regulus7:
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“One benefit of scenery is that they don’t talk back.” Regulus smiled. “Although the paintings of my ancestors often have something useful to add when it suits them.” He glanced down the hall. Paintings were just the echoes of dead relatives who had trained their representations to mirror their personalities. It was little different to the collection of Kreacher’s dead ancestors’ heads, but at times it could feel a little too like being watched by the dead. Thankfully they remained silent.
Denebola, the ever curious cat, surged forward to sniff Rosalie’s hand. “She’s part kneazle, part Siamese. She’s been a constant companion since she was no more than a hand sized ball of fluff” Regulus said, giving her tail a small tweak and she turned, batting against his hand with her head before returning to investigate Rosalie and rub against her legs. “Surely feathers must be easier to pluck off one’s robes?” He asked, brushing his robes to demonstrate that she had left a fine coating on his lap. It was perhaps rather unseemly. He should have asked Kreacher to remove what he could with a quick charm. “Would you like to take tea? I seem to recall I owe you a tour of the family crown collection but some refreshments might be pleasant after your journey?”
~ @foolgraves ~
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“Perhaps so,” Rosalie acknowledged. “But they are rather prickly, especially when moulting. There was once a time when my dear Artemis would pluck her feathers and I’d find them all over my bedroom. They would seem to appear wherever I went.” It was when she had returned that it was certainly awful. The wretched display of her most beloved companion had pained her. Her parents dismissed it, but Rosalie knew it had been over her absence. She recovered within the following weeks. They helped eachother to heal. “I don’t suppose you have any paintings of that?” She playfully remarked. A gloved hand ran over the feline’s head, received by a low purr of content. It caused a smile.
Faithfully clutching the arrangement of flowers occupying her other hand, she stood back up and met his eye. “A drink would be splendid. If it’s not too much to ask, might I have a glass of wine? Something warm.” The cold outside was biting. She could still feel the chill of it down her spine. Rosalie merely hoped the request wasn’t too improper. A show of sudden realization washed over her features. “Oh! By Morgana, I almost forgot,” she began with a tender chuckle, extending the handsome bouquet of Baby’s Breath and Spiderwort flowers out toward him. “These are for your mother. It was the least I could do for her hospitality.”












