Such was the misery of the youngest daughter’s homecoming that those who lived and worked within the Rousseau household began to wonder whether they would ever behold the infectious smile upon her face again or whether her melancholy and weariness was now a permanent fixture upon her features. No amount of indulgence could see even a twitch change the downturn of her lips and in a way she became part of the furniture, tucked up on the sofa in one of the little parlours towards the front of the house. There was only a small portion that the family actually lived in, the rest being shut up, and that particular parlour was one that rarely saw the light of day but for the sake of the young woman the staff opened it up again and brought some light an air into the room though within a few days it was covered in brightly coloured blankets, the girl herself in amongst it somewhere.
Returning home from the town with a few groceries in hand, Marie-Elise Rousseau hopped up the steps onto the veranda that was teaming, still, with the flowers she’d spent the previous seasons cultivating. Much to her delight and to the utter ignorance of her husband who had grown preoccupied with his work once more, they were hanging on for dear life and the garden was still a bountiful kaleidoscope of colour that dazzled her gaze. She smiled at it wistfully, watching as a few lingering bees fluttered around for a few moments before venturing inside through the tall, latticed doors where in the warm, sweet wind the curtains were dancing lithely, dancing, almost, to the tune of the birds flying overhead. Inside, however, it had all of the permutations of sadness which she had thought, hoped, prayed had abandoned them. Alas, not.
“Alice?” Marie’s gentle voice called out through the tall, cavernous halls of the old building. She set down her bags and peered through into the parlour where she knew she’d find her daughter and frowned out over the mass of blankets and pillows. A blonde head emerged from in amongst it all and Marie dropped her hand down from the doorway where she’d set it, a soft smile crossing her pointed features as she caught sight of the woman who was still, with her animal pyjamas and fluffy, askew hair, her baby girl. Marie’s smile spread into a faint smirk and she stepped forward into the room, sliding out of her shoes before plopping herself down amidst the softness and immediately she understood the logic behind it.
“How do you feel, my flower?” Marie asked, reaching out to smooth back some of her daughter hair. The tears that rose to her eyes made Marie move her fingers to tickle underneath her daughter’s eyes, encouraging her to let them fall which they did with a sudden abundance that took both of them off-guard. Alice tumbled into Marie’s waiting arms and the woman sighed, pressing a kiss to the girl’s forehead. “I’m sorry, petal,” Marie whispered. “I wish I could take your hurt away. You know, though… it will all be alright in the end. You do know that, don’t you?” Marie’s hands found Alice’s upper arms and she eased her up to focus her gaze. “Hey, hey. It will be okay. Alright? Where is your optimism, hm?”
Alice shook her head, shrugging her shoulders pitifully up around her ears, and she heaved herself back against her mother, sobbing pitifully into Marie’s neck. It was good to cry, Marie had always encouraged her children. They had always been so serious, so moved by their experiences that they were hard and guarded before their time. Alice had always taken to it the easiest, Marie’s boys never having understood fully though time gave them the freedom to be able to express themselves easily. Alice had always seen the need to cry, to express just how hurt she was. So many years neglecting that right, that intrinsic need to vocalise suffering, had meant that when it finally came, it was a torrent of feeling that no one could dissuade her from – and why would they? Eventually she soothed herself, just as they all did, and returned to her nest somewhere within the mound of blankets, muttering that she wanted to be left alone.
To her dismay, Marie could do nothing but retire and she did so to her office. It was a bright room, as were all of the rooms within the house that were open, and it was into hr arm chair that she sank, wondering what in the world she could do for the girl that, since the nightmare that her set her screaming the first night she’d arrived, had called the parlour home. Shrugging herself out of her cardigan, Marie decided the best way to deal with it was to write a letter. Often she’d post things to her in-laws that weren’t strictly appropriate, particularly when they’d annoyed her, and so by that logic Paul-Henri received more than his fair share of post from his wife throughout the week. This letter though was slightly different as she wasn’t sure what the address was – or to whom she was really writing. Nevertheless, she cured her short fingers around her quill and began to write, bringing her hand down onto her chin as she thought.
To Alice’s Oliver,
In case you decide to emotionally damage my daughter and send her home to us again, could you please make sure you give at least a week’s notice so I can properly establish the freezer with enough ice cream to console her with? That would be agreeable. Though, for a start I cannot for the life of me make sense of why you would want to hurt her like this in the first place anyway. That is not to say that she hasn’t had some part in this. I hope she has left you significantly emotionally damaged, also. Not that I want you to be emotionally damaged, Oliver, but I can’t help but think it would be fair given that my daughter is buried somewhere between a mound of pillows and an avalanche of blankets, never to be found again. I don’t want you to be unhappy, though. Frankly I’d rather both of you were deliriously happy but clearly that is a long way off for even becoming close to happening. As her mother, though, I have to at least ask for you to write to her. I know that it would brighten her day. You are well within your rights to feel whichever way you do but please, extend her a small courtesy. I think she needs you rather more than she realises – I shan’t speak for you in regards to her but I hope you need her, too. Anyway, I must sign off here. I hope this letter doesn’t reach you at an inopportune time.
Thank you,
Marie-Elise Rousseau (Alice’s mother).
The letter did not reach him at an inopportune time. In fact it returned a few hours after it had been sent – unopened. Marie was not entirely sure whether this was a slight of sorts though upon inspecting the front of it there was no sign that it was from her. She supposed for a moment that he might have recognised the owl but Marie rationalised that she never used her personal owl to send post to her daughter, anyway. So it couldn’t be that. It took a moment but the woman devised that there must have been something wrong. She decided to send another, just to check, and sent a nonsensical picture of a pair of amorous dog which was really rather good but that wasn’t truly the point at hand. That, too, returned and that was when Marie decided she had to do something.
After checking on her daughter who was, by that point in time, bundled up watching Disney films with her nephews and her brother who had returned home, his wife somewhere around in another part of the house. After alerting them both to her going, Marie apparated from the house and took the long trip bouncing across France back up towards England whereupon arriving there she apparated to the address she knew her daughter lived at. It was a pretty place, she decided upon first inspection, but it wasn’t the aesthetics that she’d come for. Putting her hands into her pockets, Marie moved up along the path and let herself inside the building, hopping up the stairs gingerly before making her way down the hall once she was on the right level and onto the doorstep of the flat in question. Immediately, she rose her hand to rap her knuckles upon the door front but no sound emerged from inside, making her wonder whether she’d gotten the right number at all. She tried the handle and to her astounded surprise it came open in her grasp and before she knew it, Marie was inside the flat – breaking and entering, sort of.
Marie took off her coat and hung it up on the hook by the door, recognising one of Alice’s coats with a sigh of relief. She let the door close with a soft click and then after removing her shoes she stepped through carefully, unsure what she’d find inside. She tried the kitchen first after walking through the living room and then went down the hall after the bedrooms – first stumbling into Alice’s, then into Ariel’s and then finally she opened the door to Ollie’s room whereupon she laid eyes on the man in question looking far more upset than she would have imagined. Though this, she felt sure, had nothing to do with her daughter.
“You poor little love!” She exclaimed, flying to the bedside to lay her hand upon his forehead. She stole her fingers back with a gasp, her red brows furrowing deeply over her vibrant blue gaze. She drew up the covers around him more closely and reached briefly for the pendant hanging from a chain around her neck and she fumbled it through her fingers thoughtfully before hopping away from the bed, going in search of provisions which through a combination of what she found in the kitchen and what she sourced from her bag turned out to be quite the spread.
A pot of hot tea and a few potions later, some magic was getting soup underway and Marie returned to the bedroom, setting all of the things down onto Ollie’s desk before taking a seat on the bed again. She sighed a little, forgiving him for not replying to her, and she reached to take back a few bits of sodden hair, wrought to dampness by the fever sweat.
“I’m Alice’s mother,” she introduced herself, bobbing him on the nose with the tip of her index finger. “Marie,” she clarified, getting up to retrieve a cup of tea and a potion to help with the fever which was her first worry. She found the bedside again and took a seat, setting the things down on the table for looking to him, asking, “Can you manage to sit up, dear? I’ve got something to help with fevers and headaches and all that rotten stuff but I’m going to need for you to sit up so we don’t spill it. I have tea for you, to clean out the bad taste, and I don’t want you to burn yourself on top of it all. I’ve had lots of sick babies in my time but none as sick as you, eh?” She smiled a little and reached for his hand, curling her fingers around his. “But you’ll be fit as a fiddle in no time, I promise, because I’m going to sort you out. Let’s just get you feeling less rubbish - enough so you can have a shower and then you can have some soup and we can watch some terrible films – how does that sound, poppet?”