It had been nearly a year since she had graduated. Conspicuously, it had nearly been two years since she had gotten married. A cursory glance at her medicine cabinet would have revealed the source of her in-laws’ misgivings about the lack of grandchildren. Nestled in amongst a plethora of different concoctions was something altogether more high street pharmacy: a contraceptive potion. That did not disappoint her, of course, as much as it did them. The last thing she needed to further entrench her misery and sense of failure was a child. Not that she would see much of it, of course. There was nothing particularly maternal about this, or indeed any, Malfoy. She sought to nurture her own accomplishments, instead.
Thus, she found herself in London – as one often does. She had disentangled herself from the cocoon that was her workshop in the basement of their Hogsmeade cottage and had decided to venture out. She had foregone Diagon Alley and had instead headed straight for Knockturn Alley, for a portion of the infamous district that was being revamped by the well-meaning council authorities. They were attempting to make the residential streets that little bit more appealing to incoming potential buyers. How did they do this, you ask? Well, they plonked a bookshop-cum-café opposite the tall terraces. Ingenious, really. Only, not. Ah-hah, Nott.
For all of her misgivings, she entered the shop. A copy of the Daily Prophet, bought from a corner shop on the way through, was under her arm, the employment section already helpfully unfolded. She had done that first, you see. She took a seat near the back, not really desirous of anything to drink. It didn’t take long for a waitress to appear, however, asking after what Isadora fancied before she had even unfurled her newspaper. Pursing her lips a little, she nursed the flame of dissatisfaction that had lit itself within her and implored herself to be civil. She ordered a coffee and a sandwich. That. That was civil. She even found a smile for the girl who, clearly, didn’t recognise her. Good. She didn’t particularly want to be.
That was it.
Isadora’s eyes flicked to the mirror mounted on the wall, helpfully positioned opposite her table. She regarded her sallow skin and limp blonde hair with distaste and immediately rectified the latter by pulling it up away from her face with the hairband that had been cutting off her circulation all morning. It didn’t do much, mind you, to improve matters but she felt a little happier. She observed her eyes steadily, and the long lashes that lapped up from the edges of her lids, wondering if she would do better as a green-eyed brunette, given the former’s monster already rumbled about so readily in her belly. Or perhaps a redhead, even. No. Her nose wrinkled. Too Weasley. Then of course there was her frame, so rail-like. Child-like, even. Nothing could help that. Potions were too imprecise to really ‘fix’ matters, so to speak.
She glanced down at the newspaper and reached for the marker pen in her bag. She circled a job in the Department of Communications. Then plucked one out from the Daily Prophet itself, albeit that too ultimately came under government control. She bit her lip and glanced up again, wondering if a different young woman wouldn’t have been too proud to waltz into the Ministry for an interview. Or, well, braver. Brave enough to walk into the Ministry for an interview. Merlin knew, for all of her pride and stubbornness, she was not brave enough. Bravery had never been a trait particular to Ravenclaw, after all.
The coffee had arrived and she thanked the girl before looking down morosely into its dark depths. Black hair perhaps. Grey eyes? No. The Black blood in her was so scant now, that was pointless. Black hair … blue eyes? Rookwoodian. No. Mousy brown hair and amber eyes? She closed hers, envisaging it. It could work. A different woman. Not a Malfoy. Not a Nott. Ah-ha. Someone else. Elsie. Elsie Penworthy. Obliviator? Sounded perfect. Now all she needed was someone for the magic.
But that someone wasn’t necessarily going to just walk into her life now, were they? Or were they? At that moment, the bell over the door tinkled as the green portal was shoved open, letting in a draught.