valenciacrabbe:
Truthfully Valencia didn’t give a damn about politics. The Minister of Magic was a figurehead after all, and she felt that she would get more out of Laurent being Minister over Rosier or Dolohov. Her connection to Laurent was far stronger than the other options, and at the end of the day Val was looking for what she could get out of something rather than who would be the best for the job.
“I’m glad to help out if you need anything,” Valencia offered. It was the least that she could do for Manon’s brother. “It’s about time that there is a new face in the Ministry if you ask me. Things have been too…the same lately.” Valencia wasn’t surprised that he didn’t say that it was gauche, although she liked to believe that he was in agreement.
“It was alright,” she shrugged her shoulders. “I suppose it was a nice enough night. We didn’t stay the entire time, but the time we spent was fine. How is Andromeda?”
.
“I’ll have to keep that in mind,” Laurent said brightly. “We’re not doing anything too crazy right now, but after the speeches, we’ll see. I might have to ramp things up a bit, but I hate to campaign too hard, you know? We want to be seen, we want to be taken seriously, but we don’t want to look desperate.” Hopefully that was a good enough excuse. And it was true. When candidates--especially those with muggle backgrounds--plastered their faces and slogans everywhere, high society loved to criticize. Laurent would use what he could.
“She’s great!” Laurent hoped he came off as sincere. In truth, he was pretty sure she was struggling, but he of all people couldn’t point out that it must be hard to be in her place having just lost her husband. “I’m still getting to know her child. We’re trying not to rush things too quickly. You know how society loves to talk, but we’re doing well. It’s good to have someone to rely on.”











