who had somehow graduated from cleaning the bakery counters to being up in their house, in their kitchen, with a clean plate and an open bottle of wine and all the husbandly warmth Maggie could possibly desire.
This was... less grand. Less grand, like the stab of disappointment when a newly-iced bun fumbled from his grasp and hit the floor before he'd had the chance to taste it; like... like getting fucking impaled by a sword - not just cleanly through, a nice quick painless death, but a torturous process, the steel being roughed around inside him like a butter churn. He felt a little sick. If he stood here any longer, Lorcan thought his intestines might start spilling out of his gut onto the floor.
He turned on his heel, quick, and marched to the bedroom - her bedroom - and slammed the door a little louder than he'd have liked, because now she would know he was home, but if he hadn't, he wasn't sure he'd have had the room to breathe. None of this made any sense, he thought, stricken, pulling off his mediwizard robes as though the clothes were to blame for constricting him, and patting around senselessly for his nightclothes. If he could be asleep - or look asleep - when she came in, then at least he wouldn't have to assemble an expression enough to speak to her right now, because what on earth did he have to say? Merlin, maybe he'd be better off leaving now, and should go kip on a stretcher in a hospital closet so he wasn't in her way.
Or maybe Maggie had come around on the merits of the kitchen table, these days.
He thought he heard approaching footsteps, and flinched in shock. Fuck, where was his nightshirt?
Sealing his status as the biggest disappointment in a family full of loons? That was grand. Eloping with a woman who didn't love him, maybe didn't even like him anymore? That was grand, too; that had always been part of the plan. Feigning to his wife's little brother all summer that everything was fine and dandy between them whilst he came home every night and slept on Maggie's floor because not wanting to sleep with him had naturally evolved into not wanting to sleep with him, even innocently, because nothing was right between them at all? Grand. Abso-fucking-lutely grand.
It was late when he made it back to Diagon Alley tonight, the shopfronts all dimmed, the bakery quiet too, crisp and clean in the shadow through the front window. There was a glow from the upstairs window, and the kitchen there, an echo of a laugh he could hear on the stairs. Maggie's laugh, an honest sound he hadn't heard in - well, longer than he cared to admit. Cane was probably entertaining her. Well, good. She could use some laughter in her life; it'd make up for all his misery.
The door of the kitchen was slightly ajar, and Lorcan had meant to sidle in with a smile, seeing what they were murmuring about in there, but as he glanced in he froze. It wasn't her brother - it was past his bedtime, probably - no, it was Beasley. Beasley, who worked in the shop for her, who had rubbed Lorcan the wrong way from the beginning and who had somehow graduated from cleaning the bakery counters to being up in their house, in their kitchen, with a clean plate and an open bottle of wine and all the husbandly warmth Maggie could possibly desire.
This was... less grand. Less grand, like the stab of disappointment when a newly-iced bun fumbled from his grasp and hit the floor before he'd had the chance to taste it; like... like getting fucking impaled by a sword - not just cleanly through, a nice quick painless death, but a torturous process, the steel being roughed around inside him like a butter churn. He felt a little sick. If he stood here any longer, Lorcan thought his intestines might start spilling out of his gut onto the floor.
He turned on his heel, quick, and marched to the bedroom - her bedroom - and slammed the door a little louder than he'd have liked, because now she would know he was home, but if he hadn't, he wasn't sure he'd have had the room to breathe. None of this made any sense, he thought, stricken, pulling off his mediwizard robes as though the clothes were to blame for constricting him, and patting around senselessly for his nightclothes. If he could be asleep - or look asleep - when she came in, then at least he wouldn't have to assemble an expression enough to speak to her right now, because what on earth did he have to say? Merlin, maybe he'd be better off leaving now, and should go kip on a stretcher in a hospital closet so he wasn't in her way.
Or maybe Maggie had come around on the merits of the kitchen table, these days.
He thought he heard approaching footsteps, and flinched in shock. Fuck, where was his nightshirt?
