With her legs scrunched beneath her, Amelia had to adjust the hem of her dress so as not to allow it to touch the ground or the dirty soles of her feet. Her mother was sufficiently distracted at the moment that she likely wouldn’t notice Amelia’s absence – the King and Queen of Spain were invited for brunch with a private violin concert to follow – but even the slightest bit of dirt on the white linen dress her mother had chosen for her this morning would surely lead to another lecture.
It wasn’t that Amelia intentionally defied her parents; on the contrary, she did everything in her power to please them. She had spent the last few years at Hogwarts earning every award worth having, succeeding at being top in her class, and had been appointed prefect without any hesitation on the part of the headmaster. She spoke four languages fluently, played two instruments, and knew just when to feign laughter at the jokes of important people. Aside from being quidditch captain – and Merlin knew
that would never happen with Amelia’s dismal skills on a broom – there wasn’t much more Amelia’s parents could ask of her.
But it was a heavy burden to bear, one she should have shared with her brother. Raoul, however, had taken the opposite path when it came to the parental pressure they had both been exposed to: he had bucked the system and disappeared to heaven-knows-where. The owls Amelia received from him had been few and far between, even more scarce since she had regaled him with the story of being dragged home from Hogwarts on account of her participation in the tournament. She and Raoul had had a bit of a row about it – he thinking she should have just refused to leave and told their parents to shove it – and Amelia refusing outright to hear anything on the subject.
The truth was, Amelia was too invested in earning her parents approval to do anything that might jeopardize their high opinion of her. True, she had entered the Hogwarts tournament, but as mentioned before, she had never dreamed to be chosen. It was, or so she thought, a form of silent rebellion – the only kind she ever endeavored toward. But, as evidenced by her exile to Ireland, she had been wrong.
So entangled were Amelia’s thoughts in her reminiscence and introspection that she failed to notice the approaching footsteps until their maker was crouched immediately beside her. Amelia very nearly fell over onto the muddy ground in surprise as a red-headed girl appeared, wasting no time in beginning a conversation, though she might as well have been talking to the lake as talking to Amelia, such was the direction of her words. It wasn’t until she asked her pointed question that Amelia was even sure she was being addressed.
Surprised at the directness of the question – she was much more accustomed to people dancing around the subject or trying to wheedle their way through her defenses – Amelia toyed for a moment with her standard response of merely walking away or giving a stock answer that would be boring enough to encourage the asker to leave her alone. But seeing as this was the first contact she had had with anyone even remotely her age – she did not count the pompous and dreadfully chatty suitors her mother brought around to the house – she didn’t really feel like shooting herself in the foot right away.
“I
was having a personal pebble throwing contest,” Amelia said with emphasis on the past tense, surprisingly honest but unsurprisingly blunt in her answer. She wasn’t one to waste words, for she said so very few of them in general. She did not skimp on them, however, when it came to being sarcastic. That was one of her specialties.
“But I lost,” she added, and there was the sarcasm. Amelia’s eyes met the girl’s – she would refrain from calling her an intruder for now, though the description was not inaccurate – and she surveyed her quickly, taking in her traveller’s appearance and trying to make a judgment on how to proceed. She had never been awfully good at making conversation; in truth, she was more a collection of witty barbs and awkward small talk.
“And might I return the question to you?” Amelia asked, remembering to remain polite despite her mother’s absence. Some things were just too ingrained to shirk off when out of Antoinette’s presence, unlike the impractical strappy sandals her mother had forced her to wear to brunch, which now lay in the grass behind her.
((This is what she is wearing (the one on the right). Practical, no?
))