Swirling in a frothing burgundy tide, the wine glugged from the lip of the carafe and into the glass. Setting it back down onto the carpet, Victoire Weasley’s long fingers curled around the stem of the glass and brought it to her mouth, letting the sweet yet heady flavour of the wine roll over her tongue. She lowered it back down to the carpet again and in the faint twilight of the living room she settled back into her blanket fort, pulling a sheet over her legs to ward off the slight chill coming in through the living room windows.
Since the early afternoon she had been pottering around outdoors, tending to both the front and back garden. Flowers were abloom in both areas with her pink roses bright and healthy, shining down over both the garden gate and the front door itself. In the back garden, though, she’d seen to the gnomes who, over the sound of the music on the television, she could just about hear scuttling back under the fence to sit in the raspberry bushes and begin plotting their revenge. After ridding her vegetable patch of pesky weeds, she’d retired inside to make the fort, knowing full well she was doomed to another evening alone.
Well, alone was a relative term. Over the last few weeks she had graduated from being the owner of a singular cat, half-Kneazle by design, and was awarded with a litter of five kittens courtesy of Lucius Malfoy (the cat) owned by the Divination and former-Transfiguration professors. Originally, Victoire had thought very little of the cat sniffing around her cottage. She was used to them coming in and out of the garden – Willa, Victoire’s cat, often saw them off. Lucius started to come round more and more frequently, though, and it wasn’t until too late that she realised why. So she was currently occupying her fort with her sleeping mother cat, three equally weary kittens and two that seemed to have a great affection for nibbling Victoire’s toes.
Needless to say, when the knock on the door came, she was overjoyed for the distraction.
Getting to her feet, Victoire put her video game on pause and dropped the controller on the cushion before padding out of the living room and into the hallway. She took her wand off of the hall table just to be safe and fiddled with the switches on the wall so that the porch light went on. The yellow glow that came in through the window in the door was enough to illuminate the clock on the wall and Victoire frowned, wondering who on earth would want to come and see her at eleven o’clock at night. Whoever it was had to bring trouble, Victoire knew that much.
A little mew from beside her made the witch look down and she frowned briefly at the kitten that had followed her. He was by far her favourite – entirely made of fluff which was a shock of bright ginger. He was a very appropriate cat for a Weasley to own, to say the least. He also aspired to a certain level of bravery, too, and seemed keen to protect his mistress from what may lie beyond the door whether benign or terrible. He stood poised by Victoire’s side and she shook her head fondly at the cat before reaching forward to unlock the door.
“Teddy?”
He was the last person she had imagined behind the door, if only because it was so unlikely. James, she would not have put it past. One of her cousins in trouble with their parents? Not totally beyond the realm of probability. A Death Eater? Well, certainly maybe. But Teddy Lupin? Never. Not ever again. Too much had happened, surely? Too much had changed, hadn’t it? And yet, here he was. Victoire was guilty of standing and staring too long. Her ginger kitten had attempted a growl, too, puffing out his fluffy chest in a way he seemed to hope was imposing.
“Get in here,” she found her words finally. “You’re letting all the warm air out.”
She reached out and tugged at him so he’d come over the threshold and resolutely she slammed the door shut, locking it behind them once more. She felt silly now, knowing that in the living room there was a blanket fort. She wasn’t a child anymore. That sort of thing stopped being explainable by her mid-twenties. Yet, nothing was ever simple with Potters and Weasleys, was it? Nothing ever moved smoothly with age and time as it was imagined to. She and Teddy were clear proof of that, not that anyone needed any. None of them were right. The only person who could have made them so was long gone.
In spite of herself, Victoire threw her arms around Teddy, hugging him tightly in an embrace reminiscent of the way Molly Weasley (the first) used to cuddle and fuss over them when they went to visit the Burrow. She took the opportunity to try and remember what it felt like to have Teddy in her arms again. His smell invaded her senses and for a second she felt like a teenager again, madly coveting the crush she had on him and when she loved and sought even the barest scrap of attention she could get from him. So much had changed, though, including that, so she hastened to release him.
“Tea or something stronger?” She asked softly as she let go of him, her fingers immediately beginning to twitch in mourning of his touch.