marywithoutthelamb:
Mary’s flat | Mary MacDonald & Adam MacDonald 4th of April, 1982 Closed starter for @epoxiimise
It would probably come as a shock to absolutely no one to find that Mary didn’t usually get any visitors. What was there to visit anyway? She was certainly never in the mood to entertain guests and her flat had exactly two rooms, one of which was the toilet while the other one was everything else; hardly inviting. So when the knock came, over a week after the attack on the Potter estate, her initial reaction was suspicion – tense, angry suspicion that had her blood pumping and her hand reaching for her wand. But it was immediately followed by logic; Death Eaters didn’t usually knock, in Mary’s experience. And while she didn’t let herself get caught up in the adrenaline rush of a potential duel, she kept her grip on her wand even as she marched forward to yank the door open.
Her wand was at Adam’s neck before she even recognised him. “Adam?” Immediately, she pulled the wand away and moved to glance around behind him, check if he was alone. He wasn’t supposed to be here. She had no idea why he’d be here.
“Come on. Inside.” She reached out to pull him in, making sure to slam the door behind him, but that was where her certainty ended. She didn’t like surprises and she didn’t like confusion; Adam’s presence meant both. She turned to him, expectant, both eyebrows raised. “The hell? You know you can’t-” be here, she’d been meaning to say. That sounded mean, though. And usually, it wouldn’t bother her but… this was Adam. Mary frowned and tried again, “What are you doing here? Did something happen back home?”
It had taken all his courage to make it to Mary’s door. One week ago, his casual fling had shown up in their usual meeting spot covered in soot and ranting intoxicatedly about a murderer.
Somehow, Dolohov had discovered that Adam Macdonald was related to Mary Macdonald, who he was apparently convinced had killed his best friend. The problem - Adam wouldn’t put it past his sister. While he felt he didn’t know her anymore, he knew that she was capable of terrible things if she felt it needed to be done.
Then there was the rest of the rant to think about. Explosions and chaos and so many things that Antonin probably didn’t mean to tell him. The bloke was a wizard and that fact was almost as shocking as when Adam had learned his sister was magical as well.
Her wand - he’d only seen it a handful of times - came up to his throat and Adam instinctively took a step back. He had actually never seen voluntary magic from the stick of wood, but he knew it was what she used to control what had one been weird tricks. Oh, that’s just Mary, they’d all said when they were kids.
She pulled him in roughly and he let her. Everything from their hometown was rough and his sister was no different. How many times had they handled one another like this growing up? Adam’s eyebrows shot up in disdain at the start to her sentence, hearing the rest even as she changed course. It made his usual bitterness for her come back with ease and he was reminded why they hadn’t spoken in so long.
“Trust me,” he said, just as coldly. “I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t have to be. I... I think I’m in trouble, Mary. And you’re the only one that can help me.” He wasn’t one to beat around the bush, so he pushed forward. “I think we should sit down so I can tell you about Antonin Dolohov. He’s one of your people.”








