She felt a lump in her throat as he looked at her, his words “Getting right to it, are you?” cutting her a bit, even though they shouldn't have. She figured she had a bit of a right to know, as many times as she had been burned by the men in the organization. After so many instances, it was hard to ignore the common denominator, hard to call it all a coincidence. She wanted answers, she wanted to understand. She couldn't handle pain and ignorance. She deserved to be delivered from one of them.
Her arms were folded tightly in front of her, trying to regain some of herself after the shocking loss she had suffered. Empty Elsie, with hollow eyes and numb limbs wasn't the Elsie she wanted to face off against the Death Eater ideology. She wanted strong-willed but stupid Elsie, who knew that she had worth by sheer force of will, who would face Augustus with proud eyes and an unwavering spirit, because that's who she was.
So it was a bit unnerving that he managed to make her waver so early on. The world illegitimate made her arms loosen, wanting to fall to her sides. New money aside, Elsie knew enough about the culture she had been raised in to know that the words illegitimate and bastard were just as bad as poor.Illegitimate children did not grow up to be respected members of their society, like Augustus had. The word alone was enough to help Elsie fill in the gaps of how Augustus must have been treated before he was the great Augustus Rookwood. Mistrust, resentment, distaste - all from being born.
He had no real reason to tell her such a secret. Especially if it was still such a heavily guarded secret. It wasn't... smart, or strategic, to tell her something she could so easily use to ruin everything he had built. And that was the thing about purebloods, and the rich, and Death Eaters particularly. They didn't just give out information, they didn't get to know people through exchange of information. They were more clever than that, despite screwed up ideologies (and, let's be honest, the years of inbreeding to maintain purity). So why was he abandoning that now?
She listened, carefully, trying not to betray anything. Not wanting to betray the points that aroused pity, concern, irritation, uncertainty, sympathy. She was working so hard, and she just wanted to understand in a logical fashion, but he was making her feel for his own story and it made her so upset. This wasn't helping her understand - though it was making her feel safer and safer by the minute to be in the home of a Death Eater.
Still, she was struggling to understand where Ben fit into Augustus' explanation. Ben had always been the apple of their parents' eyes, had never wanted for anything, had never had a rebellious streak, had no familial ties to the organization. It wasn't for money, for revenge, for loyalty that he had fallen in with the Death Eaters. It had been all him, and she could not understand what they had to offer that could tempt him down so dark a path.
He asked if her curiosity came out of an interest to join and she felt herself straighten up, arms tightening again as she said, a little too quickly, a little too firmly, "No." She recognized that she was probably a bit too quick to answer, so she opened her mouth to try and rectify her answer in some way, but the only thing that managed to come out was a softer "no."
He continued to speak and she felt the weight of the accusation, though it wasn't quite an accusation, it was certainly a hint of one, a warning against one. She shook her edge, her mouth phantoming the words 'of course not' though she could not speak them because of that harsh word that came next.
Monster.
How could she deny that Death Eaters had always seemed to be monsters to her? From what she understood of wizarding history, they had been monsters. Their costumes were monstrous. The interactions she had suffered through had been the stuff of nightmares, had monster consequences on her life. They had always been monsters, until it had started hitting so close to home. After all, if they were monsters, that meant her brother was a monster. And she had a hard time believing that.
"I don't know," came her soft admission. She blinked at him, her arms loosening again in their cross across her chest. "I..." What? She what? "They have a bounty on my head. In America. The Death Eaters there. I didn't do anything, I just stumbled on something I shouldn't have because I was young and stupid. Suppose I still am. But they've tried to kill me. Twice. And they don't seem to have plans to stop. I literally check under my bed and in my closet. That feels like monsters." She stared at him. An exchange of information. With his information, she could kill his reputation. With hers, he could kill her.
She supposed that might settle who was the monster.