“I thought you liked rationality.”
“I do.” The prongs sank smoothly through the meat; Avariella gave a minute, mental nod. Perfectly cooked. There was barely a clink as she lifted the fork off the plate, all wrist movement of course, deft and proficient. “There is nothing rational or sensible about this.”
Hortense fussed with her blouse cuffs a bit. It was pointless, they were already stained. As were her elbows. “You did suffer a pretty massive injury. Plus the resignation from Auror training, the switch to legal-“
“Barbed wire through the stomach. It happens to thousands of ten year old boys.” The meat tasted great too. A bit too much salt though. “We don’t send them all off to therapy, do we?”
“Maybe it’ll help you in other ways.” Hortense seemed really earnest about it too. Pretty sweet of her. “Besides, research says that over seventy percent of the adult population would do well to visi- “
“Okay, okay. Fine.” Avariella smiled, partly because of the meat. “I’ll go. It’s Ministry mandated, after all.” Another smile followed, mostly of shared amusement. “I suppose they don’t want us going as crazy as the other lunatics we lock up on a monthly basis.”
“Talk about it.” Hortense winked back, rather exaggeratedly. Then, when the lull got a little too long, “Do you wanna try the-“
“I’d love to, but I really ought to dash if I want to actually make it to the therapist appointment you’ve convinced me into attending.” The dabbing with the napkins was, admittedly, unnecessary- Avariella was nothing but neat with her eating motions- but the servers would have tossed the soft, white triangles into the rubbish cans anyway, and she did so abhor wastage.
Barely a creak as the chair moved back, and she rather discreetly slid the money for the bill atop the table- but apparently not discreetly enough with Hortense’s widening eyes and rapidly growing gesticulations. Slipped her fashionably short (yet comfortably lined) robe back over rounded shoulders, flexed her toes in her heeled pumps and started turning away with a friendly- “Tell Tristan to take care, lunch was wonderful, I’ll catch you later!”
“We simply must do this again.” Hortense was still seated, the taken aback expression from the sudden exit erased by a growing glow- probably because Avariella remembered the name of a stepbrother from their first of two meetings. “Catch you later Ava.”
“-riella.” The glow faltered, Avariella smiled a little brighter. Lowered the tone to something more gentle. “I don’t like nicknames, if that’s okay.”
“Pshh, of course.” An expansive hand gesture that resulted in yet another stain on that sleeve. Avariella resisted a little sigh. “Have fun!”
Appreciated, but highly unlikely.
~
Mental illness was …..well. As the name quite so obviously indicated. An illness. She acknowledged that. Respected it, even. It was not one to be controlled, or banished as per desire.
Didn’t stop her from bristling at the very idea of a therapist. She’d politely declined the services of even the counsellor at Hogwarts- hired to guide hundreds of students through the tumultuous storm that was adolescence. Yes, a friend b*tching behind your back or an ugly breakup was sign of the apocalypse and cause of the world raining down your ears- go call the experts.
She just couldn’t quite make peace with the idea of needing someone else to solve your problems for you. She knew not everyone had the same level of placidity when it came to dealing with issues, that she might even be abnormally ‘sorted’. It was just…..a little incomprehensible to her how people were unable to make logical jumps- proceed from x to y and attain the answer. Failed an interview? Work harder. Boyfriend break your heart? Pick better. What exactly was so mystical about average issues and their solutions? Wasn’t psychological science….less science and more sheer common sense?
But following that very rule- if your bosses wanted you to do therapy to clear you for your job, you do it. Whining was impractical. Besides, she didn’t have any hang ups with regards to ‘talking about feelings’ like some brain dead males she knew.
“He’s ready to see you, please come on right in.”
….unless it was talking about feelings to her ex’s sibling (sort of). Yes, that had the potential for getting hang up-y real fast.
But she was a professional woman, and she’d be damned if she had to clear yet another spot on her schedule for a meeting with another goddamned therapist.
They knew, and didn’t know each other; a nod as their insanely organised lives brushed past each other in the hallways of Hogwarts, maybe. She didn’t spend too long quaffling over it (the very idea of her quaffling was a little ludicrous)- “Avariella Hudson, Level Five. Thanks for meeting me.”
A steady hand extended, a gracious, polite face. Yes, they were off to an adequate start.
(He'd been a little more put together in school, hadn't he? That haircut couldn't possibly be Ministry regulation.)