The Devil's Trill [Aidan]
Posted: Thu Jun 25, 2026 10:29 am
The final note lingered in the air long after the bow left the strings. For a moment, the tavern was unusually quiet. Not silent, The Last Port was never truly silent but quieter than normal. Conversations had softened while she'd played, tankards had paused halfway to lips, and even the old wizard in the corner who usually argued with himself about Quidditch statistics had shut his mouth long enough to listen. Morrigan lowered the violin slowly, emerald eyes sweeping across the room. A few of the regulars offered applause. Someone near the hearth whistled. Another demanded she play another song.
"Buy enough whiskey and maybe I will," she called back in her thick Irish brogue. The response earned a round of laughter. A crooked grin tugged at one corner of her mouth as she stepped down from the small platform tucked into the back of the tavern. The violin remained tucked beneath one arm while she made her way behind the bar, slipping easily back into the role most people knew her for. Proprietor. Referee. Occasional source of bad decisions and worse advice.
She set the instrument safely beneath the counter before reaching for a glass that needed drying. Not that it actually needed drying. She simply preferred having something to do with her hands. The tavern was comfortably busy tonight. Enough patrons to fill most of the tables without making the place feel crowded. The air smelled faintly of woodsmoke, spiced stew, and Firewhisky. Familiar. Safe. At least as safe as anything ever felt these days. The feeling lasted all of three seconds.
Her eyes drifted toward the door as another patron entered. Immediately she regretted looking because she knew exactly who it was. Merlin help her, Aidan Blackwood. She couldn't even claim surprise anymore. He'd developed an irritating habit over the years. Every so often he'd simply appear. Sometimes for a drink. Sometimes for a meal. Sometimes just to sit and talk. Talk. As though that was normal. As though they were normal.
Once upon a time, sitting across from him had involved uncomfortable questions, awkward silences, and his infuriating ability to look at her like he could see every thought she was trying not to think. Back then he'd had the advantage of being her healer. There had been rules. Expectations. Now there weren't. Which somehow made everything worse. Because now when he asked how she was doing, he wasn't asking because it was his job. And she still hadn't figured out what to do with that.
Morrigan scowled faintly at the glass in her hand as though it had personally offended her. One of the regulars perched at the bar glanced between her and the entrance before snorting into his drink.
"Your boyfriend's here."
The look she shot him could have melted stone. "Say that again and I'll charge you double." The old wizard only laughed harder. Traitor. Morrigan muttered something deeply unflattering under her breath before setting the glass aside. She straightened, smoothed a hand down the front of her shirt, then immediately frowned because she had absolutely no reason to be doing that. None whatsoever.
She grabbed a bottle from the shelf behind her instead and busied herself pouring a drink for another customer, stubbornly refusing to glance toward his direction again. The fact that she knew exactly where Aidan was without looking was entirely beside the point.
"Buy enough whiskey and maybe I will," she called back in her thick Irish brogue. The response earned a round of laughter. A crooked grin tugged at one corner of her mouth as she stepped down from the small platform tucked into the back of the tavern. The violin remained tucked beneath one arm while she made her way behind the bar, slipping easily back into the role most people knew her for. Proprietor. Referee. Occasional source of bad decisions and worse advice.
She set the instrument safely beneath the counter before reaching for a glass that needed drying. Not that it actually needed drying. She simply preferred having something to do with her hands. The tavern was comfortably busy tonight. Enough patrons to fill most of the tables without making the place feel crowded. The air smelled faintly of woodsmoke, spiced stew, and Firewhisky. Familiar. Safe. At least as safe as anything ever felt these days. The feeling lasted all of three seconds.
Her eyes drifted toward the door as another patron entered. Immediately she regretted looking because she knew exactly who it was. Merlin help her, Aidan Blackwood. She couldn't even claim surprise anymore. He'd developed an irritating habit over the years. Every so often he'd simply appear. Sometimes for a drink. Sometimes for a meal. Sometimes just to sit and talk. Talk. As though that was normal. As though they were normal.
Once upon a time, sitting across from him had involved uncomfortable questions, awkward silences, and his infuriating ability to look at her like he could see every thought she was trying not to think. Back then he'd had the advantage of being her healer. There had been rules. Expectations. Now there weren't. Which somehow made everything worse. Because now when he asked how she was doing, he wasn't asking because it was his job. And she still hadn't figured out what to do with that.
Morrigan scowled faintly at the glass in her hand as though it had personally offended her. One of the regulars perched at the bar glanced between her and the entrance before snorting into his drink.
"Your boyfriend's here."
The look she shot him could have melted stone. "Say that again and I'll charge you double." The old wizard only laughed harder. Traitor. Morrigan muttered something deeply unflattering under her breath before setting the glass aside. She straightened, smoothed a hand down the front of her shirt, then immediately frowned because she had absolutely no reason to be doing that. None whatsoever.
She grabbed a bottle from the shelf behind her instead and busied herself pouring a drink for another customer, stubbornly refusing to glance toward his direction again. The fact that she knew exactly where Aidan was without looking was entirely beside the point.