Seldom did Tracer ever expect guests knocking at the door of her flat. Occasionally a neighbor or an old friend. Never one at such a late hour into the night, though it wasn’t odd for someone to end up at the wrong place after a few too many pints, this was out of place.
Roused from slumber with each persistent knock, until she couldn’t ignore them any longer. Tracer crawled out of bed, barefoot in her pajamas she trodded quietly as she could to the door. An unnatural chill seemed to creep through the wood as she unlatched the bolt, leaving the chain fastened and opening the door just a crack.
Tracer needed no more then a glimpse of the guest at her door to jolt awake. If the Widow wanted her dead, there wouldn’t have been such a broad approach, showing up right at the front door. More alarming then having been found was how her rival appeared downtrodden, though perhaps it was merely the fact she was absolutely drenched.
“If I let you in.. you have to promise to behave.” Lena felt doubt the Widowmaker had come seeking conflict, at least this time. Once receiving the answer she’d hoped for, she unfastened the chain, opening the door wide.
“Hold on love, lemme find some towels.” Her apartment was a bit of a mess, though it lingered somewhere on the verge of organized chaos with all of her possessions strewn about. Tracer disappears down one hall and quickly returns, offering a way of getting dry, and hesitates in giving the blanket afterwards. If she’s perpetually cold, it seems as though it makes no difference. Tracer offers it anyway once she’s mostly dry.
Lena can’t bite back the question any longer, once she’s made sure the carpet won’t have gotten soaked. “Why are you here?”
The rain would freeze anyone else. It’s but a few degrees away from being snow or hail, which against Amélie’s skin nearly feels like a pleasant low room temperature. The wetness, however, that accrues the longer she reluctantly raps the obverse of her knuckles against the breezeway door... that is another matter. Her hair is horribly matted at this point, which-- given its length-- makes it appear as though a soaking wet bath towel is hanging from her head.
Not that she notices any of that, of course. She’s far too lost in her own labyrinthine thoughts.
“... bonsoir,” is all she manages to start with, her voice weak and resigned, rubbing at her arms with both of them crossed over her chest, as though shivering. “Do not be dense. You know I cannot promise zhat.”
Despite not doing as Tracer asked, she nonetheless steps inside. The second she’s out of the rain, she unfolds her arms and reaches for the giant mess of soaked hair behind her head, giving it a wringing squeeze to expunge some of the rain. It soaked the floor underneath her, but she either doesn’t notice or doesn’t care.
The blanket is accepted in complete silence, and she puts it to prompt use across her body. A few deft wipes across her arms, then her legs, then her waist, before she wraps her ponytail up into it to make a semi-turban behind her head. In the middle of tying a knot for it though, Tracer sees fit to ask that question. She knew it was coming, but... she’d hoped to be dry before having to address.
“What was my name,” she nearly whispers, her tone maudlin, her hand sinking down to one of the pouches on her bandoleer. Her sickly, pale yellow eyes sink to the floor, unable to look at the shorter woman while she talks. “Was it Amélie? Is zhat who I was..? Mon dieu, I-- I am trying to remember. But I cannot.”