27 january 2002
Twenty-four. Quinn Regan was twenty-four now. Positively ancient. She should feel worse about it, she supposed, but maybe she had too many things going well in her life for her to be worried about something so insignificant as being another year older. Most likely, though, was that it just hadn’t hit her yet, not properly. She had only been awake for ten minutes, after all. She hadn’t moved more than to glance at the clock (half eight) and fully determine that she was quite alone in the room.
The sun had woken her up rather than her alarm or the loud man she shared her bed with or the cute little baby that slept in a bassinet a foot away. She didn’t like sleeping in, even if she had nowhere to be. And today, she truly had
nowhere to be. Her mother had cancelled the traditional family breakfast, telling her that now she had her own family, it was time to start making traditions of her own. Quinn got the feeling that her mother also wasn’t thrilled enough with the cleanliness of the house in Dublin -- she had been staying in England since her granddaughter had arrived -- to host any sort of meal, but her mother was the one person she didn’t want to argue with.
The rest of her mother’s gift was to leave Quinn and Oliver properly alone with their daughter for the first time in the two weeks she had been there. It was only natural that everyone wanted to see Lula -- she was half Quinn’s -- so there had always been someone else in the house, whether it was one of their mothers or another visiting relative or some other visitor they actually wanted to see. Of course, there would be people back in the house later that evening for dinner. She couldn’t
not celebrate her birthday without some sort of admiration. But until then, she had the whole day to figure out that new family tradition.
Quinn sat up slowly and sniffed, tucking a strand of hair behind her ear as she yawned. Glancing out the window, her eyes fell on all that land, all that airspace just perfect for flying. She had every intention of flying today -- birthday rules stated she could do whatever she wanted -- as she needed to be ready to return to training in a few days, once February rolled around. So far only her manager and captain knew of her impending return to the pitch, but she planned to use birthday rules to tell Oliver today, too.
She pushed back the blankets and moved to the edge of the bed, the stone floor cold against her bare feet. That was just another thing they needed to do to make the house a home, buy a rug for their bedroom. Why had no one gifted them a rug yet? They had received countless things she didn’t want, like baby-sized United paraphernalia and Gryffindor-themed nursery set, why not throw in a rug or two? But that wasn’t important, she reminded herself as she stood up to find some socks and pull on a sweater. It was her birthday.
It was warmer downstairs and she followed the sounds and smells into the kitchen, one eyebrow raised as she leaned against the doorway and took in the scene. Oliver, shirtless and with his back to her, standing over the stove with a baby in one hand and a spatula in the other. She assumed he wasn’t cooking anything that could splatter back on him or Lula, deciding to instead enjoy what she was seeing.
What was it her healer had implored her with after Lula was born? ‘
You can look but you can’t touch.’ It was hard advice to listen to, that was for sure, especially when he looked so positively domestic. Plus, distracting Oliver with sex was her only surefire way to win an argument and she was sure there was no way they could avoid that today -- the argument, that is. There was no way he would care for her decision to return to flying so soon. But she was the good quidditch player in the house and it was her birthday, so really, he’d just have to deal with it.
Later.
Now, she would love for all the birthday admirations to get underway. She slipped into the kitchen with a sleepy, “Mornin’,” reaching up on tiptoes to leave a kiss on Oliver’s cheek before dipping back down and leaving another on Lula’s forehead. She was fast asleep and her eyes stayed close even as Quinn made noise hoisting herself up onto the counter and slid back a few inches, making herself comfortable. The kitchen wasn’t as cluttered as it was when her mother wasn’t practically living with them and she had, on more than one occasion, not been able to find something she was looking for after her mother had so lovingly rearranged all the cabinets.
“Want me to take her?” She’d take Lula even if he didn’t want her to, honestly. Birthday rules.