She's definitely not just about making tea.
Mai should've known that life after the war wouldn't be nearly as boring as she'd feared, especially since she has an important job to do. Post-series, contains spoilers.
George and Mitchell's first meeting.
Food plays an important part in their household.
Annie's ready for a change.
Mitchell hates war movies.
"Come on, Annie. Just give it a try. What could it hurt?"
When all is quiet in the little pink house. (Epilogue to Series 1)
Mitchell discovers something unexpected about his new friendship with George.
Somewhere in the middle of their meandering conversation while the dough was rising, George talked about his family for seconds that turned into minutes, and minutes that turned into stories.
Annie hadn't given much thought to sex since her death.
George drops his bag on the floor, leans back on the door with his eyes shut and wonders how he can word a request that he not be scheduled for work on the morning after a full moon. Eight hours of hospital corners and emptying bedpans and being polite and cheerful after a night of howling and tearing in a vault in the cellar just isn’t as fun as it sounds. It’s unfair that Mitchell’s curse comes ready-made with coolness and brooding. George just gets rabid tetchiness, wall-eyed exhaustion, and a feeling like his joints aren’t put back together properly.
"I'm quite sure that living with a vampire is the exact opposite of normal."
It was some kind of irony that the answer to the vampire problem turned out to be the zombie problem.
She watches George, her hand over the stillness of his heart. Nothing stirs. There's no sound but the rain seething in the new leaves and the static on the television.