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the inscrutable drystan b. fawcett ([info]brythonichero) wrote in [info]valesco,
@ 2011-09-06 19:59:00


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Entry tags:bess fawcett, drystan fawcett

Bess
He was in a mood. If asked, Drystan's reply would of course be that it was caused by the gossip feature and his wife's appearance in it. If someone else had been asked, they might have said his mood had been going on for a time longer than that. However, if his teammates had noticed he was a surlier sort of quiet, the matter hadn't been remarked upon. Nonetheless, he could feel the dark edges of temper creeping up on him, waiting to surpass the boiling point. As a matter of course, Drystan considered himself an even-natured sort, not prone to extremes of emotions. His family had a passionate nature, so biology had taken it upon itself to make him the stalwart. There were exceptions, of course, very memorable ones, like the times he never acted out but ought to have built upon themselves to the point of exploding. But they were few and far between, and he tried not to dwell on them. Drystan tried for a shower, hoping to relax and ease his foul state of mind, but the hot steam was a catalyst for the searing headache he'd been flirting with all during practice and left him simply in a blacker mood than before.

Even the prospect of coming home after a long day gave him no real relief. Barely sparing a moment to notice Penelope had evidently taken the children out for a night, he forewent the usual niceties and greetings to his wife and instead threw a copy of the Tattler on the table and pressed his hand to his closed eyes. "If you're going to carry on assignations with my rival players, you might avoid the cameras."



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[info]bestzeller
2011-09-07 12:53 am UTC (link)
Bess didn't look up from the now covered interior design magazine she had been examining. Sitting on top of her open pages now was that ruddy tabloid, The Tattler, and she scrutinized the picture her husband was referring to (how convenient that it had flapped open to that very page). Bess watched her photo-self flail her hands around in anger at Charlie Spinnet, and she recalled the meeting. She had been warning him to keep his relations with Penelope away from their flat because she'd caught the bloke sneaking out again!

She believed Penelope when she told her he'd just been visiting, but bloody hell! Drystan would flip an absolute shit if he found out that his sister was shagging a quidditch player. Charlie Spinnet didn't have the most remarkable of reputations, either, and Bess gave him quite the verbal lashing. She did not want to get caught in the middle of this little affair, and Charlie had promised that he'd try to talk Penelope into telling their secret.

Though even the threat of being yelled at to death by her older brother could not have kept Bess from bragging about her rendezvous with a quidditch stud like Charlie. Not that she'd ever voice her opinion to Penelope or her husband and...these bloody Fawcetts.

Bess let out a breath through her nose and looked up at Drystan, eyes full of annoyance as she huffed, pushing the tabloid off of her legitimate magazine without a word. He wanted to be stupid and accuse her of 'assignations,' having some sort of tryst with Charlie, then fine. She wasn't going to give him the time of day, and it was not as if she could tell him what she was doing in the first place, she'd promised Penelope she'd keep her secret.

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[info]brythonichero
2011-09-07 01:36 am UTC (link)
He did a bit of his own exhaling through the nose, in a pinched and quite disgusted manner. Drystan pulled out a chair with more force than necessary and slumped down it, his head hanging low. Rubbing his forehead absently, he stared with unseeing eyes at the open page the Tattler had landed on, his mind half ruminating on the picture, half on the abysmal day he'd had.

"Sorry," he muttered, suddenly batting away it with enough force that it slid right off the table, "foul mood. I didn't mean to storm in wands a-lit."

Leaning back a ways, his hand drifted down to drum on the table-top, contemplating his wife from across it. "Suppose I was looking for a mad-on. Found it, too, when this blasted thing dropped into my lap.

"Still, it seems a valid point, Bess. We've both dealt with the nuisance that is gossip in print. I don't think it's unreasonable to avoid being in situations like this that give them fodder. They do well enough on their own, as it is." His voice was punctuated by a note of disgust.

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[info]bestzeller
2011-09-07 02:23 am UTC (link)
Was he really trying to lecture her about staying out of the public eye? Really? Bess turned her glare on her husband as he spoke, wondering if he really thought that was a good idea. Not only had he come in here basically throwing things at her, but now he was telling her what was appropriate and should be avoided. As if she didn't know! She was the one that had to deal with the rumors that he was the father of Maggie Brand's son. When had Bess ever caused any controversy? Sure they got some unflattering pictures, but did it really look as if Bess had known there were photographers?

More reason for her to be mad, to be honest! That meant that someone was tailing Charlie, or at least had set camp outside of their complex, so for all Bess knew some sleazy photographer had a picture of Penny and Charlie together! How would Drystan react if he found out about his sister's relationship through the bloody Tattler?! Bess was sure the end of the world would begin occurring right in their flat.

She blinked a few times and Drystan and then rolled her eyes; he was being ridiculous.

"I'll take that into account," she snipped, turning back to her magazine. She may have been more inclined to deal with his mood if he wasn't slamming papers in her face or sending them flying across tables.

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[info]brythonichero
2011-09-07 02:48 am UTC (link)
She was annoyed, clearly. That suited Drystan just fine, as he was no closer to being even-tempered than he had been when he walked in the door. Some part of his mind registered that he'd brought the foul mood home with him, but so what, then? He'd apologized for the initial snap, but if she was going to be stubborn, he'd happily comply.

"Especially if they're lurking in the vicinity, which I don't like one bit." And would have tried to combat, had he known anything more about how the picture had been taken.

From his perspective, it was circumspect, even logical, to refrain from any questionable kind of behavior. Meeting quidditch players that were not him nor on his team seemed fairly questionable, which was why he nearly found it difficult to blame the Tattler for reporting it. This, of course, brought him to his second point, where an uncertain niggling had been steadily working itself into his head throughout the day.

"Why were you meeting with Spinnet, by the way?"

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[info]bestzeller
2011-09-07 03:28 am UTC (link)
Bess shrugged, keeping her eyes down on her magazine but this time forcing herself to. Her lips pursed as she tilted her head, trying to look as casual about the encounter as she could. Bess could certainly tell the truth quickly and loudly with her sharp tongue, but lying, especially to her husband, was a bit difficult. Not to say she wasn't decent at it, but.

"No reason," she said, figuring it was the safest answer. Bess knew if Drystan prodded enough she'd eventually break, or...well, no, it was really something, to have a sister-in-law, especially one as seemingly fragile as Penny. Bess really felt like the girl's mother most days, so being able to help her like a real sister would was something she did not want to break lightly. She'd have to come up with a good excuse for her husband, then, because he seemed to be more concerned about this than she'd thought he would be.

Bess flipped through her magazine, not paying much attention to it now as she tried to focus on her story, "Bumped into him, he remembered me from the party."

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[info]brythonichero
2011-09-07 04:25 am UTC (link)
His look was considering. It wasn't an unreasonable answer, if one ignored the part where Charlie Spinnet had never before been spotted in the largely residential and private area of Montrose, he and Bess had, as far as Drystan had seen that night, had very little discussion between the pair of them, and the gestures she'd been making he knew enough to recognize as the ones she made when she was quite a bit ticked off. He was confident that he would be on the receiving end of those now, had she not been so determined to give him the cold shoulder.

When one examined those facts as well, it seemed less reasonable than before.

Drystan was reminded of another moment where his wife's answers had been less than satisfactory, though it had been easily brushed off before.

Perhaps it shouldn't have.

This time, there was no creeping, curling feelings of dread or panic in the bit of his stomach, but a hot, lancing anger he was determine to tamp down on until he had all the facts he needed.

"Bess, I'm not a fool, nor will I be taken for one," he said softly. "How did you come to meet Charlie Spinnet?"

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[info]bestzeller
2011-09-07 01:41 pm UTC (link)
This time she did turn to look at him, confusion and annoyance struck on her face. What did that mean? Obviously she did not think her husband was a fool (well, she thought it sometimes, but only when he was being ridiculous like right now---), but why was he assuming that there was more to this story? What had she ever done to make him question her words to him? She wasn't giving him the absolute truth, but it was true; if she had arrived ten minutes later she would not have run into the man.

There was no way to give him a proper, suitable answer without giving up Penny's secret, and Bess was just not willing to do that. In a house full of Hufflepuffs, maybe Drystan would understand the sisterly loyalty she was defending as he softly berated her. He should trust her word, just like she trusted him whenever the tabloids randomly linked him to some woman! It wasn't as if she was caught snogging Spinnet.

Flustered, and a bit offended, Bess collected her magazine and pushed her chair back to stand. She tilted her head at him as if she was scolding one of their children,

"Just leave it alone, Drystan," she said quickly, sharply, her face growing just the lightest shade of red. Bess started past him, shaking her head with great frustration, "It's nothing, and you're making it into something."

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[info]brythonichero
2011-09-07 06:32 pm UTC (link)
Drystan had never once believed she would abuse his trust or faith. Not even when, to the best of his abilities, Chester had tried to interfere. He knew Bess. He loved her, he trusted her, he believed her.

But because he felt all these things toward her, he also knew when she wasn't quite telling the truth, and that concerned him. More than concerned him, even, for despite his bravado of an inner-monologue, there was that sharp, strangling feeling of panic and hurt that was growing difficult to ignore.

"I will not leave it alone, Bess," he said, remaining seated because he was annoyed that suddenly that was to be the last word of the conversation. "I choose to have a problem with this particular scenario. If you'd simply explain it to me, the problem goes away and then, yes, we will leave it alone."

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[info]bestzeller
2011-09-07 07:42 pm UTC (link)
Bess threw her hands up, reaching her boiling point and unable to continue the stiff and rigid conversation they'd been playing with. The magazine fluttered noisily to the ground, "What do you want me to say, Drystan?"

It was as if she was never allowed to talk to another quidditch player, another man! She told him it was nothing, and he should believe her! Were these tabloids actually getting to him? Did her husband think that she could not control herself in front of another good-looking man? Bess got hit on constantly, thank-you-very-much, and she never felt the urge to stray from her husband, and he should be absolutely confidant in that! What the hell was wrong with him?

Her hand flew out as she spoke, wild gesticulations a key factor in her serious discussions, "I wasn't expecting him, we talked, and some photographer took a picture!" Bess realized her poor choice of words immediately, and could hear Brady scolding her for it, "What I mean to say..." she began to backtrack, but stopped.

Bess pressed her lips into a thin line, not able to figure out what she meant to say that would make anything sound better. She put her hand up again, "I don't have to explain myself. You should trust me when I say it's nothing."

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[info]brythonichero
2011-09-07 09:13 pm UTC (link)
His eyes narrowed dangerously. "You weren't expecting him?" Drystan stood so quickly, his chair rocked over onto its back.

He was barely keeping a handle on the fury now. He hadn't believed that there was something legitimately adulterous happening with his wife and the Kestrel! Drystan knew it wasn't a chance encounter, he could see that by the way she paused between her sentences and the curious times she chose to meet his eyes, but he thought, what, she'd been selling Puddlemere strategy to opposition? Had Spinnet sniffing around her and was boxing his ears for it? Taking on management qualities and attempting to poach him? All varying levels of the far-fetched, and most none of what he'd expect of Bess, but Drystan knew he was missing something, some small but vital piece of the puzzle, and he didn't understand how, or why no one was enlightening him on what it was. So he picked his angle and tore after it with a vengeance.

"I want to believe you, Bess! I do. I don't know what it is you're trying to hide, but I can't believe you when you say nothing. That shin-guard?" he ran a hand through his hair frustratedly as his volume and accusatory tone crept higher. "The one you didn't recognize, then said was mine, then said it belonged to a teammate you'd accidentally taken it from? Fine, it seemed bizarre, but perhaps it was true, all right. Now, you just happened to stumble upon Spinnet in our neck of the woods, but then it's 'you weren't expecting him,' so what, Bess? What am I supposed to think when you tell me it's nothing?"

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[info]bestzeller
2011-09-07 10:45 pm UTC (link)
The shin-guard. She hadn't even---he was connecting that and---Bess suddenly felt sick, realizing how really terrible her husband must have been viewing this entire situation. Viewing her. If she'd found a high-heel under the couch she would have been furious, and---Bess' hands were clenched at her side as her mind raced for something that would satisfy Drystan's questions and keep Penny's secret safe. If she told her husband about his sister's current activities, in the mood he was in Drystan would probably go bursting through the walls. No, no, she'd have to take one for the team, as they said.

Bess had to trust that he loved her enough to trust her when she said she was being honest with him. She looked worried, her breathing becoming heavy, and it was a wonder she'd managed any sort of cases at her job because this sort of pressure was ready to crush her. Her eyes dropped to the ground, her hands going out in a pleading sort of manner.

"It's not what it looks like." How guilty did that sound? Bess felt so foolish and she forced the tears that stung her eyes to not roll down her cheeks by sucking in a deep breath, "I'm not---you have to trust me, it's---" For the good of their family? What could she say? She looked like a cheating wife with no excuse for any of her strange actions.

"Drystan," she let out, looking back up at him finally, ready to burst with the guilt and heavy load she had on her shoulders. Merlin's beard, she was going to strangle her sister-in-law, "I swear it's nothing, I just can't tell you what it is right now. I'm not doing---anything!"

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[info]brythonichero
2011-09-07 11:29 pm UTC (link)
The sudden drop in her anger surprised him. He'd been gearing for battle; a nasty one by the look of it. And now that her tactics had changed, Drystan's footing was less sure than it had been. Oh, he was still furious. Now he knew not only that he wasn't being told the truth, but that it had to be kept from him. But now he wasn't sure if that's what this was, a tactical change from anger to pleading, to have him soften towards her, or something else. Something genuine. And even if it was genuine, what could be so terrible that she had to keep it from him, but for that one horrible thing that kept poking and prodding at him, even as he refused to give name to it.

No, he didn't know what his wife was up to, and suddenly, he was no longer sure he wanted to know. Up til now, Bess had never had any cause to keep things from him. Drystan didn't know what it meant that she was suddenly doing it now, but it didn't sit with him, and he didn't need to tolerate it.

"If I've kept things from you, it was never with the intention to hurt you. If you'd asked, I would always have said it. I didn't talk about the Puddlemere trade, true enough, as I was afraid it might not go through and you'd think the less of me for it."

He had to pause, as he studied her dispassionately, reigning in his control which continued its threat of slipping beyond his grasp.

"I don't know what game you're playing at, Bess," Drystan said finally, when he knew he could speak curtly, with his icy remoteness in place, "but I don't want any part of it. When you feel you can trust me with your secrets," he said the word as though it were a curse as he backed away from the table, "whatever they may be, you know where I'll be."

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