He used to shelve books. But they’d gotten some new hires and Hades could make better use of his time doing something that his employees couldn’t do, such as processing orders or placing new ones or gossiping a bit with Lou at the front. But Lou wasn’t here today and he’d done all the other things he needed to do, which meant he was primarily on Watch Opal Duty. Once, this wasn’t hard. It involved giving Opal a pile of books and letting her entertain herself with them.
But these days, Opal was a person, who needed more interaction and attention. So: he took his daughter shelving.
Or, he was trying to take Opal shelving. She had figured out a more fun game, which involved running around and unshelving.
With a high-pitched giggle, she scampered down one hall and found her next victim: Elinor’s book cart.
“Opal--”
But Opal was already grabbing all the books on the bottom of the cart and pulling them off, still giggling like a rabid troll as she did.
Hades sighed. “Right, sorry about that, she’s got lots of energy right now.”
In which Elinor gets a surprise visitor on her door who warns her of what is to come...[takes place: June 18]
@charmed-henry
[tw -- discussion of violence and kind of abuse; Order shenanigans]
AUGUSTA:
The final straw, it turned out, was being asked to spy on her brother.
It wasn’t the awkward forced dates with men she knew she would never love. It wasn’t even the horrible things they did to magical creatures, or the dangerous attitudes about Magicks that had taken Augusta years to unlearn. All of that cognitive dissonance, Augusta could take. She had lived a double life for long enough.
But she had always believed that, despite the numerous fucked-up things about her family, they would always stick together. It was always family first, Order second, everything else third. Until now, apparently. Until Henry had become a risk.
On some level, Augusta understood why her parents were worried he would turn on them. He was distant lately, and the few times Gus had spoken to him on FaceTime, he seemed distracted. And she’d heard about what happened at the trial…
The thought made her shudder.
So when she got to Swynlake, instead of gathering information on Henry quietly, Augusta revealed everything. She showed him the messages. And then she asked if there was someone here she could speak to, someone who was organizing forces against the Order.
And that was how they wound up on the doorstep of Best Castle. Augusta knocked and pulled her cardigan tighter around her. It wasn’t cold, but the werewolf thing kind of freaked her out.
ELINOR:
Elinor had been reading in the study, when the great knocker for the front door echoed through the ground floor. There were not many people that wandered this far out and Elinor had made it a rule (for safety!) that the girls needed to tell her if they were having anyone over. No one had been reported. Which meant this was a surprise visit.
Once upon a time, Elinor had loved unexpected visitors. They were stressful, yes, but Elinor was in her element when under a little bit of stress. She liked being a hostess. It was the role she was bred for and she’d always been better at that than being a wife, or even a mother.
Since coming to Swynlake, however, unexpected visitors had gotten rather perilous.
Still, Elinor got up, folded the page down in her book, and moved towards the door. When she pulled it open, she was surprised to see her nephew, and even more surprised to see her niece. This was very ominous indeed, but Elinor couldn’t help the way she smiled. It had been so long since she’d seen her nieces.
“Augusta!” Elinor said. “What a surprise. Please, children, come in. Come in. I’ll set the kettle on.” She drew Augusta into the house with a hand on her shoulder, leaning in to kiss her cheek before turning to move towards the kitchen.
AUGUSTA/HENRY:
Augusta smiled back, but already, she could feel that familiar twinge of anxiety that came with family gatherings. Not that this was a family gathering, and Aunt Elinor hadn’t even been present at the last couple of them. But that feeling never really went away.
She couldn’t wait until she was done with all of this, honestly. She had an exit strategy. She wasn’t brave or idealistic like Henry was; the only reason she was here was because she wanted to protect Henry. And the second she did what she came to do, she was packing up her stuff, moving into her girlfriend’s place in Birmingham, starting her new job, and getting out of this messed-up world of the Order.
When Aunt Elinor went to put the tea on, Augusta glanced at her brother. He seemed like he was on the verge of tears. He always did, nowadays. It made Augusta angry– how could any of this possibly be worth it? She wanted to convince him to come to Birmingham with her, to get away from all of this. But she knew he wouldn’t. He was too stubborn. And he had a more personal stake in this than Augusta did.
The Charmings followed Aunt Elinor into the kitchen, Augusta settling into a seat, Henry hovering anxiously.
“It’s quite pretty, what you’ve done with the place,” Augusta said politely, even though she really did not want to do small talk.
ELINOR:
Elinor knew that there was something on the horizon. Augusta would not have shown up without it. She didn’t know in what capacity it would come: Augusta, leaving the Order and needing help. Augusta, sent as a spy. As a warning. There were a great many ways that the Order could use a woman as a weapon or a toy or whatever they wanted. Elinor had known this while in the Order, and now that she was out, she saw it for both the strength and horrible, horrible weakness that it was.
But before darkness settled again, Elinor wanted a moment with her niece and nephew as just that: her niece and nephew. Elinor had always loved her family. She missed them dreadfully. Even her bratty younger sister. And especially Shannon’s children. They were her only blood nieces and nephews, after all.
“Thank you, darling,” Elinor said. “It was horrid when I arrived, but I think I am beginning to bring some life to it. Henry, sit down.” She said it as a command, but a kind one.
He was making her nervous. She was nervous. Her brain was firing on all cylinders, trying to uncover what new plan the Order had before anyone had to say it. She moved to the cabinet, pulling down mugs and plates, silverware. There was some leftover tea cakes from lunch yesterday that she could get out for them to eat.
“How are your studies going, Augusta?” Elinor smiled over her shoulder at her niece as she moved to the sink to wash her hands.
AUGUSTA:
Augusta shot Henry a very older-sister-type look (nowhere near as effective as one of Jacqueline’s looks, but it would do) and he reluctantly sat down, though his leg was now jiggling nervously. Augusta turned her attention back toward her aunt. Henry was also making her nervous.
She smiled placidly. “Just about finished up. Finally,” she chuckled, though there was no real humor to her tone. It was the same thing she always told her relatives, who asked why she was still in school when she could be doing so many other things. Like getting married, was the implicit part.
She didn’t know if that was where Aunt Elinor was going with the question— because she did wonder how much she had changed since leaving Uncle Fergus— but that didn’t really matter. That wasn’t what they were here to talk about.
“But I actually was here to talk to you about something else, if you don’t mind. Erm…” She took out her phone and set it on the table. “My brother thought you should know. It’s about the Order. They’re… planning on attacking the castle, we think.” She unlocked her phone. “I have proof. Texts from my family. They’re not going to be a part of it, but they know what’s happening and they’re not going to stop it. I’m… so sorry, Aunt Elinor…”
ELINOR:
The question had been genuine. When Elinor had first gotten married, she had wanted to go back to school, get her masters. She thought it would help her feel more equipped for running a castle, considering the first few months, even years, had been rather difficult. But, Fergus hadn’t been keen on the idea and she’d found out she was pregnant with Merida not long after she had moved in. It had always been something she regretted, so she had been happy when she’d heard Augusta was going back for another degree. She’d been very proud.
But, clearly, her niece wasn’t here to ask about school or for her advice.
She was here with a warning.
Elinor nearly dropped the tea mugs as she set them down in front of her niece and nephew. Of course the Order were coming here. After what had happened with the king. This was to be nearly expected, though Elinor had thought they might be safe, the Order not wanting to come full force into a magical town. She felt her stomach twist as she took the phone and read through the messages, disgusted at her sister’s behavior, unsurprised by her brother-in-law’s. There was a lot she could say about Fergus, but at least he was no coward. He would face his actions, even if it meant meeting with a sword at the end of it.
The phone slid back across the table and Elinor looked up at Henry and Augusta, her eyes filled with tears. Not for herself, but for all the children caught in the middle of this. Not just Opal, Aidan, and Bellamy, but Merida, the triplets, Augusta, Henry, and even Jacquline.
“You donnae need to apologize, darlings. This isn’t your fault.” She came around the table, so that she was nearer to them and she kissed at Augusta’s hair, squeezing her shoulders. “I am sorry that your parents have put you in the middle of all of this.” Her other hand came up to touch Henry’s cheek, then his hair, brushing it back gently. “This isn’t your responsibility anymore. I will take care of all of it. Do you know when they are coming?”
AUGUSTA:
Augusta closed her eyes, letting out a long breath. She had never really been close with any of her extended family. She assumed they were all the same– judgmental gossips who would spring at any opportunity to embarrass her family. Not to be trusted. The only person she had ever really trusted with her deepest fears and secrets was Jacqueline, but now…
Now everything was different. And, strangely, it was her aunt reassuring her. Augusta had assumed she would finally have to stand on her own here. Henry was on her side, but Henry needed her to be there for him, not the other way around. In her family, Gus had never really had to take on this role before. It was nice to realize that she had Aunt Elinor– that she wasn’t going to do it alone.
Or maybe she wouldn’t have to do it at all. Maybe she could disappear into her new life, the one she’d always wanted. There was only one thing giving her pause…
Her brother, who now looked like he was trying to burn a hole into the table by the pure intensity of his stare.
She scrolled back up in the texts. “Mid July. So… it could be any day now,” Augusta explained. “They’re, erm, they’re getting on a boat, I think. I was sent here to collect Henry, but– I’m not going. I’ve got a job in another city, and, erm, someone to live with.” She didn’t think she should be more specific than that, even if she wanted to trust Aunt Elinor. “So I wanted to use the opportunity to warn Henry. I’m sorry there isn’t more notice, I… it’s all happening very quickly.” She looked up at Aunt Elinor nervously. “Will you all be okay here? It might be best to leave, hide for a bit…”
ELINOR:
“Donnae worry about me,” Elinor told Augusta with a smile, squeezing her shoulders again.
No, they wouldn’t run. Merida wouldn’t leave. Elinor knew that without even having to ask. Her daughter was stubborn and this was her home. Elinor understood. She had been sold from one home to another. And then forced to leave that home too, which had been more of a home than the first. This was her home now. And more importantly: it was Merida’s home. They would defend it.
Besides, they’d started this fight. They’d killed the King. It wasn’t shocking to Elinor that the violence of the Order was falling on two women. Hadn’t it always?
“We will be alright now, thanks to you. Do you need anything? Money?” she asked. She did not have much of it herself, but if her niece needed it to get set up in a new life away from all of this—she would gladly give it.
“What about you, Henry?” She looked over at her nephew, who had been stony and quiet this whole time. Elinor knew that he had struggled with the Order in the past. With his loyalties. And while she wanted to trust them both, she was cautious and she doubted she’d say anything about her plans to either of them. To keep them out of a situation where they would have to choose.
AUGUSTA/HENRY:
Gus shook her head. She already had everything planned out. Never, in her life, before now, had she been a planner. But these strange times were making strangers of everyone. It helped that she had Mo to stay with, who was highly pragmatic and had helped Gus figure things out (and, in some cases, figured things out for her– Gus really had the best girlfriend ever).
But she wanted Aunt Elinor to keep an eye on Henry, who valiantly (stupidly) refused to flee. Gus still thought there was a difference between her own form of self-preservationism and her family’s. She wasn’t fleeing the country, for one thing. Henry seemed to have no sense of either, though. He wanted to stay and fight. The Order had, it seemed, trained him a little too well.
Henry looked up from his concentrated stare at the table, looking briefly confused before his expression settled, once again, on a stony determination. “I’m going to help defend the castle,” Henry said in a low voice. “If the authorities won’t let me pay for what I’ve done, I’ve got to find my own way. The only thing I need is for you to let me do that.”
Augusta sighed, as though she had already had this argument with Henry, and looked at Elinor imploringly. “I’ve tried to tell him–”
“It isn’t your concern, Augusta–”
“It is my concern, you’re my brother and you’re clearly–”
“I am an adult, Gus, just let me make my own decisions for once in my life!” Henry’s eyes flashed with more emotion than he had shown the entire conversation, and they both went silent. Augusta shot her aunt another look.
“Just… take care of him, please.”
ELINOR:
Elinor frowned.
And she thought of her own children. Merida and the boys tiffed, of course, but there was ten years between them, so there wasn’t really anything for them to truly have ever fought over. Merida was just as bad as the three of them. A prank for a prank was usually how debts had been settled between all of them. But she was thinking about her boys, left behind in the clutches of the Order. Elinor regretted that as much as she regretted pretty much every other decision she’d made in the last few years.
Maybe, her whole life.
She just looked at Henry and saw her boys. Saw them just as scared. Just as lost.
Her hand squeezed Augusta’s shoulder. “Donnae worry. I will. We all will.” Herself, Merida, Tom, Phil, and John. She knew the boys would certainly watch over him. They all cared about him too. Elinor just…wished she had tried to do more for him before all of this. Maybe she could have stopped it. Or lessened the blow.
“If you need anything, Augusta, please, do not hesitate to reach out to me. If you are--leaving your parents, let me help, when I can.” She squeezed her niece’s shoulder.
AUGUSTA/HENRY:
Augusta nodded, feeling strangely relieved. She hadn’t really walked into this conversation expecting much. She had a lot of assumptions about her aunt, most of them just based on the faceless entity that her entire extended family was. And now she was entrusting Henry to her (though she knew Henry would firmly oppose this framing). And she… felt good about it?
Maybe there was more to her family than she realized. Maybe there was a way, at the end of this, for Augusta to come away from it with a family. Not the same one she’d always had, but a family still.
If there was one thing that coming out, first to herself, then her uni friends, then Jacq and Henry, had taught Augusta– it was that being queer often meant you built your own family. So Augusta had made peace with the idea of doing that, and she hadn’t expected any of her blood relatives to be a part of it. But now they were here surprising her. And she was surprising herself.
“I’ll be okay. I’ve been planning for this– even before all of this happened. I dunno if I would’ve been brave enough to actually do it if not for, erm, all of this.” Augusta gestured vaguely. “But thank you. I’ll… stay in touch.” She smiled nervously.
Henry nodded, his eyes trained on the table again, his expression once again stony and impassive. In his opinion, the sooner Gus got out of here to safety the better. The less she involved herself, the less of a target she made herself. And he knew this was the last time he may see his sister, if she did have to go deep into hiding– but he was avoiding that truth. He didn’t say anything.
“I have to say,” Augusta added, smiling at her aunt gently. “I… didn’t expect this. But I hope our paths will cross again. And… I’ll be thinking of you all. Be careful.”
ELINOR:
Now that Elinor’s family was fracturing like this: her boys somewhere--she didn’t even know; Fergus hating her; her coward of a sister fleeing; Henry here, but distant and tortured; Augusta feeling trapped and needing to run herself--Elinor regretted everything.
She looked back on her life and wished that she had spent more time at her sister’s. Maybe, it would have made her and Shannon grow closer. Or maybe, it would have been horrid, but at least she would have a better relationship with her nieces and nephew. She had been so busy with Fergus’ family. The children on that side…it had been easy to fall into that family and leave behind the Briars. Her sister had always been so snooty. Elinor had fit right in with the DunBrochs, by not fitting in much anywhere else. It had been easy…but she hadn’t thought about the children.
She should have thought about the children.
That was what she was doing now. And it felt like she was the only one who was. She worried about all of them. Merida--what her purpose was now, how the world would treat her. Her sons, what they were learning, how it would shape them. Thomas and his son--two generations touched by the sins of their fathers. Phillip and John. Henry and his twisted honor.
It made her feel as if her heart was being rent into warped metal.
“You be safe too,” Elinor told her. “And I’m proud of you. For having a plan, for having your own mind. I wish I was more like you when I was younger.” She smiled fondly at Augusta and it was only this exchange that kept her from crying. This hope for a better future for all these children who were escaping those same sins of their parents.
“You’ll be fine, but check in anyway. We will take care of things here.”
AUGUSTA/HENRY:
Augusta looked up at her aunt, and for a brief moment, she thought about telling her everything. Aunt Elinor hadn’t said anything outright that made Augusta believe this, but her hopeful smile made Augusta think maybe she would be a safe person to tell… and that did make a difference, when Augusta felt like she couldn’t trust anyone in her family at all.
But she couldn’t take that risk. Everything was already decided, and Augusta couldn’t put Mo at risk like that. This wasn’t just about her.
Maybe someday, though.
So she smiled sadly and nodded. “I’ll be okay. And Henry knows how to find me. He always has a place to stay, if he needs it.”
Henry knew this, but he wasn’t going to accept his sister’s offer. In his eyes, she was innocent. She deserved to get out of here before the black hole that was the Order had a chance to suck her in too. Going with her was cowardly, in Henry’s opinion– and it was also dangerous.
So he didn’t look up, just stared at the table and nodded, resigned to his fate. He was going to protect the castle. It was more than his duty, it was his destiny.
In which Elinor learns about a plot which sets her on the path to Swynlake...[takes place: May 01, 2021 at Henry’s sister’s wedding]
@charmed-henry
[tw -- talk of idk premediated murder, the order being the Worst]
ELINOR:
Once, Elinor had loved weddings. When she was a little girl, she had dreamed of her own. And then, when Merida was a little girl, she had dreamed of her daughter's. Elinor had long ago made peace with the fact her daughter may never marry (but not with the fact that if she did, Elinor would not be there.)
That was what she thought about at weddings now. And she thought about her own marriage, crumbling like the foundations of the castle that she had worked so hard to maintain for almost thirty years.
She ruminated, standing in a corner, clutching her goblet by the base--before her curiosity or, perhaps, her desperation became too much.
Henry was her target, though the way she smiled at him when she finally sought him out did not betray this.
"Henry!" she called, giving him a warm smile. "You are looking well. I haven't seen you since Christmas."
HENRY:
Henry thought he was doing rather well at this wedding. Between proudly introducing Ashleigh to people and recounting the epic takedown of the vampires (and maybe, just a little bit, embellishing the nightmare fog situation) Henry was beginning to believe he may just have turned things around. He was just on his way to refresh his drink when Aunt Elinor stopped him. Perfect. Another opportunity.
"Thank you very much, Aunt Elinor. It's lovely to see you." He bowed his head slightly and smiled. "I have missed seeing everyone, being away at uni. That place is certainly nowhere near as civilized as any of our property." He chuckled. Henry did feel kind of bad for speaking poorly of Swynlake, but it was objectively true. Swynlake was a wild place.
ELINOR:
Elinor smiled tightly at Henry's assessment of Swynlake. It made her anxious. She knew, objectively, that she needn't worry about Merida. And yet, that was how she spent all of her freetime anyway. When you were a mother, it was impossible not to constantly worry. It didn't help when your daughter had a penchant for trouble and also, you hadn't spoken to her or laid eyes on her in two years.
"I can imagine," Elinor said with a little nod of her head. She had to be delicate about how she asked her questions. The last thing she wanted to do was alert Fergus to her inquiries. He would not take kindly to them.
"I trust you are handling everything alright on your own, then?"
HENRY:
Henry nodded seriously, straightening his posture a bit. This was his opportunity. His parents would probably later ask what he had talked about with Aunt Elinor.
"Of course, yes. Hasn't been easy, of course. I have a suspicion that the fae situation from this winter is only going to get worse. Nasty buggers. Of course, we have other priorities at the moment. Just a situation I'm keeping my eye on at the moment. But I'm not going to let it get in the way of the werewolf mission." Henry assumed someone had already told Aunt Elinor about that, considering... everything.
Was it a bad topic to bring up? Henry wasn't sure, but he wanted to prove that he took this seriously.
ELINOR:
Werewolf mission, Henry said and Elinor felt her heart clench. It did not show on her face, but she felt the panic spread easily through her veins as soon as her heart released.
There was only two werewolves she knew of in Swynlake: whoever had stolen that poor babe back and Merida.
For just a beat, she was completely silent. Her whole body frozen with dread. She did not want to know more--but she had to know more.
"Oh?" she said, finally, and her voice was light, airy. Almost too soft to be heard over the din of the reception. "And how is that mission going?"
HENRY:
Henry hesitated. Honestly, Henry wasn't as involved as he was making himself out to be. The mission had started before Henry had gotten there, and as a younger (and fresher off his Blood Hunt) member of the Order, he was mostly there to support.
"We've had some setbacks, but it's all being handled very professionally," Henry said seriously, like he was a soldier reporting to a general. He didn't want to show any sign that this was an uncomfortable matter for him, the fact that they were hunting a former Order member. And a family member. Henry already had enough of a reputation for being too emotional. He wanted to prove that wrong.
"Honestly, I wouldn't be surprised if these wolves took each other out. There was a situation around Christmas, some wolves and vampires got into it with one another... but of course that doesn't mean we'd wait for that to happen. We're going to need to be proactive. We have a few leads so far, but it's a question of how to be tactful, if you understand what I mean. The local government is not very cooperative."
ELINOR:
The coldness of her dread was burned up at once by a rage which felt almost impossible to contain. She wasn't sure how she managed. Perhaps because she had been practicing so long. Though, there was a moment where her hand twitched around her glass, as if she was going to raise it and strike Henry across the cheek.
Perhaps her anger was stayed because Henry was just a stupid little boy, who could not be faulted for absorbing the lessons he'd been taught. She wondered where that small boy had gone, who clung to his mother's skirt.
"I see," Elinor said, though she felt detached from her own voice. It sounded mechanical to her ears. Rehearsed. Her mind was already racing ahead.
Her divorce was already finalized. All that was left was for Fergus to sign the damn papers. Which was a hurdle, in and of itself, but no matter. If she had to leave, that would work for itself. She would be relinquishing the boys but--they had not wanted her anyway.
None of the legalities of that mattered anyway. What mattered was that Fergus had lied to her and that someone was hunting her daughter.
"And when you say we, you are referring to Mr. Smith, Knightley, and Harrington, are you not?"
HENRY:
If Henry was being truly honest, Tom, John, and Phil were really the ones doing the work of this werewolf mission. Henry was mostly there for support. And even though he told the others that he was putting the fae thing on pause, Henry had sort of privately made that his own mission, so that when something inevitably happened because of the fae, Henry would be prepared to step in and save the day, securing his family's reputation once and for all.
But nobody was ever honest at these Order events. Everyone was just trying to one-up each other, to be the most impressive, and if Henry wanted to make his family proud, he had to play that game too.
"Yes, and myself, of course," Henry said, puffing up a little bit. And Rose. He felt bad leaving her out, but Aunt Elinor didn't know her, so there wasn't really any point in bringing her up to Aunt Elinor. "Not to worry, we'll have this taken care of in no time at all."
ELINOR:
"I am sure you will," Elinor told him a voice that dripped, honeyed with irony.
What kind of order poisoned boys' minds so deeply to make them think that promising the death of a daughter to her mother's face was ever something that was good? That was right?
Elinor had spent the last two years wrestling with the edicts she had lived her life by. She had always believed that when someone was turned into a monster, they were stripped of who they had been before, their humanity. But, when Merida had come to her father's hall and revealed what had happened to her--
Elinor had only seen her daughter. Not a monster. And she couldn't look back from that moment. Her confidence had chipped away and now...
Now was the time to act.
"Well, good luck." She reached out and squeezed Henry's shoulder, perhaps harder than she meant to, and then looked to one side. "I think I heard someone call my name. I will see you at Christmas."
And then, she disappeared through the crowd, already planning a much more impressive disappearing act in her head.
Going through the old posts makes me miss Helinor (aka Hel, she was an OC). She was the only one who could make Felan nervous or pissed in one sentence.