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Welcome to Charming, the year is now 1894. It’s time to join us and immerse yourself in scandal and drama interlaced with magic both light and dark.

Where will you fall?

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Queen Victoria was known for putting jackets and dresses on her pups, causing clothing for dogs to become so popular that fashion houses for just dog clothes started popping up all over Paris. — Fox
It would be easy to assume that Evangeline came to the Lady Morgana only to pick fights. That wasn't true at all. They also had very good biscuits.
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don't know if I can play this part much longer
#1
2nd September, 1893 — Rowle Residence, Mayfair
The sixth day dawned – the sixth day since his father’s stroke, since Philip had been awake again. Yesterday had been a whirlwind: first, Philippa off to the Hogwarts Express; then leaving for the altercation at the Leaky Cauldron, with his unfortunately-titled siblings; after which he had stopped in to see his father, who was still clinging obstinately to life.

Philip hadn’t had the opportunity to rectify this as yet, but he was still grasping at the possibility of it, still turning it over and over in his mind, letting it consume his attention all morning. He didn’t have anywhere to be today, as far as he knew – but being at home was little better than that, when he didn’t have the place to himself. He had stalked from his bedroom to his study for the morning, thankful the younger children were occupied with their governess or nanny or whoever she was (– he hadn’t worked out their respective ages yet, one thing at a time –) but still intent on avoiding his wife.

Until he came down for luncheon and found her at the table. Supposing it couldn’t be avoided, he sat down opposite her. Lunch was served; he started eating. It struck him that, at its core, this was essentially Robin’s plan (a plan of civility and finesse, above reproach): to continue to exist in this life he barely knew, and had never chosen. Robin would have them all doing the same marionette dances they had always been, even though their strings were newly cut. He would have him act the Philip she expected forever.

For the last few minutes, Philip had kept his gaze trained on his wife rather than his food, not quite caring to be subtle about it. He didn’t know her, but if she had any wits about her at all, surely she had noticed the difference in him already in the last few days? His pacing about the house, aggravated and erratic; the confusion, as if he had suddenly been plunged to the precipice of madness; rifling through his possessions and the rooms and his life as if he were a stranger trying to make any sense of it. He was half waiting for her to accost him about it, but – who knew? He had no idea what she would do.

Alexandra. He knew her name, ha; and he must have a vague textbook trajectory of their history buried somewhere in his head that he would need to dig through, too. He tilted his head at her, watching every small movement she made. She looked neat, well-dressed, impeccable today: precisely the way she had every day this week. There was a certain coolness to her, he had decided, but – he didn’t yet know much else.

He couldn’t fathom what they might usually discuss at a Saturday lunch, and certainly hadn’t bothered to guess at it.
Alexandra Rowle / Alice Dawson


The following 1 user Likes Philip Rowle's post:
   Alexandra Rowle

#2
Alexandra had hoped that the dramatic shift in Philip's demeanor was related to either their daughter going off to school or his father's stroke, and as such would have settled back into his normal behaviors as the dust settled. Phillipa was sorted (a Gryffindor, Alexandra still wasn't sure how that had happened) and had already begun her classes. His father was comatose still and would either wake or wouldn't. There was no need to carry on as though the very ground beneath his feet had shifted.

The larger issue at hand was how even the way he moved seemed to be altered now. Alexandra had grown accustomed to her husband's behavior over the course of their decade long marriage — she knew how he functioned, how he thought and breathed. Everything about Philip was so entirely predictable that when he'd returned home days ago Alexandra had noticed immediately how something was off. There was a look in his eyes that was entirely unfamiliar to her, a certain energy about him that she didn't quite understand.

She ignored it for the first three days, deciding not to question his apparent breakdown in hopes he might soon settle back into himself. Then, when the fourth day set into night and he made no mention of their scheduled marital duties, Alexandra had determined something was gravely wrong with her husband. After all, Philip had never once squandered an opportunity to further the Rowle legacy. Never once.

And yet, the man sitting opposite her had done just that for going on three days now.

Alexandra sat with a rigid spine as she pondered what might've brought about this great change. She supposed he might've found himself enmeshed in an affair with some floozy, but that still didn't explain why he was prowling around the house like a lion stalking its prey. It also seemed entirely outlandish a prospect, for there were no unexplained absences or signs of such a thing. She wouldn't mind if he had either, so long as he was discreet about the affair and was mindful over fathering bastards. Perhaps then she would receive more than an one month's reprieve from her duties.

The weight of his stare was impossible to shake. Philip, who she had once pleaded with to show her any ounce of emotion, was looking at her as though he'd never seen her before. Alexandra refused to meet his gaze until she had finished her meal and the plates cleared away. Let him stare, she thought bitterly to herself. Nearly thirteen years of marriage and he chose now to act like a man possessed. She reached for her wine glass and took a small sip. Then, and only then, did she meet his gaze as if to demand, what?
Philip Rowle / Elias Grimstone


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   Philip Rowle
#3
She seemed, Philip was beginning to glean, as the silence churned away between them, inclined to ignore him. He could not recall if this was usual, or an effect of his altered demeanour – maybe silence had always been a more pleasant pastime than talking to her husband? Maybe other Philip had just been that deathly dull? Maybe – maybe Algernon Rowle’s reach had extended still further, and he had cursed his daughter-in-law too? (No, that could not be, because the curse was broken – and she was still ignoring him.)

Other Philip might have been unaffected by this. Philip here and now was swiftly finding he had precisely no patience for being ignored.

But he waited until their plates were gone, fingers drumming incessantly at the edge of the table, some small way to siphon out all the raw energy, the awful weight of being his body now contained.

And then she looked at him at last. His fingers stopped drumming.

“Do you ever speak?” he asked – he didn’t even know if he meant it to be mocking, or it was a genuine question. She seemed all but set in stone today, so who knew if they ever exchanged words. “I’d imagined luncheon might come with a conversation starter.”


The following 1 user Likes Philip Rowle's post:
   Alexandra Rowle

#4
"Of course I speak, dear." Alexandra coolly returned despite being anything but. His absurd question confirmed every doubt she now held over his sanity. What had caused the shift then? Men had affairs all the time if her friends were to be believed, that Philip would be this moved by something so trivial was ridiculous to consider. The children were all fairing well, his career was as bland as ever. An addiction, perhaps? Someone out of their mind on whatever illicit substance floating around at parties might've made sense, except she knew Philip. The man she knew had never even indulged in too many glasses of wine at dinner.

She took another sip of her wine, and with it another opportunity to ponder his behavior. A drug addiction made the most sense — but to what substance? He was erratic and paranoid, the only drugs Alexandra had ever indulged in had only mellowed her out enough to sleep. Perhaps she ought to have the chef slip some laudanum into his food at supper to encourage his rest, maybe then he'd return to his typical behaviors.

"Are we to discuss the weather? Or would you rather I comment on the food?" It was obvious by her tone that neither was a topic she held any interest in discussing.


The following 1 user Likes Alexandra Rowle's post:
   Philip Rowle
#5
He had never heard a dear so cutting. She could not have had any affection for him before the change, could she? Surely fondness did not fade so fast – and yet, Philip had seen no sign of it.

The weather, the food... maybe it was because Philip felt like he had woken up lashed to the mast of a sinking ship that he felt better placed to blow some cannon holes in it now. If getting a sentence out of her was like pulling teeth, maybe the whole thing was already rotten.

Or maybe this was just how some people were content to live? (He didn’t know. He wouldn’t know. He hadn’t gotten to live, had he?)

Her sips of wine felt disdainful and judgemental, like she was goading him every time she lifted the glass to her lips. Well. Philip was sure he could play that game. “No. But you could start,” he suggested, a new caustic glint in his eye, “by reminding me why I married you.”


The following 1 user Likes Philip Rowle's post:
   Alexandra Rowle

#6
Alexandra kept a cool composure, determined not to allow this wild version of him to rattle her cage. She was, however, positively stunned by the question, for she was wholly uncertain of his reasons. Their courtship was typical, bland even. Flowers arrived at the exact right occasions, their conversations then weren't any more riveting than they've been for the past decade. Alexandra had accepted his offers only because she was scorned once before and didn't dare risk a second missed opportunity. Theirs was a marriage of convenience, never passion, never happiness. The longer she sat with his question, the more she realized it was the first personal question he'd ever truly asked of her.

"Was it not because of my everlasting beauty?" Alexandra replied, her voice dripping with sarcasm. She paused then to take another sip of her wine, its sweetness a direct contrast to the icy air between them.



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