Surprise him? Scrambled it was, then. Sindri was nothing if not consistent, and Dash had been with him long enough that she was familiar with most of his habits and, especially, food preferences. “Oh!” she exclaimed as arms appeared around her waist. He started washing his hands above hers. The girl frowned and twisted a little, turning her head so that she could look up at him. “You’re the worst,” she teased, wrinkling her nose and then smiling cheekily, all traces of her frown gone. She let him wash her hands for her without complaint. When he was done, however, the girl spun quickly and pressed herself against his torso, running her hands up his chest again slowly. “But you’re cute,” she conceded in a soft, cheeky voice. The hufflepuff graduate scrunched her hands in the front of his shirt, making a point of drying them there before laughing a light, tinkly laugh and poking him in the direction of the food he was supposed to be helping with.
She was never quite so cute and playful when the couple was around other people, but then again, neither was he. It wasn’t that they weren’t affectionate with each other in public, but there were definitely things that they only saved for each other. The girl cracked a couple of eggs into a cup, planning on beating them a little. Really, she thought, it would be a surprise for him if she poached them. But as much as he’d asked for a surprise, they’d both known what he’d wanted when he said it. It was a strange dynamic, she mused, but a familiar one. Dash filled their little kettle with water and then disappeared for a moment into their bedroom to fetch her wand to boil the water more quickly. She was on breakfast-autopilot.
“Of course he did,” she answered, unsurprised. The Tricketts were that kind of family. The kind that were quite forward with those sorts of things. She sometimes got the impression that the family didn’t really understand people who didn’t have a similar mindset. Imagine if she didn’t want to have children at all! The brunette knew that she wouldn’t still be with Sindri if that were the case. They just wouldn’t be compatible. Family was the most important thing to the Tricketts, and Sindri was no different. By now, Dash felt like they were all her family too, especially Leifr, Tor and the boys’ father. Even though her boyfriend had never known his mother, the girl felt like his family was infinitely more real and together than hers was. She was totally drawn to them, so unlike her mother and father and their pseudo marriage.
“I think my mother wants us to build her a new dining table,” she said after a moment’s silence, assembling various elements of their breakfast in the frying pan in front of her. She didn’t eat very much, but Sindri did, so the girl made sure to get an appropriate amount of food cooked. She wasn’t stingy with helpings of bacon for her boyfriend, instead piling it up as she cooked it. “I was thinking that we might be able to start something this weekend? She’d never ask, but I think she’d love it.” Dash started heaping their breakfast food onto two plates. When she was done, she poured two cups of tea, making both of them just as they liked it. “Outside?” she asked, raising her eyebrows. There was a breeze outside, but it wasn’t cold, and enough shade from the few trees they had growing around their back porch.