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the inscrutable drystan b. fawcett ([info]brythonichero) wrote in [info]valesco,
@ 2010-01-14 00:03:00


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Entry tags:drystan fawcett, heidi twilfit

[Lettie! FINALLY]
NOTE Backdated to a few days after New Year's.

Two months was nowhere near enough time to adjust to having a son.

Barring a few rare cases, most men had nine months to prepare for the appearance of a child in their lives. Drystan had a matter of hours to accept a newly one-year-old into his life, a single parent. It was fortunate he was well-to-do, so the matter of taking care of him, finding sitters when Quidditch called him away from home, was never a problem financially. He was clothed, fed, and other than that troubling feeling of why his mother never came when she cried for him, Drystan thought he and Stephen had taken to one another very well, in a parent/child respect. If he'd thought about it before Stephen had ever come into his custody, Drystan might have balked at the prospect of him becoming a father so young. There was so much he wanted to do in his life, so many things that had to come before children did.

But any time he felt resentment, or sadness, that he, too, was suddenly forced to grow up more than he wanted to, a simple glance at Stephen fixed that. Drystan needed the little boy as much as the little boy had needed him.

That did not mean that Drystan had any idea what to do with a baby, however. When the pediatric division of St. Mungo's owled him, informing him that Stephen was overdue for his inoculations, he immediately panicked. Was Stephen going to die without them? Or fall dreadfully ill? Was something going to happen to his nephew that was his fault?

Everyone assured him no, but Drystan thought it safer to have whatever needed to be done finished as soon as possible, though, and so he was waiting in the evening, baby in lap, hoping one of the Healers would be calling Stephen's name soon.



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[info]iseeyoubaby
2010-01-20 01:30 am UTC (link)
To say that Heidi was in a delicate state was ... something of an understatement. In the short span of a few hours, she had gone from a happily in love young woman planning to have a child very soon in order to complete her blissful domestic haven to a woman whose husband was dead and had apparently been a murderer. She refused to believe the Aurors no matter what they told her - when she tried to explain to them that it was impossible that her husband had killed Mr. Wilkes because he had been at home with her that evening, they had asked her if she'd kept an eye on him even late in the night when she'd been asleep, and it had been so horrible!

How was he even supposed to testify now that he was -- was -- dead?

She had swooned at the house and they'd taken her into St. Mungo's, but that had been hours ago and she'd been sick with worry and not being able to even see for herself that Ellis really was gone ... so she'd been wandering the halls mournfully, trying to hide her puffy eyes from passersby.

And that -- well, that was when she'd seen a vaguely familiar face - one Drystan Fawcett. Her brother was acquainted with him and he was, unfortunately, extremely handsome. She felt something click and blinked, feeling a bit odd.

Then she caught sight of Drystan again and a small smile spread across her face. She clipped happily over to Drystan and sat in the chair next to him, immediately snuggling up.

"Hello, sweetheart! How is our little man doing?" Because Merlin knew that she couldn't remember his name right now for some strange reason...

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[info]brythonichero
2010-01-21 02:01 am UTC (link)
At first, he thought the cuddling head of hair belonged to that of a small child, perhaps run free of a mother's unwatchful eye. But as soon as the kittenish purr escaped, Drystan was immediately bemused. Despite whatever other Quidditch players might have experienced, and his own brief foray with the confused mother-to-be of 1980, Drystan's followers were very well-behaved. Bess, certainly, may not have approved of them, and that did warm his heart ever-so-slightly, but he'd never had problems with girls throwing themselves at him. It was for this reason he did not immediately throw her off his arm, believing her to have some logical reason for such a forward greeting. This did not, of course, stop him from shifting Stephen ever so slightly to his right, away from the stranger.

"I--I'm sorry," he glanced over the lady's person, seeing no identifying tags of any sort, "do you work for the pediatrics division?"

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[info]iseeyoubaby
2010-01-21 02:08 am UTC (link)
Heidi merely giggled.

"Oh, Drystan - you're so funny!" He may or may not have been able to vaguely recognize her face, since she did tend to hang around certain Magpie games now and again.

Still, that probably just made her look more suspicious, not less. She arched her brow at him and gave his shoulder a quick pat. "Have the healers seen him yet? I know how you worry." Or at least, she imagined that such a sweet and perfect husband would worry.

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[info]brythonichero
2010-01-21 02:15 am UTC (link)
It was incredibly beneficial that his expression was set permanently in line of mild disapproval, for the incredulous face he was making in his mind's eye was bordering on uncouth. But with the amount of familiarity the witch was showing, surely Drystan had to have known her in some capacity? Although how he could not recall this face in the handful of close friends he kept, he was not sure of. With a crinkle of his brow, he studied her in uncomfortable scrutiny.

Deciding at last that it was possible she'd attended some of his games with better seating, or perhaps remained afterwards for mingling with the teams, he did not know the woman. It would be best to disengage as firmly but kindly from the conversation as possible, then. "I'm afraid you've mistaken me for someone else, madame," he said with a polite incline of the head, despite the fact that she had used his name.

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[info]iseeyoubaby
2010-01-21 02:17 am UTC (link)
This time she made a small pout.

"Don't be like that, silly." She gave his arm a playful swat and then glanced worriedly over her shoulder. That nasty nurse had been following her for some time, she was sure of it, and she didn't want the woman to come over and a cause a scene.

Clearly she was some sort of deranged fan of Drystan's that wanted to make her look bad in front of her husband.

"What did you want for dinner tonight? You know I can make most anything if I set my mind to it..."

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[info]brythonichero
2010-01-25 11:19 pm UTC (link)
"Is that—er—" That was the moment he stopped and realized that this might not have been a case of mistaken identity after all. Surely if she were looking for someone else, she would have realized by now, sitting so close to him and for such a long time, that he was not that particular someone?

But what could a woman he'd never met before in his life want with him?

Trying to quickly memorize her features, he realized she did seem familiar to him, but it could simply be that she had one of those faces that resembled someone, if one tried hard enough to look. "I'm sorry," Drystan said finally, "what relation do you believe you have with me, again?"

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