Amelia knew the solitude she had enjoyed after getting well at St. Mungo’s wouldn’t last, but she had at least taken solace in the fact that as long as her parents were still ill, there was little chance she would be mandated to attend formalized social gatherings.
But as she always did, Amelia had underestimated her mother, and Antionette had wasted no time informing Amelia that, as the only person in their family fit to be seen in public, she was to attend all the mandatory upper class events that her parents would have attended if they had been well. So instead of just a few encounters that her parents forced her to attend in the past, this year’s holiday schedule was already packed, and the suitable outfits for each hung up in her closet by Antoinette’s personal assistant. Amelia was not to be trusted to pick out her own clothes.
So tonight, Amelia had put on the obligatory green dress and gold shoes that her mother had chosen for the occasion, stopping to brush a kiss on her father’s cheek before she swept out of the house. His cheeks were sunken and his pallor green, but his eyes still held that same intellectual curiosity that had always defined him in Amelia’s mind, which was reassuring at least.
Amelia apparated to the café on the invitation card that her mother had given her, all gold filigree on cream-coloured card stock. It felt too thick between Amelia’s bony fingers, but she was rid of it as soon as she passed the threshold of the café and into the crowd of people.
The next hour was a blur. Someone took her coat, and moments later she was recognized by several people all at once, being directed from one conversation to another, whisked here and there to grace them with the presence of a Lyons family member, which for some reason they all seemed to think was important. Thankfully, Amelia didn’t need to talk much, as all of these types of people loved to talk about themselves, so she merely handed out the routine compliments, nodded to feign interest, and politely smiled her way through the endless barrage of small talk.
Eventually, though, Amelia needed to excuse herself to use the bathroom, a few moments of solitude to regain enough endurance to face the rest of this night. It was going to be a long holiday season keeping up this social façade.
Stepping out again into the throngs of party-goers, Amelia plucked a flute of champagne from the tray of a passing server, sipping it as she surveyed the room. She wasn’t certain what group she ought to rejoin, since she didn’t actually belong to any of them, but she figured if she waited long enough, someone would tell her what to do. Someone always did.