- Messages
- 10,626
- OOC First Name
- Claire
- Blood Status
- Muggleborn
- Relationship Status
- Single
- Sexual Orientation
- Asexual
- Wand
- Straight 9 1/2 Inch Rigid Walnut Wand with Thestral Tail Hair Core
- Age
- 1/1999 (64)
The half-mile walk from Monty's house to Wendall and Mary Lou's farm was a pleasant one, even in winter. Monty thought so, anyway; but then again, he'd always been fond of gloomy weather. Grey skies over damp countryside soothed his anxious mind. If anything, he was liable to complain that New Zealand wasn't gloomy enough. In any case, it seemed silly to apparate and miss out on a good stroll in the fresh air, especially when visiting his cousin’s family was often the only thing that got him out of the house.
He had not told them why he was coming - only that he had something important to ask. It had been on his mind for several years now, and the time had come at last to put his plan into action. Besides his grandchildren, Wendall and Mary Lou were his closest family; he had watched them grow up, advised them, and supported them however he could, and now that they were older, they supported him in turn, so it was no surprise he had come to think of them as a son and daughter-in-law. But it was the way they treated him like a father which had touched him so profoundly. Their kindness and company, especially in the midst of so much loss, meant more to him than he knew how to express in words, though he regularly sought to try. He loved them both very dearly; and as family, and the godfather of their children, he felt an obligation to care for them in any way he could.
He turned down the narrow road to the farm, passed through the wooden gate, and came to knock on the front door. Naturally, he had brought biscuits - a pack of Mary Lou and Wendall’s favourites each, because he couldn’t decide. Funny how small decisions could be so much more difficult than the big ones.
He had not told them why he was coming - only that he had something important to ask. It had been on his mind for several years now, and the time had come at last to put his plan into action. Besides his grandchildren, Wendall and Mary Lou were his closest family; he had watched them grow up, advised them, and supported them however he could, and now that they were older, they supported him in turn, so it was no surprise he had come to think of them as a son and daughter-in-law. But it was the way they treated him like a father which had touched him so profoundly. Their kindness and company, especially in the midst of so much loss, meant more to him than he knew how to express in words, though he regularly sought to try. He loved them both very dearly; and as family, and the godfather of their children, he felt an obligation to care for them in any way he could.
He turned down the narrow road to the farm, passed through the wooden gate, and came to knock on the front door. Naturally, he had brought biscuits - a pack of Mary Lou and Wendall’s favourites each, because he couldn’t decide. Funny how small decisions could be so much more difficult than the big ones.