Into the Vale of Avery, rays of blazing light touched down, warming the faces of those that uplifted their cheeks to the sky. The breezes were fair but did not rouse chills from the pale, delicacy that was the skin of the young women that inhabited the family’s château at the end of the valley furthest from the mouth that swept travellers in and the coursing River of Circe out into the Atlantic. The heat of the sunshine abated the creaminess of their skin and browned it a scarlet akin to the colour of the swollen strawberries that were being picked faster than the farmer’s wives could weave baskets for the ready hands. And of course, such women in the throes of youth were in fruitful abundance also. For, naturally, the Avery family had taken every card they could from their healthy hand and spread them across the balcony courtyard that served as a plateau for their game; poker, it was not.
The courtyard was a balcony yet bore in its brickwork evidence of a building having stood where many others newly did. The brick had been washed smooth in the eggshell white that so decorated every other inch of the château barring the turrets whose tiles were stained the plum purple that was customary; their calling card, if you will. Trellises had been erected and magnolia plants had been wound around them and left to hang and across the wooden structures like cloying lovers, providing a natural form of shade for those that lingered beneath. Rounded tables were dotted about, heavily populated by Averys and not, covered in stark, white table cloths and ornamented by little accents in matching turret plum. Streamers were left to flutter in the wind with the standards that had been erected that morning and music was in abundance, a Greek course as opposed to their Welsh preferences.
The irony was not lost on Cerelia. As she walked beneath one of the trellises with some rather boorish company she found herself enjoying rather more than propriety would have allowed the optimistic tunes that were designed for one to bob their head to and fold into the arms of another to dance. Of course, her company was no one to dance with. While her cousins enjoyed the humour of their newly extended family comprised of relatives of Greek origins, she found herself with the German cousin who did not speak a lick of English for, as he’d felt necessary to impart to her, he saw no real reason to. Their paths had not crossed up until that point and though he was courtly and knew his manners, it was lost on him the idea of passion and the true flick of the tongue. His smile was that of a man who knew he was watched. He did not truly care for her; which suited Cerelia fine, truly.
He was much taller than she but walked as though his upper back was being pressed upon with some great weight; and of course, he kept his hands behind his back. His nose was large and hooked, his eyebrows offensively unkempt and straying into one another above his nose. His eyes were beaded and pointed, a hollow blue that bore none of the passion that so many Avery’s held in their gaze. He was wanton of nothing; not even so much as a glass of wine. His mouth was downturned and his tone gruff as he grunted out his words from the left side of his lips as though he was unwilling to commit honesty to anything he said. His hair was swept back in a pony tail, clasped at his neck in a purple ribbon to match his Violet Beauregard-esq choice of clothing for such an occasion – quite a lot of gold, for clarification, and more than enough purple.
Cerelia’s eyes strayed to one of her cousins; or, rather, the cousin around which the event centred. Christina looked misplaced beside her beaming husband as they drifted amongst the guests. She was pale and fair and beautiful while he, though not unattractive, was the coarse opposite and had spent far too much time in the sun, a fact that made Cerelia twist her parasol beneath her fingers, ruing their custom and belief that to be pale suggest power and status. Of course she was, for that reason, Adolphus’ pride and joy. She was washed out, her hair the same colour as her skin and her eyes like two sapphires in a statue worn pale by sandstorms. Yet her lips remained painfully rouge; a colour that no amount of scrubbing could dislodge much to the chagrin of Adolphus and the ever hard-working maids who endeavoured to dress Cerelia to his tastes, his desires.
“Dir sind sehr schön.” Cerelia felt her cousin’s lips on her ear and she stopped mid-stride, her eyes turning to him, moving from her cousin to his earnest face. She blanched but found her face warming regardless. She dropped her gaze as she had been taught and rolled her lips against each other, forcing a smile upon them.
“Danke, Luther.” She whispered, meeting his ardent gaze. She felt his hand find her cheek and she marvelled privately at the softness of it, expecting course fingers to rub against her skin, chipping at it and in turn smoothing his own touch. Her smile faltered a little at this thought and she blinked a few times before moving away from Luther, preventing him from employing his only romantic tactic that still, to her, felt soulless and ... it felt like nothing; forced.
“Cerelia I-”
Her gaze flicked back up to him in an instant and her eyes filled with hope but before his lips could tremble out a few other words, she was struck by a firm hand finding the small of her back. She cleared her throat as quietly as she could manage and watched out of her periphery as Luther politely stepped back and smiled at Adolphus, wearing the expression of a cowed animal, before slinking away in search of his mother. Cerelia exhaled shakily and tightened her grip on the handle of her parasol, refusing obstinately to meet her father’s searching eyes.
Adolphus, giving up, pressed his lips to her ear and chuckled, eliciting a shiver from his daughter. “I have some gentlemen that would like to speak to you, Cerelia.”
Cerelia trembled beneath Adolphus’ steady grasp of her but he paid it no heed as he led her from underneath the trellis. He swept his daughter through the French doors that had been left open by the maids and he waited for one of the doormen to open the double doors before stepping out into the upper foyer where he had left his associates. He waited a moment for Cerelia to let down her parasol but no longer before taking her wrist and shoving her roughly towards the pair. Cerelia stumbled, only to be caught by her upper arms by one of the men, the younger of the two, she saw. Her eye-line found his chest and she recoiled upon seeing the badge that poked out of the breast pocket of his robes.
“Aurors,” She whispered, wrenching herself away from the man’s grip. “Father what-”
The young woman’s yelp permeated the walls and stung what the Aurors had boasted to be an iron-clad constitution within their hearts. The pair took a half step backwards as the girl recoiled from the strike to her cheek, her hands letting the parasol clatter to the floor as her gloved hands groped for her cheekbone. Her eyes closed momentarily and she bent her knees as her body tried to absorb the shock and the pain. She took her hand away hesitantly and her eyes widened at the sight of the scarlet that stained her fingers. Her eyes flicked shut again as she took a handful of shaky breaths. One of the Aurors glanced at her father and watched as he inspected his cufflinks before stepping forward and slapping the back of his hand across her face again. A second strangled scream followed.
“These men have come to talk to you about Potionatus Poténtiæ, I trust you are familiar with it?”
Cerelia’s gaze met Adolphus’ as he spoke, his every syllable dripping with unveiled mocking and sadistic mirth. Her eyes narrowed at him, her lips contorting into a movement that promised retort – though before she could, his hand found her cheek again. This time she did not scream. She merely took it and after a moment, nodded. Adolphus chuckled, the sound so shatteringly close to her that it felt as though he was against her again. Cerelia’s hands found her upper arms as she curled arms around herself and with struggling eyes she brought the Aurors back into her field of view once more.
Leaning down, Cerelia’s fingers curled around the parasol and she lifted it from the tiled floor, bringing it close to her chest. She considered it for a moment, her eyes moving down the length of it, before looking up at her father. The Aurors stepped forward, their shoes clapping against the surface that was ill-used to that sort of purposeful stride. She lowered her gaze once more and ran her hand down the parasol, her fingers curling around the handle that curved delicately at the end, a crow etched into its material.
“You bastard,” She murmured, just loud enough for Adolphus to hear.
For a fourth time his hand came up but when he moved forward it struck air as with an echoing crack Cerelia disappeared from the spot. Adolphus’ shout of frustration followed it but the resounding bounce of his growl could be heard more clearly than the cries and more than a few lips upon the terrace twitched upwards to themselves. So, she had escaped.
Cerelia landed gracefully upon the lawn in front of Rookwood Manor. She dropped the parasol immediately as her legs buckled beneath her, sending her sprawling onto the carpet of lush verdant blades. Her hands sank into the well groomed fields of green as her tears came and she hung her head between her shoulders, her back jumping awkwardly with the sobs that wracked from her chest.
“Cerelia?”
The blonde lifted her head and found solace in the sight of the Rookwood matriarch that was Athena. Loping behind her was a German Shepherd that enjoyed its ignorance of the situation. Cerelia felt Athena’s hands on her shoulders and the Avery girl allowed Athena’s arms to curve around her. The elder woman smoothed back the curls that Cerelia’s hair had been teased into and the girl winced as a stray finger grazed across her cheekbone. Athena sat back on her haunches and lifted Cerelia’s face up in her hands.
The Rookwood woman’s expression contorted into one of concern, horror and then finally, determination. Athena got to her feat with the abruptness of a woman on a mission and her hands went beneath Cerelia’s arms, coaxing her into a standing position. Cerelia managed to snatch up her parasol once more as she stood and Athena took her hand, leading her slowly across the grass towards the house while the German Shepherd ran on ahead.
The steps were harder to climb than Cerelia had ever remembered but as Athena led the girl through the conservatory that had been refurnished by her careful eye, Cerelia felt her shoulders relax. The elder woman set her down on one of the chaise lounges and lifted her head up by the chin, inspecting her cheek with an eye practised to assess injury.
“What has he done to you now, hmm?” Athena asked with a small curve of her lips before reaching for a stray cloth to dab away the blood with. It wasn’t much and the depth of the cut was superficial, naturally, but Athena didn’t believed that the depth or the blood loss determined the horror of the wound. The fact that he had done it, alone, was horror enough in Athena’s opinion. Her own father. Very little was a secret in Pureblood circles, she reviewed mentally as she wiped away the last of the blood.
Cerelia looked at Athena with a small smile. “Sharp cufflinks,” she replied; her way of joking. “Is Augus-” the girl bit her lip. “Mr. Rookwood here?”
Athena’s eyebrows quirked upwards a little and she laughed, a small laugh that was Athena’s measured chortle – her trademark. She folded the cloth with clever, quick fingers and Cerelia watched her as she lifted her wand from her pocket. With a flick, Cerelia felt the wound heal and she closed her eyes in thanks to the woman before her, her hand coming to brush against the skin.
“It wouldn’t do to let him see you all bloodied but I can do nothing for the bruise.” Athena murmured, bringing her fingers beneath Cerelia’s chin to turn it and take in the bruise. “There are many Mr. Rookwoods, Cerelia. Augustus is in the study. I’ll let Petal know that she is to set another place at dinner, shall I?” Athena smiled at Cerelia’s sudden horror as she looked down at herself. “I agree, if it helps. It is a family dinner. Not a ... well a wedding, I presume?” Cerelia nodded. “I will get some clothes for you from Kat’s wardrobe and have the House Elves make up a guestroom for you.” Cerelia looked up at Athena, her eyebrows furrowing. Athena stood and picked up the cloth, looking pointedly at Cerelia. “You are not going home to him, Cerelia Avery.” She told the girl. “You will stay with us, are we clear?”
“Athena I can’t,” Cerelia whispered, reaching forward to catch the woman’s wrist. “I can’t. I can’t stay here. We must leave. We all must leave. The Aurors...they know, the Ministry knows...”
To her credit, Athena did not appear shocked though the slither of fear that Cerelia hoped not to see did worm its way through her eyes. Despite this though, Athena smiled indulgently and placed a gentle hand on Cerelia’s head.
“We wear upon our skin runes that tell us who we are, sweet girl. Azkaban is a place of untold horrors. For that reason we do not fear. We have gold in our pockets that allow us to wield a power that the Ministry cannot dream of. We allow for no one to hold over us something we do not have guilt for. We do not fear men in cloaks with Auror badges. We do not fear their judiciary. We are a family. We are Rookwoods, more importantly. What the Ministry knows they cannot prove, my dear. With us you are safe. Here you are safe. I promise you that.”
Cerelia gave a small, strangled cry. “Athena you have not met my father.” She whispered, her eyes wide and damp with unshed tears. “He will not cease if he believes he will come out of this-”
Athena shushed the girl and drew her hand down her face, bringing her palm to rest on her cheek as her fingers lifted Cerelia’s chin up, forcing her to look at Athena. “You have not encountered my wrath.”
The woman’s confidence did not rest Cerelia’s weary heart but it did provide some form of reassurance. The Rookwood lady took her leave thereafter with the promise of protection, a meal and a warm bed on her lips. A House Elf replaced her presence and, taking Cerelia’s hand, helped her down the hallway to the study outside of which Cerelia lingered for a time, tossing her weight from one leg to another as she fumbled her hands together in an attempt to draw enough confidence to enter. In the end, the meddling Elf did it for her. The Elf knocked and pushed open the door, allowing it to frame Cerelia in her delicate nervousness. The girl lifted her head and her lips came together as her eyes found Augustus.
The girl stepped inside carefully, picking her way across the floorboards as she lifted her dress from the floor. She swept the fabric out from behind her and she moved back towards the door, drawing the door to a close before turning back to Augustus.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered, fearful of his reaction. “I did not mean to intrude I-” She blinked rapidly and dropped her eyes to her hands as she fought to find her words. “My father has...he appears to have sold us out.” Her stomach tossed within her at the thought of it and she felt it lurch, nausea ruining her composure as finally she allowed her tears to run once more. “The Ministry knows. They know ... the Aurors... they... I don’t know what they wanted to do with me but they were there and I... he ... he was happy about it as though it was his orchestra and I don’t know ... I can’t ... I just... I just left. I couldn’t stay. I couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t ... I couldn’t stay knowing that they could come that they could take you back to Azkaban I ...” Her eyes squeezed shut. “I had to warn you...”
The girl’s arms came around herself once more and she drew back as though she wished for the ground to swallow her whole. The final betrayal had come in that. Athena’s insistence terrified Cerelia but regardless hope leapt within her. She could stay, the elder woman had said. Yet what difference would it make? Adolphus was still a friend to Augustus and it was he who owned Cerelia. The opening of their home to her would not protect her from Adolphus. They were but walls, after all; walls that that could fall. As could they all.