“I am not wearing that,” Amelia said obstinately as her mother walked out of Amelia’s closet and back into her bedroom carrying a purple cocktail dress that Amelia had intentionally buried at the back of her boudoir beneath “last season” clothing, hoping never to have it come to light. Clearly, that plan had backfired, because her mother’s keen eye had spotted the curve-hugging dress that Amelia had so despised and, judging from the look on her face, she had every intention of making sure her daughter wore it.
“I don’t recall asking for your opinion,” Antoinette replied curtly, completely inflexible as always. She crossed the room in five long strides, passing Amelia who was standing in a bra and underwear in the middle of the room, her arms crossed over her chest not out of modesty for what little she was wearing, but out of sheer frustration with her mother’s endless antics.
“Obviously you didn’t, or you would never have arranged this date in the first place,” Amelia huffed, “you know I hate these things.” She knew she was whining, and that it was unattractive, but after exhausting nearly every other method in her not unimpressive reservoir of ways to get out of doing the tiring list of things her mother always made her do, Amelia was at the bottom of her rope.
“If you were capable of getting dates on your own, I wouldn’t be forced to arrange them for you,” Antoinette said pointedly, fixing Amelia with her glass-green eyes, “Now get dressed. I won’t let you keep Simon waiting.”
“I am capable, I just don’t- oh nevermind,” Amelia said, making her annoyance known even as she admitted defeat, dropping her arms and stomping over to the bed where her mother was sitting, the dress hanging next to her. Amelia took the dress haphazardly from the hanger and unzipped it with more force than necessary, stepping into it one long leg after another and then turning her back to her mother and lifting her hair so she could be zipped into the dress. Without rush, her mother’s fingers moved to the zipper, bringing it up slowly and clasping the latch at the top. Antoinette's hands then found Amelia’s hips as she turned her daughter around to face her, and Amelia let her long hair fall down around her shoulders and dropped her hands to her sides again. In putting on the dress, Amelia had given up any power she might have been holding onto before. Now, she was no more than her mother’s dress up doll that could be puppeted into saying and doing anything Antoinette said. It was nothing new.
“Now, I expect you to behave yourself this evening,” her mother said, producing a pair of strappy silver sandals from beneath Amelia’s bed and leaning down to strap Amelia’s feet into them while she doled out the same instructions she did before every one of these pointless dates, “Act like a lady. Think before you speak, and if you can’t say anything nice, keep your mouth shut. His father has assured me that Simon is very much looking forward to this and I expect you to act as if you are as well.”
And Simon’s father was probably lying just as much as you were when you told him I was excited too, Amelia thought mulishly to herself, though she nodded in silent agreement to do as her mother said. Fighting it had been a losing battle from the beginning; Amelia always did as she was told, and Antoinette always got her way. Everything else was just a tedious journey to the same frustrating place.
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Antoinette had insisted on apparating with Amelia to the restaurant, just to make sure Amelia didn’t change her mind at the last minute. She was probably right to do so, because although Amelia had consented to put on the dress that made her look like some kind of trophy her mother was auctioning off, put on the shoes that were completely inappropriate for this time of year, and endured the rest of the date preparations in silence, she was still not at all committed to the idea of going on this date.
The routine was always the same: her mother would talk to her socialite friends about her hopeless daughter, tragically dateless, and in doing so, would peak the interest of other meddling mothers and fathers keen to find dates for their own teenage children. It was pitiful, really, that her mother had nothing better to do with her time than to play matchmaker for Amelia. And this time she had picked a real winner: Simon McLaggen. Amelia knew relatively little about him other than he was the son of Cormac McLaggen, a name she did not recognize because of her fascination with quidditch – Merlin knows that is certainly something she did not possess – but rather because he had been in attendance at a few of her parents’ functions. He was one of a thousand handshakes to Amelia, and his son wasn’t much more notable. A sixth year in her own house, played quidditch (or at least that was what her mother had told her ), and… nope, that was it. Her mother hadn’t given her any more information than that, believing the only thing Amelia needed to know was that he came from wealth and status.
At the door of Murray’s Place, Antoinette watched until Amelia was fully inside before turning on the spot and disappearing into the light snowflakes that were falling outside. Inside, it was much warmer, so Amelia’s tentative plans to keep her coat and avoid having to be seen in this ridiculous dress were thwarted, and she reluctantly removed her coat and handed it off to the doorman. The hostess recognized her immediately – probably from the other awkward dates she had been forced into attending here – and escorted her quickly through the restaurant, all the way to a secluded table near the back, clearly of her mother’s doing. If Antoinette thought isolation from other restaurant-goers was going to induce Amelia into doing anything more with Simon than eat, she had another thing coming.
Amelia nodded a thanks to the hostess as she dismissed herself, leaving Amelia standing uncomfortably next to the table where Simon was sitting. He was dressed nicely in an ensemble Antoinette would have approved of and was holding a spoon upside down in his hand, to which Amelia had no reply. She tugged her ‘too-tight-in-my-opinion’ dress down once before sliding into the chair opposite Simon, tucking a curtain of hair behind her ear as she sat.
“Well, let’s get this over with, shall we?” Amelia said briskly, unfairly taking out her frustration with her mother on her “date”. Simon hadn’t done anything to upset her – yet – but these things never went well. It was better to just get through them as quickly and painlessly as possible and move on like they never happened.