The crisp smell of pages that hadn’t yet been turned, the cracking of spines, even the thin layer of dust which covered the lesser-loved volumes – all of these appealed to Amelia’s senses, which had been dulled by the past few months of her captivity. There was nothing like a bookshop to bring her back to life.
For the first time in five months, Amelia had been given her parents’ full permission to be out of the house on her own, which was actually quite a feat considering the leash they had kept her on since her untimely removal from Hogwarts in March. Although they had told the headmaster that her removal was due to “familial concerns”, that answer was just about as vague as the ones Amelia typically gave to her peers and teachers. The concern had come from her mother – technically family, though more robot – who objected to Amelia’s participation in the Hogwarts Tournament. While this had been the anticipated reaction from the maternal sector, Amelia had hardly expected to be removed forcefully from Hogwarts on account of her being selected champion.
And so she had been tutored at the family’s summer home in Ireland during the remaining months of the academic calendar by various tutors who were either dreadfully dull, completely incompetent, or altogether unconcerned with her performance, but rather with the paycheck they had been promised. A particularly dreadful tutor with a peakish appearance and mustache that took up most of his face had met an unfortunate end when one of his own demonstrative charms backfired; he was not invited back.
Aside from her studies, Amelia had been allowed on the grounds of the estate, to attend events which her parents would also be in attendance, and not a lot else. As a result of the amount of free time which had been heaped on her, the redhead’s wandwork, non-verbal spells, and musical talents had expanded and improved this summer, but her social skills seemed to have receded even further, if that was at all possible. Although her mother had put her through the rigmarole when it came to learning to interact with others, Amelia had faltered at every step – whether by design or personality flaw it would have been difficult for Antoinette to tell.
But now, her mother had finally deemed Amelia’s punishment fulfilled and had relocated the family back to London. Her father had been thrilled to return to his old office and proximity to the other researchers in his field; Ireland had been almost as much a punishment to him as it had been to Amelia, though that certainly hadn’t been Antoinette’s intention. And with this relocation came the reinstatement of Amelia’s freedom to come and go as she pleased, though her mother’s short temper kept her from wandering too far.
The Black Raven Bookshop had always been a sort of haven for Amelia whenever she was on summer holiday. Although there was a library in her parents' home, Amelia had long ago made it through all the pages which lined the shelves, leaving her longing for more. This shop was not all that well known to the general public, which made it all the more appealing to Amelia, who enjoyed the solitude the shop often brought. The owners were kind and unobtrusive, willing to let Amelia be and not ask too many questions. It was like disappearing into another world when she came here, and each book she read a world within that world.
Having just finished flipping through a book on interspecies transfiguration, Amelia replaced the tome in its appropriate shelf and began walking the aisle again. She stepped slowly, allowing her eyes to rake across the names, some familiar and others new to her. At each unfamiliar title, Amelia paused to take in the spindly, block, or even handwritten words, occasionally pulling down a book to peruse the first few pages to gage her interest.
Just as she had pulled down a particularly thick volume entitled Wizards and Wandlore, Amelia saw through the shelves the upper torso and neck of another individual. The bookshop having worked its magic on her, Amelia was in such a state that she was willing to make assumptions about who else was in the shop, and thus she believed she had just caught a glimpse of one of the shop’s few employees, a young man who had helped her on a few other occasions when she needed to order a book or ask about getting a translated version. Flipping open Wizards and Wandlore, Amelia was reading as she walked around the end of the aisle and into the one she had just glimpsed, her eyes on the pages as she spoke.
“Andrew, you wouldn’t happen to have this in hardcover would yo-“ Amelia had begun saying, though by the time she reached the end of the anticipated question, she had looked up and realized that, in fact, she wasn’t speaking to the shop assistant, but instead to a total and complete stranger.
Mortified by her mistake, Amelia felt blood rising blotchily to her cheeks, obscured only slightly by the hair that hung around her face. Her eyes immediately darted to the ground as she snapped the book shut, pulling it tight to her chest as her mind chastised her – stupid, stupid, stupid.
A solid minute of stone silence passed before Amelia could stop the mental bashing long enough to even think about anything else, though it felt like days from where Amelia was standing. Raising her free hand to the back of her neck, Amelia rubbed the muscles there in a characteristic nervous gesture, still not looking at the young man she had so easily mistaken for another.
“Ah…” Amelia finally muttered awkwardly, a slight nervous laughter escaping her, though it was clearly not the ‘laugh-it-off’ type of giggle, but more of a ‘get-me-out-of-here’ variety, “… obviously you aren’t…um…you don’t work here…I…um… sorry,” the be-freckled young woman finally managed, all of this spoken at the floor, though meant for what she assumed to be the store’s only other customer, and perhaps inhabitant.