The air outside was hot and sluggish, so the candle of the day was pine and lemon. Refreshing and cool, a futile attempt to ward off summer lethargy. Today Amelia had planned to reorganize the back room-- she was a neat person overall, but over time she could still collect clutter. She swore she still had Carina’s Charms textbook from fifth-year summer homework on a shelf, and it wasn’t going to go anywhere until she rolled her sleeves up and cleaned the damn closet.
But it was too hot to clean the damn closet, so instead she was leaning on the counter and reading a magazine, contemplating Albus Dumbledore and his turbulent infamy. It had been a slow day. Some elderly women buying candles for their bathrooms, her current wedding commission, and a beleaguered young man trying to shop for his girlfriend’s birthday. It wasn’t good for business, but Amelia appreciated the peace.
She didn’t like to keep the radio on loudly, but she would play it quietly under the counter to keep her company. Today it was an upbeat disco station-- another futile attempt. Music, candles, the fizzy drink she’d bought as an indulgence.
The bell over the door rang brightly and she looked up as her ex-cousin-in-law came into the shop, grinning wide. She smiled back just as broadly as he skipped straight through greetings-- “Ya have any candles ta cure Dragon Pox? Been itching something fearful all week.”
“Don’t think a candle would help you much,” she teased back. “But I’ve soup at home if you want dinner in a few hours. Did you come all this way to see me?”
She wouldn’t be surprised if he had. Immediately after the divorce she’d been crushed to remember how much love she’d been shown by John’s family, imagining that she’d have to cut ties with them all. It had been a surprise and a delight that John’s cousin Donncha still stopped in to see her. Amelia hated losing people, and knew Donnie did too, so it was nice that they hadn’t lost each other.
“Mmh, it’s so hot today,” she said, just to make conversation. She paced quickly to the other side of the counter, hugged him quickly. It was too hot, though, so she let him go and beamed up at him-- “How are you!”
It had been too long since she’d seen Donnie; it always felt like it’d been too long, no matter how recently she’d seen him. She tucked her hair back behind her ear and appraised him-- he seemed tired, but he often did.