Out of this room, down the corridor, behind a door, a woman writhes in an unnatural contortion of a body that could not contain the sanity of one who had held it together for so long. Delirious, she turned her head to press her cheek to the sheets, wet and bloody from the wounds on her skin. Her face, her hands, and her legs. Where the pink of her nails was, the grime was a mix of skin and blood. Down where there was supposed to be the promise of a new birth, she was dry; and surprisingly, unharmed. Yet, the untranslatable pain was in her womb. A Healer stood over the woman, watching and waiting. He knew his instructions, but he knew the outcome, too. He watched and waited, looking on at an unspeakable pain that he knew he would never suffer. It wasn’t the first time, even in this family, that he was made to witness the agony of the women. Still, he stood, transfixed by the manifestation of madness on this woman. There was something new about this pain; something grotesque, unnatural, and foul. He knew. But he didn’t know enough to save her. Augustus heeded nothing. And for that, he will lose the promised son, and the wife.
Back in the peaceful hum of his office, away from the room with silencing charms that Cordelia was put to suffer her last week, or perhaps it was just days, Augustus sat back in his armchair, wearing a smirk on his face, and watching a girl his daughter’s age speak. There was a space in his mind that fought back the reality of what was waiting for him in the other room, but he kept his peace. Strangely, it was easy. He watched Cerelia with curiosity, recognising in her a slim semblance of her father, and yet, the kind of spirit that he had only observed in the victims of that very same man. It was no secret that girls were not particularly protected in certain households of the Pureblood Elites. Yet, because Augustus was more capable of indifference rather than cruelty to his daughters, his suspicions about Cerelia’s relationship with her father was slowly becoming more intriguing to the man. It would seem, then, for all of his elusiveness, Adolphus Avery maintained some kind of consistency.
As the girl continued to speak, it was rather apparent there was still a child in her that wasn’t allowed to be let out sufficiently. Perhaps if Augustus had more conversations with his own daughter, he would have noticed the same. Yet, it was Cerelia who held his attention. Despite all of the maturity she seemed to hold together, and the obvious potential that was brimming at the surface of her person, the child had not been destroyed, yet. It was fortunate, really. Despite that, the heaviness of her relationship with her father was merely hinted at. Augustus was curious. He wanted more, anything to quell his questions. There was no real relation to what she was sent to him for. Well, it wasn’t going to be any good on their part, anyway. That was the problem with talking, wasn’t it? Somehow, one way or another, in talking, you revealed yourself. And Cerelia didn’t seem to have any qualms about that. It wasn’t that she had to be cautious against him. It was just that the fear and suspicions there have become characteristics of the spirit of the Pureblood Elites have concocted a poisonous way of living and believing that was only too keen to find a stake for continuity in every pocket of the community. You couldn’t run from it, even if you could manage it. One was always cautious. There was no rest.
“Well, honesty for honesty,” Augustus started. “While success is a massive appeal, as it is to people like us, Potionatus Poténtiæ promises sport to me. It’s probably why Shabaam wanted the Rookwoods on this. And your father, of course.” There was a gleam in the man’s eyes, where the sides have begun to fall a little in a crinkle of insignificant aging. “I’m not sure, of course, about your father’s true intentions, but I liked the proposition as soon as testing subjects were brought up.” He chuckled to himself. “Good old days, in my opinion. Back when we had far more control over the weakness of the Ministry. It didn’t last long at all, with us. But before us, too, it was good.” Augustus began to sip on the Absinthe that had been waiting for him for more than a couple of minutes now.
“I could use a trip down the Nile now,” Augustus spoke between his chuckles at the girl’s words. “Well, I will wait on Shabaam’s information or alert, if anything. I’m sure Adolphus is catching up with the man. After all, it’s been years, I believe, since the last time we had an encounter. Besides, Shabaam has this establishment …” Then, with a glance at Cerelia, he stopped himself. Thoughts of Maia entered his head suddenly, and there and then, he knew that he had placed her in the manor, but had very soon forgotten about that girl’s existence. With that, Augustus made a mental note about Shabaam’s gift. What with another frustrated disappointment with Cordelia’s attempt at providing him with another heir, Augustus was itching to vent it on Maia now.
“You’re looking for an adventure then?” He asked, suddenly, as if a thought had struck him. “I am due in Italy to speak with interested parties about Potionatus Poténtiæ. We know what the Italians can offer, and I know they will be keen for an exchange of their services. They are very effective, after all.” Augustus paused, studied Cerelia’s face, and smirked. “I’m sure Adolphus will not be opposed to my request for your company for the purpose of business, eh?” He raised an eyebrow in question, before a loud, desperate rattle was heard at the door.