Florence liked to think herself uneasily spooked by people. The solitary observer of human society, she liked to think she’d learned all there was to learn – the peculiarities, the predilections, the pretentions. She was realistic enough to concede that it was not so, that she was too young to really know the full spectrum of human intricacies, but she felt as though she understood the basic principles that all human beings – especially magical ones – seemed to live by. It seemed unimaginable to her that anyone, especially a stranger – albeit one whose reputation and bloodline preceded him, could bely the assumptions she had constructed into quasi-fact over her sixteen years of life. And yet, there stood Edward R. Lupin – entirely unruffled by her, undaunted by what was expected of him, easy-going, almost blasé in his relaxed confidence. Florence could only blink.
Somehow, the Leaky Cauldron didn’t seem as freeing as it did before. There was something different at play here, with him. Florence was not sure what it was yet but it piqued her interest enough to make her want to see how it was all going to play out. It was an illusion of a choice, she knew. Neither of them had one now. The Ministry had him in a vice grip. She wasn’t sure if he realised. He’d been foolish enough to volunteer – or perhaps brave enough. She wasn’t sure which it was but nevertheless it would be down to her to make it impossible for him if he showed any signs of strain, of wanting to back out. They wouldn’t let him now. She was their crisis case. He was the last olive branch they had for her. The last bridge to burn.
But perhaps, illusion or not, it was worth seeing the end result. What else was there to this man? What were his faults – his peculiarities, predilections, and pretentions? Why did he make her think that maybe they didn’t follow the normal paths? In fact, she was almost sure they didn’t. He was a Lupin. Thus a Potter. They didn’t want for anything. It wasn’t love of gold that drove him into the Ministry’s arms, crowing about a desire to help nurture a lost generation of witches and wizards. It couldn’t have been selflessness, could it? A genuine desire to do good? That, she had all but given up as a myth.
“It’s not up to me,” she answered gradually, a sad almost-smile flickering about her mouth.
She turned then, but not wholly away from him, her left shoulder angled towards him, her head twisted around just a little – her body language inviting him to walk at her pace, for them to enter the dungeon office together.
“Thank you!” Eloise’s voice was breathless with indignation. Florence did nothing to hide her smirk as she sat down in her usual chair across from the social worker.
“Right,” her smile returned in full force as she lifted a hefty packet of paper work off of her desk and dropped it down on their side. Florence’s expression clouded with confusion for a few moments before she schooled it back to neutrality. She knew what it was, of course. It was paperwork outlining her previous homes and the problems she’d faced there, as well as the problems she’d created. It was a systematic appraisal of how difficult she would be for the Lupin man littered with propagandistic nonsense about how reforming her would be the greatest act of patriotism etcetera, etcetera… It had just never been that big before.
“Background paperwork,” Eloise laid her hand on top it before turning to some of the last pages. “To peruse in your own time and implement our advice where you wish to.” Florence raised an eyebrow. “Just sign here, Mr Lupin. Then there are a few other pages here for you to sign, as well, and we can call it quits once I’ve gone through the dark magic exposure.”
“Don’t let me near it or I’ll start cackling and talking about the Dark Lord,” Florence informed him wryly, resting her chin in her hand.
“Florence!” Eloise’s voice was razor sharp, her cheeks filling with blood as she looked around furtively, her eyes tracing to the door, as though expecting someone to turn up – Aurors probably.
“It’s the same speech every time,” Florence pointed out, dropping her hand and sitting back heavily against the chair. “The Ministry feels that exposure to certain types of magic will trigger a natural propensity for acts that contravene proper wizarding cond—”
“Show some proper wizarding conduct now, will you?” Eloise snapped. Florence brought her lips together with a pop, meeting the elder woman’s gaze steadily.
“Unfortunately,” she all but purred in Lupin’s direction, “your new charge has an excellent memory. Indeed, the Ministry does feel that exposure to dark magic, in particular, will bring out certain natural … leanings, if you will,” she eyed Florence, determined not to repeat her verbatim. “Her parents were naturally dark leaning, to put it mildly. We would like her to refrain from falling into circles that would allow her to slip into such … groups… that would lead to her …” she closed her eyes, letting out an impatient sigh, “contravening proper wizarding conduct.”
Florence’s smirk returned with full force.
“Thus, Mister Lupin … we really would rather you kept her away from Knockturn Alley, any contact with Death Eaters or their children—”
“I’m a Slytherin,” Florence cut in, her attention firmly excluding Eloise. “The last one is hard to do. Drives them mad.”
“And indeed,” Eloise reasserted herself firmly, “if possible we would really rather you socialised her within your own circles. The Potters, for instance. Or, um. Well, many of their associates. Light wizards, if you will. I am sure you’re acquainted with many. You really are her last chance for reform, Mr Lupin, and we feel you are her best chance, too.”
Florence cringed and turned her head away, imagining that, if it meant Eloise could get one foot in the door, she probably would have made pigs fly for ‘Mr Lupin’s’ attentions in that moment. It was all rubbish, all of it. Apart from the bit about him being her last chance. That … that probably wasn’t hyperbole. Merlin.