wednesday night, 26 may 2004
She realized that letter was a bad idea as soon as the owl was out of arm’s reach, or about two seconds after she had sent it on its way. She had just been replying to his note and while it was
technically true, Honey didn’t exactly want Charlie to know she wasn’t currently sleeping with anyone else. That hadn’t been the point she was trying to make-- though, honestly, she didn’t know what the point was at this.. point. It was bad enough that she was agreeing to go
with him anywhere, but this—
Honey had had some wine, and then a bit more wine, and then a bit
more because that was the thing to do when
Grace graced her with her presence, like she had that night. She had anticipated the rest of their wine-suggested activities—maybe some kissing, definitely some snuggling—but Grace had fallen asleep as Honey had found her second wind. And then Charlie’s owl had arrived and replying seemed like a good idea.
But it was a bad idea. Honey had only just realized the whole
situation maybe a week ago. It wasn’t like she had set out to find some sort of something that resembled exclusivity—she didn’t think it went both ways—but she liked their arrangement and he was meeting her needs, so she had simply made no move to change things.
Whatever the origin story of her feelings—no, the
situation—she didn’t want to ruin things now by telling Charlie any of it. She wasn’t about to stupefy the owl out of the air, either, which left her with a couple of shit options: 1) apparate. To London. She’d lose only one arm if she were lucky. 2) Floo to London, but Charlie wasn’t on the network (and she would find time to roll her eyes about that later). She couldn’t floo to Fergie’s—she wasn’t confident she wouldn’t walk in on anything and she would be annoyed by
that later, too—but she
could floo to the Leaky Cauldron and apparate from there. It was doable, had to be because the only way to keep things like they were would be to intercept the letter, distract Charlie enough to not know she ever sent one. (Distraction would also be fun because she would otherwise be flying solo if she stayed home.)
She couldn’t think about it anymore. Or maybe she could a little, as she checked herself in the mirror. She looked flushed—the wine, the situation—but she hadn’t put pajamas on yet, so at least she had that going for her. She gave up on fussing with her hair after a few seconds and grabbed some floo powder before she could reconsider. It took a few minutes—and a solid break at the Leaky Cauldron to wait for the room to stop spinning—but she safely (more or less) arrived on Charlie’s street, all pieces and parts present and accounted for.
Honey knocked before remembering she didn’t need him to be there; he had given her a key back with his leg issues and— the key was back in Hogsmeade. She was almost too lost in thought, wondering what to do if he wasn’t there (because going back to Hogsmeade and returning to London again seemed out of the question), to realize the door was opening. “Hi.†He looked surprised, but not unhappy, to see her. That was good. “I—“ Honey blinked. She hadn’t gotten this far into planning The Plan. “Was out with Fergie.†She waited a beat before she raised her eyebrows, silently asking to be invited in.
@Charlie Baker