BELLATRIX LESTRANGE. ( @mcssmisery )
who: @amdromedas
where: outside the tonks household.
when: april 27, 1983.
She didn’t know why she was here.
The house was quaint, really, enough to make her stomach churn. It’s what she’d pictured their home to be like; that warmth that she only read about in fairytales. Bellatrix hadn’t thought when she’d apparated, truthfully. She’d had Andromeda’s address for a long time, acquired by a one of her more loyal house elf’s after presents had arrived from her sister for Christmas one year. Still, she’d never been. It felt silly, really, because what would she do here? Lurk outside and make sure her sister was safe? They couldn’t talk, of course; Bellatrix couldn’t bear that. Not now. Not with what she knew.
Still, here she was, standing outside, a sore thumb wearing a black cape in their bright neighborhood.
Bellatrix might’ve knocked if the situation were different. Might have found the lion’s courage that lay within her, somewhere, according to the Sorting Hat. Right now, though, she couldn’t find that burst of bravery, or even anger, that had propelled her here. The letters had brought up an unwelcome swarm of emotions, and they still buzzed within her, muddying her brain, causing her to stumble up Andromeda’s steps with that same bloody stupid mindset she’d had as a child. Hatred and love and that thin, thin line between them. It was making her sick to her stomach.
Her father’s notes had merely confirmed her suspicions, but she’d burned them. Burned every last one of them to make sure that Andromeda would never be found out. Not now. Despite it all, despite the fact that her sister was a Seer, confirmed by her father’s horrific tests ( tests that Bellatrix didn’t know about; tests that, now, made her want to beat him into oblivion for conducting ), Bellatrix still protected her. She always would, at the end of the day. And what was she here to do? Tell her that? They didn’t even talk about the weather. With a shake of her head, Bellatrix practically ran from the front door, down the sidewalk, about to head into the alley when she saw her sister. Feet stopped, planted into the Earth, Bellatrix knew that she was trapped. She didn’t know why she’d came, but she was here, and now so was Andromeda.
It was a duck today, Dora’s current fascination. Their little nose flared out into a little bill and by the time the pair of them walked from the library back home, she’d nearly perfected her quack. It was impressive, if not a bit amusing, and Andy knew, perfectly well, that she shouldn’t encourage public use of Dora’s penchant for turning into animals that waddled into their path, she couldn’t help but chuckle as Dora turned the sudden tuft of hair on their head to a vibrant blue.
Andy brushed Dora’s hair back, shifting back to its original color. “I like that color on you, Dor; it looks lovely with that jumper. Maybe not with the bill,” she laughed, dropping a kiss to their forehead, “But with the jumper? Absolutely.” Dora nearly laughed, but their face contorted into confusion.
Andromeda didn’t answer, frankly she wasn’t sure if she could. She didn’t freeze, she didn’t misstep, she didn’t do any of that. She merely kept walking, breezing past her sister to get her child inside. There were a thousand feelings swirling in her chest and she would deal with all of them, and her well and truly terrifying sister after her child was inside and safe. That was the priority, their safety - and if she was able to not completely panic because she could compartmentalize what was important and what wasn’t, that was merely an an unwelcome perk for this particular trauma response.
“Dora, love, let’s get you inside,” her voice was like ice, not offering any room for arguments. If they did have any complaints, she was in the house before they were able to voice them.
Muttering a protection spell on the house and a muffling charm on the pair of them, she turned back to her sister, suddenly feeling like Druella’s daughter again. Her spine straightened, her chin jutted out just so, her gaze suddenly colder. Truthfully, she felt a bit more like Bellatrix’s sister than she did Druella’s daughter but, oddly enough, that batty old bitch was less controversial of a connection given the circumstances.
“Hello, Trixie,” she said, the childhood nickname falling from her lips without much care. It was calculated, of course, it had to be, because she was nothing without careful consideration of all possible outcomes. Bellatrix had always been the most unpredictable out of the three sisters, but Andromeda hoped that the use of the name would be something of a power move, proving their familiarity, that she was still her sister and there would always be string attached to that, no matter how much she tried to slice them off.
“I’ve been expecting you.” The statement was plain, unafraid, blunt, though it never quite reached unkindness. “I have a pretty good idea of what you’re doing here, but I’ve been wrong before so,” she brushed past her sister, nodding her head towards the gate that led into the backyard. It probably wasn’t the smartest decision to go into a more private area with a woman that was no stranger to murder but she’d far prefer bodily harm on her own person than having her sister inflict it where others might witness it. “Why don’t you tell me why you’re here? I imagine this isn’t a social call.”