He nodded fervently at her surprised question, unable to put it into words. In truth, the memories felt more like dreams, but he didn’t know how to explain it. When she asked if he was a Death Eater, however, Erik drew back a bit in surprise. “No,” he said again, this time shaking his head. When she trailed off, though, he realized she might not have heard him. “I’m not a Death Eater. But I’m not in the Order, either. I’ve got enough trouble with my work and my family. It really isn’t worth the extra drama, in my opinion. But I think it’s brave of you to help,” he concluded, an almost fond smile appearing.
Erik didn’t want to presume anything, but for a moment there, when he first greeted her, she had looked so hopeful. What had she been hoping for? The question nagged at him until she looked up at him again, at which point he blinked in pure shock. He didn’t understand why she would trust him; she had not been given a very good excuse to do so, had she? Mind, as a Hufflepuff, he was the sort – much to his parents’ distaste – to just want to trust someone. To be friendly. What house had Victoire been? he wondered.
“I- Are you sure?” he asked, his eyebrows lifted. He had always been a little bit obvious with his feelings, even if he should have kept some of them to himself. “I mean, I would gladly explain, but…”
It seemed, though, that she was quite set on it. So he picked up his box – yep, peaches. – and followed her down the road and down into her yard. It was genuinely picturesque. As someone who tended to pick up Muggle classics when at a loss as to what to read, he immediately equated her home to what Marianne would have wanted for her cottage. Erik wasn’t sure if that made him kind of lame, given the novel was meant for a female audience, but he also wasn’t sure he really cared. For once, though, he kept it to himself. Telling Victoire that her place was the perfect image of a cottage in the Sensibility era would probably make him sound insane. He could have at least referenced Gothic works instead, right? That was more… masculine, sort of. Right? Maybe not. Oh well.
Speaking of feminine: Victoire’s key. He smiled at it when his fingers pulled it from her bag, and he balanced his box on one hip as he turned the key and pushed the door open so she could head in. He hesitated, but she took the keys out and called for him to follow her.
There was something even more charming about the inside of the home than the outside, though Erik chided himself for noticing that as well. He didn’t remember this place. He supposed that made sense, though, given who his mind thought she was. Particularly given Abraham, it would have been strange for her to live in a home he didn’t recognize. His brow furrowed a bit, but he tried to cover it when she offered the treats, and he paused, taking off his shoes to set them by the front door next to his box. In his own home, he wouldn’t have cared, as it was a hell of a mess on any given day. It seemed rude to dirty the floors of the woman he felt was the… mother of his child.
F*cking hell, he was actually insane, wasn’t he?
“Um, yeah, sure,” he agreed amiably, determined to keep his tone pleasant. Unsure what to do with himself, he sank into one of the chairs at her table before realizing that he probably should have waited for her to ask him to do so.
Erik truly felt guilty about the whole thing. He was excited, in a sick sort of way, because he would know who she was. He would know why she had – well, not died. But he sort of wished he could have sent out a storm warning in her direction before he saw her, because she was about to be in the thick of this, too, and he didn’t think that was very fair. It felt like he was coming in and uprooting all of her herbs, despite her watering them in front of him, merely leaving a cloud of confusion over his features. He hated that he had caused it, mostly. That cloud, that is. He did not pull up her herbs. That would have been incredibly rude.
But she seemed too nice to ruin like he apparently was going to. For a moment, he almost said he was on break from a mental institute and was expected back for bingo and snacks at the hour, so he really should just head out. But she was asking him questions and he just… he had to know the whys.
“Well,” he began, gesturing back to his box. “I have peaches if you want one. Otherwise, I’m actually not that picky.” Erik wasn’t sure if that was true. He hated kiwis. But he would eat them if those were all she had. Whatever it took to make it easier for her, basically, would be just fine.
His eyebrows pulled together slightly in question when she started tripping over her words, and he nearly held up a hand to say that she didn’t have to talk about it if she didn’t want to. But she got out the question just before he moved to do so, and he faltered. If she didn’t know, how did he go about explaining?
“I- I mean… You’re…” the mother of my son, I think? And, y’know, someone who refused to marry me because she knew she was too ill to be around very long. “Everything,” he concluded, the word almost a sigh, as though it felt amazing to finally say it. And, really, it was a relief to wrap it all up in something so straightforward and serious.
“Here’s the deal, right?” he began finally, leaning forward and allowing the words to come tumbling out of him like salt would’ve done from the shaker sat nearby on her table if he had knocked it over. “I don’t see how you are still here. A year and a half ago, I woke up one morning, and something was wrong. I knew it wasn’t right but I didn’t know why. So I asked my parents, and they said that I had gone through heartbreak and they had given me a potion to help forget it. But they supposed it must not have worked if I still saw these images of you.
“And, they were so odd. Like, you know in a dream when you just know stuff? Like, you don’t have to have someone tell you to know who somebody is? They were like that, except I was awake part of the time when I thought about it, so I know it isn’t just a dream. And, really, my parents have never been all that fond of me, so at first I thought they had done it on purpose. Made me forget your name and little pieces here and there. Like how we met or our first date or-“ his eyes fell, completely shocked with himself for almost mentioning something so intimate when she didn’t even remember him.
Of course, it came to mind because he certainly didn’t remember Abraham being born, nor any incident that could have brought him about. That had always been the odd hink when he tried to tell people about his son. He had been told his own son’s birthday, because he hadn’t known it.
“You know,” he saved himself, “other important things. But I don’t know anymore. It seems like they really did try to help. Went to a master potion maker, and they said he had done his best. But I just don’t see how or why they would have done that if you’re still alive. Particularly if you aren’t even aware of the fact that there’s a little boy named Abraham who, … according to these memories… is supposed to be partly yours.”
Erik blinked up at her with wide eyes, though his chin was turned away in an obvious show of just how unsure and uncomfortable he was about mentioning it. “I’m assuming you don’t remember ever having a son?” he tacked on, grimacing. His hand came up to rub at his features, and then shook his head. “This doesn’t make sense. It doesn’t make any sense.” Oddly, for someone so typically fully of energy, Erik felt exhausted. It was like his mind was rebelling now that he was trying to remember little things about her.
Why was it so difficult?