Although she knew there was no chance of Elijah causing her body harm, Amelia still stepped away when he jumped down from the rafters. It wasn’t that she thought he would miss his intended landing space, but rather that she remembered the clouded nature of her thoughts when he came too close to her. Amelia was still kicking herself for the last time she had let him get close to her; she wasn’t all that keen on letting him get close enough to use his powers of persuasion on her. Her thoughts were clearer and more attuned to her more rational intentions when she kept her distance.
As he morphed back to his human self, though, Amelia was given a full reminder of why she needed to stay so far away from him. Elijah was, just as she remembered, dangerously attractive. He had the easy kind of confidence that allowed him to get away with tousled hair and slightly askew clothing; it actually added to her intrigue. He was tall and strong and the grin which appeared on his angular facial features was the same one that had dwelled in the forefront of her mind those months ago, try as she might to ignore it.
It was that grin which held her in place as Elijah walked down to the level on which she stood, his easy gait the antithesis of the strain which held her muscles in place, nervous as she was to be around him again. The muscles in her legs and torso were tightened, hoping to keep any lingering butterflies in her stomach locked firmly in their cages. She had been coerced by those impish insects once before, but she was determined this time to let her brain conquer her body, rather than the other way around like last time. Elijah posed a serious threat to that intention, but Amelia was stubborn.
His comment was nearly lost on Amelia, who was so focused on behaving as though she was not pleased to see him – and at least mentally, rationally, she wasn’t – but as he walked past her that focus was broken as the smell of his cologne and the dusty smell of charcoal that she only recognized because of her brief encounter with it while in Elijah’s makeshift studio in the Room of Requirement. Amelia would never use charcoal herself – she had no reason to, and it was far too dirty for her liking – and she had never seen anyone else employ it, so this was a smell she associated exclusively with Elijah. The combination of scents threatened to weaken her defenses, but she steeled herself against it, closing her eyes to maintain concentration so as not to slip up in his presence.
Just send the package and get back to the routine, her mind encouraged, her eyes open once again as Elijah inquired as to her wellbeing. This question really had no right answer, which resulted in Amelia’s hesitation to respond, but she managed to form something mildly coherent and succinct after a few seconds of thought.
“I am busy,” Amelia replied briefly, her cold tone a reminder of the distance that now existed between them. If these last months had not passed as they did, her reply may have been different, but there was no changing the past. Things were the way they were, and that so rarely changed that Amelia had come to expect the stability of routine.
As Elijah busied himself with something behind her, Amelia leaned down to seal the package she had brought up, quick work with a wand. Elijah’s motions behind her were of interest to Amelia, but showing that interest might give Elijah the permission he needed to infiltrate her defenses once more, so Amelia ignored it and busied herself with her task of returning her mother’s idea of appropriate attire. She lifted her head to the rafters and whistled a seven-note melody which brought Aurora drifting down to her arm, the owl’s eyes still resting skeptically on Elijah, though he no longer posed the same threat now that he was not feline.
Amelia stroked the feathers of her pet, feeding Aurora a treat she had brought. She was just about to search for another owl whose help she could employ to carry the heavy package when Elijah spoke again, this time far less familiar than he had been initially. His apologetic tone was the only thing which persuaded Amelia to turn around to face him, though she maintained her distance in the interest of maintaining her train of thought.
With the number of people offering to let me hit them, one of these times I am actually going to take them up on it, Amelia thought to herself, wondering why boys always thought that violence would be sufficient enough to get past any problem that might come up.
But Amelia had no desire to hit Elijah; it wasn’t that kind of anger. She wasn’t angry at him, but rather disappointed. She had known upon meeting him that depending on other people rarely led down any road but disappointment, and fully believed it, but he had made her dare to think differently. It was her mistake. It was easier, though, to manifest this disappointment as anger, because it was not such a revealing emotion. Anger was predictable, acceptable; disappointment would convey to Elijah the meaning he had had to Amelia, to her sense of happiness, and that she could not allow.
“You don’t have to apologize,” Amelia said with a shrug that suggested she was non-chalant about the whole thing, though that couldn’t be further from the truth. Although she had taken on that stance, it was just one of many defenses she had built around herself, “There is nothing to excuse. You were busy, and so was I. You don’t need to ask my forgiveness, because there has been no affront.”
“We went our separate ways, and neither of us is any the worse for it,” Amelia lied. Her response was icy, distant. It was a sad recognition, that this is the way things were with Elijah, the person she had believed would be different, but this is what came from foolish beliefs. There was a part of her that knew what she was saying was untrue, was screaming to be heard, but was silenced by her overwhelming need to take a rational and cold-cut approach to this situation. It simply hurt less.