Productive? The skepticism and confusion probably showed on his face; it was a good thing she couldn't see him. The point of breaks was that they weren't supposed to be productive. Otherwise it wouldn't be a break. Kendrick knew that his wife didn't quite share his philosophy on breaks, and for that matter he wasn't sure his sister did either, but despite the fact that all the women in his life seemed inclined to push themselves past the point of exhaustion, Kendrick was a man who valued simple things, like a roast beef sandwich under the (nonexistent, currently, due to the time of year) sun at noon, in between shifts of running around the country fixing people who split their bodies between fifty miles and turned their wooden floors into sticky pitch that they promptly got stuck in. "This is productive," he replied, his voice carrying. "And bull. Your lungs sound remarkably clear for someone with a lung disease. I've heard so much coughing in the last two minutes." It was maybe a little aggressive, but Kendrick didn't want Ingrid to lie to him. He was quite sure she had lied to literally everyone else today.
Kendrick sighed, looking at the door. It would have been nice if Marcus had quit his job, or something. Kendrick saw him around once in a while in the Broom Regulation office--something that sounded horribly boring and not terribly useful at that. Rather like the man himself. In any case, if there had been no danger in seeing him, Ingrid just might have decided to go into work today, as driven as she was. Instead, she was here. And currently giving him a look that, had he been anyone else (or had she been anyone else) might have had him inching away slowly. He was tempted. But he also wanted to do the right thing, and at least in his mind, this was it...illegal or not.
"Jo's the one in Law Enforcement, not me," he said cheerfully, a sentiment which he didn't feel but which rather fit the statement. "I just fix things when they go wrong." There was no underlying meaning in that, although someone might read one into it. Unfortunately, there was no way to fix some wrongs, no matter how much Kendrick wished he could. This was one of them--there was no way to really fix people that were broken. You could fix their outsides, but you couldn't fix their insides. That was a lot of the conclusion he'd come to, spending time at St. Mungo's during the war. And of course, dealing with Death Eaters, who were broken in very different ways. This was a different type of breakage again, but the same rule applied. Oddly philosophical thought for him.
Kendrick wanted to cheekily reply that if she made her schedule, other adults could disrupt it, but he had probably already reached the limit of cheek that she was going to tolerate from him in this mood. Possibly the limit of his presence, too. He fished it out of his pocket--it was actually quite good quality, and ought to taste good. As everyone in the wizarding world knew, chocolate was a remedy. Kendrick moved forward to the table and set it down before looking at his friend again. She looked...well, she looked a lot of things that he expected her to look, but she also just looked tired. Maybe it was just his perception. But work couldn't compensate for people, and Ingrid hadn't been doing much to heal that part of herself. Two years was a long time, really, especially as they were still young. Not yet thirty. And yet, in those two years, he felt like she had done nothing but withdraw.
Kendrick almost left. He really did. But something made him want to stay. "Don't you want to talk about it?" bubbled up in his lungs and crossed his lips, and there wasn't much going back after that. They never talked about it, so why would he think that she would be more eager to do so today, when it was fresher, and worse? But there, the damage was done.