Things had been different with Blythe since they'd left Hogwarts in a way that felt unfamiliar to the way it felt different with Marin or Jacqueline or Peter. Leaving Hogwarts always felt like opening up to something less focused, less directed - the rising seventh year was all too conscious now of the ways in which it was so artificially contained. Most years, though, leaving felt like an interruption, where what happened within its walls was merely put under stasis, to be resumed without complications the following year. That had not been true the summer before their fifth year, of course, but here they were again. He didn't know whether it was that she was leaving or that he had finally released himself, perhaps permanently, from the confines of the Sterling ancestral home.
It wasn't that Mark and Kay's apartment was much better, but at least it wasn't in Orkney, and his brothers had, surprisingly, managed to mature to the point where Lionel no longer resented their presence, although the number of barbs would never lessen. It was kind of welcome, in a way, the kind of blood that actually seemed like it might matter in the long run. And, if Lionel's job sorting beetle eyes and doxy eggs in the back of the apothecary, and sometimes donning a pained smile in the front when the cashier was on break, all for the occasional chance that the sleepy, aged proprietor might share some unusual insight into his previous career creating potions that could create occasional rifts in space (like Vanishing Cabinets, but temporary and on any surface) was utterly mindless, at least, for the first time, he was earning something for his work rather than being subjected to eternal indentured servitude. Still, all of this made it strange as he scrawled another short note and tied it to Iseult's leg. Tomorrow, six, they'll both be working. Their talks had a lot more words in them when they were in person. Something about the medium of short sentences sounded a lot more ambivalent.
Plucking the increasingly scribbled-on parchment from the owl, who hooted slightly irritably upon seeing him re-ink his quill, he narrowed his eyes, considering then shrugged. The paint will be set by then. Four. Like her, Blythe's penmanship was elegant with the hint of an edge. Sure he wrote and attached the address. "Last time, just...do your job," he muttered at the owl as she regarded him balefully. No sooner had she swooped out of the office-bedroom again than Kay burst in, looking disheveled at best. Lionel glanced upward, doing the calculation. He hadn't told Kay about Blythe - there was absolutely no need to - but on the other hand, seeing his face would probably be entertaining, and might even mollify him slightly.
"Merlin, Kay, you can keep more than zero days' worth of takeaway in the fridge at one time, there's something called preparing ahead," he said, unable to resist the dig as he wiped his quill in an orderly fashion and declined to turn around. "If I'd ordered food when I woke up, it would be ice by now in any case. She'll be back in ten minutes, you can make up your mind what you want in the meantime." Stowing his quill, he turned around and cocked his head with a slight raise of his eyebrows and a smirk. The expression was entirely for the sake of being infuriating, for his own amusement. "And try not to make a new mess in the other room in the next twenty four hours, my girlfriend's coming over."