The iron vines on the dining-room side of the old oak door curled back on themselves to allow the door to open, and Ceinwen emerged with a beatific smile for the diners and renters sipping their first late-morning brandy or . The regulars all tipped their hats or gave a friendly wave as she meandered through the tables, asking how everyone was doing this morning. All frequenters of the Ysgubell & Ystafell knew that, no matter how dotty she might get from time to time, Ceinwen Conway was the one really in charge here. But she never had any major disagreements with her nephew Trahaern and his wife Enid, who handled almost all the day-to-day running of the public house. As she took a seat at an empty table closer to the front door of the inn, Trahaern grabbed a bundle from under the counter and stepped over. "Thank you, Trey," she told her nephew as he handed her today's mail, a copy of the Daily Prophet, and a glass of redcurrant rum, before smiling at her and returning to his position at the front desk / mini-bar.
Old age is a good time to enjoy the pleasant routines of our country inn, she mused while looking over the latest news. The inn was full of old faces and new ones, the smells of Ceinwen's niece Catrin cooking in the kitchen, the hustle and bustle of Enid delivering platters and cleaning up dishes, the common noise of multiple quiet conversations, the frequent but random *pops!* of witches and wizards Apparating onto the front lawn where the anti-Muggle enchantments would protect them from being seen... other than the Day That Magic Died, what a rough day that had been! Most of the Muggle neighbors had been horribly confused by the sudden appearance of a large pub where there had been a condemned dump the night before, but they knew the Conways (despite not being certain where precisely Ceinwen lived) and she was able to keep them calm for the interim. Then when everything went back to normal? Memory Charms, Memory Charms, Memory Charms!
On to less stressful, more current things. The Prophet had nothing particular new or exciting - the advice column was good but nothing applied to her at her age, and the Caerphilly Catapults were performing poorly this season so she glossed over that article. The Pink Arts section was disastrously maudlin, and she already knew all the gossip from the Blablabla. Finally she set aside the paper, promising herself that she would mull over the Fiendishly Difficult Crossword sometime later that afternoon, and picked up her various letters. She was pleased to see a letter from Mme. Boudet, the granddaughter of an old friend of hers from Chateoil, though whatever owl had delivered it appeared to have flown through a squall and she had to wring out the envelope before she could open it and begin perusing the letter. She was only half a paragraph in when she registered how warm it was.
"Trey, darling? Why don't we leave the front door open today, it's so nice out," she called over her shoulder.
"Yes, Auntie," Trey replied, presumably drawing his wand since she heard the creaky hinges swinging a second later.
"We'll need to fix that later, too. I'll handle it, I feel like I haven't done much around the old place lately and I'm still kicking," Ceinwen called back, returning to her letter.