siriusbrontideâ:
A huff of laughter escapes, ragged and half-mad. Itâs teary and deranged, and he crushes himself closer to Remus even when he should be pulling away. How? He asked himself that so many times. Dumb luck, a one in a million chance that his plan would go right at all. But Sirius had months to consider his own demise, the gnawing feeling in his stomach leading him to formulate some kind of tactic for escape, if the time ever came where he would need it. âLetâs just say the great and mighty Dark Lord didnât consider a spy in the ranks when he decided to base his wards on the ones at Number 12.âÂ
Sirius remembers being eighteen years old, tagging along with his father while they constructed them. Marked for months already, Sirius was fondly regarded by all at home by that age. Dear Sirius is a master of runes, my lord. Crafted the ones on his wand himself. Praise from his father, an alien concept. But he was the golden child, then, finally. Tom Riddle looked at him with interested eyes, gaze too heavy, and Sirius managed an innocent smile in return as he answered every question that arose. Yes, my lord. I find ward-crafting fascinating. Not even a lie. Heâd harboured teenage dreams of going into curse-breaking, before he doomed himself to a life as the Black Heir. It was easy, then, to get up close and personal, to watch as the spells were laid down.Â
More intimate knowledge came later, when he first tried to bring Remus into Grimmauld Place. He squeezes Remus tighter at the memory of that, the way the wards had gone up and on the offensive, the way Remus had almost bled out from his wounds. Sirius had spent weeks down in the cellar after that, tucked away in the ward room, pouring over the spell schematics to figure out what he needed to remove, to learn the way every link in the chain of magic worked. It was an obsession, accompanied by the dawning horror that overwhelmed him when he read his great grandfathers notes. All the darkness that had gone into the spells beneath his home. All the darkness that must have been carried out in the sessions he had missed at the Riddle house, when his father had sent him away to tend to other work. Dark magic. Blood magic. The sacrifices necessary for a certain type of safety.Â
His voice is a numb thing, but he broke the seal and now the words keep coming. âLocked me up in the dungeons, but there were cracks. Found them after a few days, got out and down to the ward-room and âââ A breath. âEasy to slip out as Padfoot.â Nuzzling close, drifting into quiet again. A few days. A few days too many. It had felt like weeks, but he didnât feel like he should share that sentiment. Heâd rather spare Remus than have him know. And then there was the journey through the woods. Being hunted like a prey animal, Bellatrix following behind. âAnd then I made it here. And itâs all okay now.âÂ
There are so many questions he wants to ask. So many things he needs to know. Some for his own peace of mindâdid they hurt you? what happened to your wand? what can I say, what can I do to help?âand some that would be important to the Insurgencyâdid Amelia really turn you in? can we trust or, or is she lost? how much trouble did you have, crossing the border? did they follow you?âbut he canât bring himself to ask them, yet. Itâs clear there is something Sirius isnât telling him, and heâs defaulting back to their usual behavior: talk later, let Sirius ignore it all until he canât anymore, even if he ought to talk about it, even if it would help for him to.
But a part of Remus is afraid. Afraid to hear it, and worse, afraid to make Sirius relive it, or afraid that Sirius will resent him for bringing it up at all. Afraid of losing him again, for some avoidable reason. He canât bear the thought of that, not right now.Â
His heart is a maelstrom, relief and fear and despair and joy all in equal measures. Heâs dreamed of the day Sirius could come home for years, since the very moment he convinced himself not to give up on his own life. Theyâve been working towards this and planning for it, and now heâs here, and whether itâs on their terms or fateâs doesnât so much matter, because heâs home, and heâs safe, and heâs here, in Remusâ arms.
But... heâs not safe. Not entirely. Not knowing that the Death Eaters have some way of crossing the border undetected, not knowing they know heâs a traitor and will probably stop at nothing to hunt him down. Not knowing the Mark is still on his arm, clear and dark and angry, and that they havenât found a way to get rid of it yet. Not knowing that, though Molly and Ted and Minerva are working, doing their best, the wards are still unstable at best, only holding in certain parts of the castle. The worst case scenario leaps readily to mind: the wards falling, the Death Eaters coming, taking Sirius from him again.
They would not grant him a merciful death, if they caught him. Remus knows this better than most.Â
   âIt will be,â he rasps, barely a whisper before he pulls away to finally look at him, take in his sunken features, his mussed hair, his exhausted eyes. Remus couldnât exactly expect him to look well after days or weeks in his animagus form, on the run, but itâs still hard to see him like this. âI promise it will be.â












