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Sirius Black ([info]first_sirius) wrote in [info]_firstwar_hist,
@ 2009-11-30 22:03:00

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Entry tags:* complete, 1977, andromeda tonks, sirius black

Characters: Sirius Black and Andromeda Tonks
Date: July, 1977
Location: Tonks Residence
Rating: PG?
Summary: In which Sirius and Andromeda attempt to sort out how to interact without Sirius leaving in a huff. It mostly works. Sort of.
Status: Complete



The first conversation had gone well. Had been easy. Almost natural. It was reasonable that she would have sought him out. She'd left. He'd left. For different reasons, really- or maybe, deep down, it was the same reason. It was still strange to try to frame it in that terms, though, that his leaving had been like hers. In his mind, there was some sort of intrinsic, undefinable difference vested in the circumstances. But they'd both left. He'd eventually relented to her gentle inquiries though he'd have much preferred the conversation to stay centered around her explaining her own departure. All in all, it had gone well. He'd been happy that she was happy.

So it was strange when their second conversation had gone so poorly. Intellectually, he knew that they way her leaving had been treated, the way it had been explained to him had been a little warped. She'd tried to owl him, to explain things, but his mother had found those letters in short order. And then it had been six years of silence. Six years of behaving as if she had died. His family's view of her leaving may have been skewed, but the pain of it had been real. A pain they weren't allowed to acknowledge, let alone talk about. Bella had only ever talked about it once, one last time to explain the way of it to him, and then she'd never said her sister's name again. It was supposed to have been like Andromeda had died, only they'd never been permitted to grieve the loss. At ten years old, it had been difficult to understand apart from the hurt of it. Even though he thought about it differently now, understood that she'd needed to leave, it didn't erase the past hurt.

And it didn't help that James's wariness of all things Black apart from Sirius did little to put Sirius at ease. He relied on James's moral compass, especially when it came to matters of his family. Under the name Tonks, despite her being disowned, James still saw a Black. The third and fourth conversations had been equally awkward, also ending with Sirius leaving. He just had no idea how to be, how to behave around her. She was a Black, only she wasn't. He'd renounced her, but only because she'd left and he'd been too young to know to do any differently. Only he'd left, too. So they were the same. Only they weren't. And it had been six years. He was so different from the ten-year-old he'd been when she'd left. And she was... a mother. A wife and a mother and a Tonks. It wasn't like with Bella, who had so easily, so visibly still been a Black under the name Lestrange.

But it had been a month. A month since they'd tried doing this, since they'd said much of anything to each other. He got the feeling she was waiting. Or giving him space. Or something- the not knowing, the not understanding how or what she was thinking just by looking at her felt strange.

But he was at her door. The why was still a little ambiguous. But he was there. He wanted it to work. He wanted for there to be something between them, he just had no idea what it might look like. Dressed in jeans and a t-shirt, he knocked on her door, his brain trying to concoct some way to keep his haphazard impulses in check, to keep himself sociable.

Maybe he should have thought this part out beforehand.



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[info]first_sirius
2009-12-01 05:02 am UTC (link)
That she smiled was good, he liked that. And it boded well, which he appreciated given the way he'd left a bit gruffly the last time. Though he still had no idea what he was going to say. That mattered less, however, as she spoke immediately.

He knew she meant it nicely, genuinely, and he knew that he was the one trying to see a jibe in something innocent. That knowledge in no way impeded the way he wanted to respond with sarcasm. Or maybe he just had very little communicable understanding of the impetus for 'this surprise visit.' Unable to construct a benign response, which in and of itself was more than a little depressing, Sirius opted to ignore it. And he went with the only thing he could think to say:

"Can we.... not talk?" he asked cautiously, like he was worried he was going to offend her. He didn't mean in general, he just meant for the moment. It somehow seemed like it would be easier if they just didn't have to bother with what they were saying. Sirius was too tethered to the way Bella and Cissy spoke, each statement carrying layers of meaning and intent. It made it difficult for him to engage with Andy without that, made him feel like he was constantly missing something, not understanding. It had to be the talking that was getting them into trouble. "You know, just sit? And not talk."

Predicting her reactions was difficult, which made the matter a bit uncomfortable. It was a hell of a lot easier when he didn't care, when it didn't matter. In those situations, with new people, it hardly mattered at all. But everything about this felt fragile. Breakable. Or like something that already was broken and needed delicate piecing back together.

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[info]first_andromeda
2009-12-01 05:25 am UTC (link)
A confused look crossed her face as she processed his words. He was standing on her doorstep but he didn't want to talk. It made little to no sense to her and it gave her reason to pause and wonder as to what exactly he was doing there. Then again this was new territory for them. Neither of them really knew how to act around the other and it made them even more difficult than they already are. But then the rest of his statement came out and Andy couldn't help but grin. She knew how that was and what he meant. She couldn't even begin to count the number of times she had shown at Ted's parents home and asked his mother if she could just sit quietly with her. In the first few days after she had been disowned her sitting quietly normally ended up with her in tears but as time went on her crying sessions got smaller and smaller eventually she began to talk. It was just a matter of knowing that there was someone there who would sit with you and not expect anything of you. That the silence that lapsed between you and that person was enough that words weren't needed. The fact that he was asking for such a thing now spoke volumes to her even though he didn't know it.

Andy might not have known precisely what to say to him or how to make things better for him and make it seem like the world wasn't so bleak and dark or depressing but she knew how to give him what he needed as it was precisely what had been done for her. As much as everyone might say that they knew what they were going through and that they were there and that things would get better they just needed to patient, they never really knew. Not until they went through it themselves. Andromeda had appreciated all of the support she had gotten after she was disowned but it was still down right depressing most days at having no one she could talk to or confide in for while she loved Ted dearly and had given up everything for him, he could and never would understand what she was going through and what precisely she had given up. At least Sirius had someone who understood. She knew what it was like and how hard it was and as such she would grant him pretty much anything he asked for if it meant making things easier for him while he tried to adjust to all of this.

"Of course. Come in." Taking a step back she opened the door further and ushered him in before closing it behind him. "I just need to put Dora down for a nap and then we can have the afternoon to ourselves." Turning she led him down the hall and into the kitchen were Dora was sitting in her chair, happily banging on the table. At the sight of Sirius she stopped immediately and peered at him quietly but upon deciding that he was of no interest to her went back to banging on the table. Andromeda just rolled her eyes as she headed towards the stove and put a pot of water on to boil for tea before picking Dora up and heading for the doorway.

"I'm going to put her down for her nap but I'll be right back. Feel free to make yourself comfortable while I'm gone."

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[info]first_sirius
2009-12-01 06:13 am UTC (link)
Something like relief settled over him and he stepped inside. It wasn't an entirely easy relief, because just that like, she was talking again. But at least it barely even counted as small talk. So he just nodded before following after her, incredibly committed to keeping his mouth shut. Especially when she mentioned her daughter.

She had a child. It was still weird to think about, which prompted much of his reluctance to discuss the topic. He hadn't known. He didn't know if any of the Blacks knew. They probably did. It was probably just one more thing his parents had decided he didn't need to know. The thought that her daughter was also his first cousin, once removed, still lagged a bit behind. But to look at her, the little girl in Andromeda's arms, he couldn't see a Black. Maybe it was because her hair kept changing, and he had yet to see her hair go particularly dark. Or maybe she just looked too innocent, too blissfully ignorant of her heritage. Surely neither he nor Andromeda had ever appeared so innocent. Or maybe it was the setting. Blacks were raised in ancestral homes. This place felt odd with its warmth and welcome. Like it was designed to shelter and raise perfectly normal children.

Sirius's gaze was still lightly pinned to Nymphadora, but he nodded again. Crossing his arms over his chest, he leaned back against the counter, without a clue as to how he was supposed to go about making himself comfortable. In her absence, his eyes roamed about the kitchen. Where she cooked dinner for her family, played with her child, talked to her husband. It was a life he couldn't fathom for himself.

He had no idea how she was managing it.

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[info]first_andromeda
2009-12-01 06:24 am UTC (link)
Andromeda was actually grateful for the time it took for her to put Dora down for her nap as it gave her time to collect her thoughts as well as center herself for even though she was grateful to have a family member, any family member to speak to again she wouldn't have wished this sort of life for anyone, not even her worst enemy. It was hard to walk away from it all, to give up everything and everyone they had ever known. To walk away from what they were used to and what, as Blacks, they were guaranteed to have an adult. The real world was much different than what she had grown up with it but perhaps it wasn't much the real world as it was the non pureblood world. The way the rest of the wizarding world lived outside of the realm of purebloods had been quite the shock for her and she still found herself, even after six years, questioning why some things were the way they were and why some things worked like they did. In the world she had grown up in those sorts of questions didn't exist. Their world was constant, stable, never changing. You knew where you stood according to what name you had and how much money you had and how much power your family had. Out in the real world that didn't matter, at least not in the sense it did inside of the pureblood world. There were days Andromeda longed for it all once more, longed to have it and more importantly her family back but at the same time she wouldn't give up the life she had now. She couldn't give up her daughter and her husband, not for anyone or anything, not even her family. It had been incredibly hard for her to do this, to make the decision to leave and go on her own and she was nothing more than the middle child, Andy couldn't even begin to imagine what Sirius was going through. He was the heir and everyone's favourite. He had been the center of attention and the focus of everything since birth, to give that all up and walk away? She had no idea how he had done it, but then again she still wondered how she had had the strength to do it either.

Pressing a kiss to Dora's head she made sure she was tucked in safely to her bed before turning and leaving the room, activating the wards that would alert her to anything going wrong with Dora as she shut the door. Pausing for a moment she took a steadying breath before turning and heading back down the stairs and into the kitchen just in time to catch the tea kettle whistling. Moving about the kitchen quietly she set about making up some tea for them and setting out all of the fixings for tea before grabbing her own mug and motioning towards the chair across from her where she had set the other mug, indicating that he should take a seat rather than continuing to lean against the counter. Though if he wished to remain standing she wasn't going to force him to sit. She would remain patient and let him do things at his own speed and pace and in his own time. Perhaps if she let him start things they would go much smoother than they had before. All she could do though was wait and see what would happen.

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[info]first_sirius
2009-12-01 07:20 am UTC (link)
When she returned, he almost lazily watched her as she went about the business of setting out tea service. It didn't occur to him to wonder if she found it odd, or intrusive to be watched.

It never been with her like it had been with Bella. Andromeda was sweet where Bella was masterful. Where Andromeda was hopeful, Bella was calculating. Andromeda was quiet, reserved- words Sirius understood but employed differently. With Bella, Sirius had known what she wanted, what she had expected. How her mind worked. How to follow her cues and track the meaning beneath her words. Their thoughts spun in too similar a fashion, something Sirius was unwilling to say aloud. Which was convenient, then, since at the moment, nothing was being said aloud.

Sirius picked up his mug, adding perhaps too much sugar, before making his way to the table. He didn't hurry. It was hard to find cause to hurry in the summer. Sitting, he let out a breath that bordered on a sigh. He wanted this to work, to be able to do whatever it was they were trying to do. His default strategies of either charm or sheer force of will lacked the appeal of likely success. Part of him had little doubt that he could please Andromeda if he chose- that he could smile and say the right things and make the right jokes. It wasn't a question of ability. Those were the sorts of antics reserved for people he didn't care about. People who needed to be placated to make his life easier. He didn't want Andromeda to be in that category.

But Sirius didn't know how to open himself up. With James, James just saw him. Saw clean into him. It didn't even matter that there were pieces he didn't think James understood, or would ever fully understand, because at least James knew they were there. And how to deal with them. That first night, the night Sirius had left home and gone to James's, Sirius had been a bit too shaken up to say much of anything properly and James had asked if Sirius had killed his father. Looking back on it later, Sirius had seen what wasn't there- fear, accusation, or condemnation. James had asked because he needed to know that they were going to do next.

Part of Sirius wanted it to be effortless between him and Andromeda, but it was hard to claim familial rights and ease from a family they'd both walked away from. Well, Sirius had fled from. Perhaps that was part of the difference between their leavings; some tiny part of Sirius's motivation had been the fear that he would truly hurt one of them. His eyes drifted back to Andromeda. But her choice hadn't been the selfish choice he'd thought it was. She wasn't a selfish person. She was sweet. And kind. And giving.

Settling in, resting his elbows on the table, Sirius took a sip from his mug. Yeah, too much sugar.

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[info]first_andromeda
2009-12-01 07:38 am UTC (link)
Andromeda simply watched him quietly as he moved about, her gaze catching his briefly over the rim of her mug before she let it go and let him do as he pleased. What was one supposed to say in this situation? Yes she had been through it all but that didn't mean that it made her the expect on what to say or do, how to act or feel or even how one was supposed to get over all of this and move past it all for if the truth were to be known, she herself still wasn't over it all, she still hadn't moved past it all. Even after six, almost seven years it still haunted and plagued her a great deal. She could still see all of their reactions clearly in her mind. The horrified look on her mothers face, the disappoint and disgust showing clearly on her fathers. The way Bella's jaw had clenched in that subtle, angered way she had of clenching it and expressing how she felt without ever saying a word. The entire mood of the room had shifted in one single word and in that split second when everything had changed, for the first time that she could ever remember, Andromeda had truly been afraid of her family. Everything had happened much faster than she had thought it would after that. Her parents had begun shouting at her, making demands and threats, all the while she tried to defend herself and her actions. Bella had simply just left without a word spoken the entire time though she hadn't needed to say anything for Andromeda to know how she felt. She was dead to her sister long before she ever left the room. It was a night that still haunted her both during her waking and non waking hours and while it had gotten better here lately it had gotten worse, much worse and while she hated to think it had anything to do with him a small part of her knew that the reason it was all being drudged back up in her mind was because of the boy sitting across from her.

And he was nothing more than that, a boy. A simple boy, or as simple as one could be when you were a Black. But still he was no older than she had been when she had left. The similarities between their disownments were more than she cared to see or recognize but then again at the same time they were completely and utterly different. Sirius was lucky though. He had friends and a support system to fall back on, and he had family, in as much of a way as she could be counted as family. He had what she hadn't when she had gone through all of this and she could only hope that such a thing meant that this would all be easier on him that perhaps he wouldn't have it as rough as she did for she did not want him to suffer and be as miserable as she had been in those first few days, those first few weeks where all she had done was stare silently at everything and everyone. Andromeda had gone through life the first six months after she had been disowned on autopilot. How she had ever managed to graduate from Hogwarts and pass the entrance exams into the Healer programme with the way she had been acting she would never know but eventually she had started to come around and participate in life even more. And every day that passed she was grateful for Ted. For the way he had silently stood by her and offered her support. How he had asked but hadn't asked and on the days when he would find her curled up silently sobbing and never said a word but instead just sat down beside her and let her cry, she would never be able to repay him for what he had done for her and she would always be grateful for it and love him.

Blinking rapidly she tried to push away the thoughts and flashes of memory that ran through her mind and made themselves known to her. This wasn't about her. This was about him and what he was going through. Focusing on him once more she took another sip of her tea as she watched him, waiting for some kind of sign that he wanted to talk or hell even a word to come from him. It would be his move this time if he wanted to start the conversation. He had asked for this and as such she would respect his wishes for as long as he wished for them to last.

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[info]first_sirius
2009-12-01 04:16 pm UTC (link)
The thing about not talking was that it made everything else more obvious. How she sat. The way her fingers wrapped around the mug. The fall of her hair over her shoulder. The way their postures and carriage faintly mirrored each other's. These were things that were comforting in their familiarity. However, without the distraction of conversation, the way she seemed to be blinking back tears was painfully apparent.

It was difficult to fathom how he could have upset her when he was trying his level best to not do anything at all. When girls were upset in his vicinity, Sirius usually had a very clear picture as to why. So maybe it had nothing to do with him. And maybe that was just naive, wishful thinking.

It was his hope that if he could figure out how to manage this, to just cohabit comfortable silence together, that words could come later. With her, there was just too much potential for too many words- too many honest words for someone so inclined obscure his thoughts and feelings from an outside observer. Family used to be exempted from the habit, but then he'd had to learn how to employ it toward his parents. That he'd had to at all was still irritating, and he resented them for it, for loosing his trust. His expression darkened for a moment before he realized it, and then he was quickly retreating behind a more tranquil face to try to avoid giving her the impression that she was the cause.

He wanted to know what he'd done or hadn't done to upset her, but he didn't know how to ask without making things worse, so he kept his lips sealed. But he didn't want her to think he was ignoring it. Or her. After a moment's pause, his thoughts seemed to unravel, letting him delve into the comfortable region of acting without much analysis. Under his watchful gaze and impassive expression, one of his hands moved across the table until the backs of his fingers pressed lightly against the backs of hers. It was contact that he was able to enjoy with an acute singularity he doubted he'd have found without silence.

It was one of the most staggering things to adjust to after leaving, the absence of conversational contact. The press of a hand on his arm when he spoke. Having his hair adjusted and smoothed absently. There were multitudes of little gestures and affections that sprang from familial proximity, a certain ease at being in someone else's personal space, the sort that only came from spending years together. He was consciously, sometimes uncomfortably aware of that particular loss. Some of it was amended with James and Remus, whose expectations for personal space and privacy Sirius had been methodically eroding for years. Conveniently, however, Sirius had found that more and more there were plenty of girls at school who seemed to crave contact as much as he did- although in the absence of the barriers of gender and blood relation, those interactions had a way of taking on a life of their own, leading to a good deal more than what Sirius considered platonic affection. All the practice was serving was to constantly broaden his definition of platonic affection.

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[info]first_andromeda
2009-12-02 07:39 am UTC (link)
There was a reason Andromeda avoided thinking on her family, of remembering times past and the way things used to be or they had ended for when she did start thinking on them it was hard to stop and even more it was hard to control her emotions and feelings that were attached to it all. It had taken her a very long to box it all up and shove it deep down inside of her and there were only certain days of the year that she took the boxes out and removed the lids and let the memories and emotions play out; only certain days that she allowed herself to be as she used to be. To do it any more than that and she ran the risk of everything unraveling around her and coming down around her ears for now matter how long she was away from them, no matter how long she was with Ted and away from the influence of her family and the world she had grown up in that part of her never went away. Just because they had disowned her didn't mean that she stopped being a Black or that she stopped being a pureblood and there were days when those two things were so incredibly hard to deal with in the life she had now. Everyone thought that just because she had been disowned that it should have been easy for her to distance herself from it all, to change herself and be someone else. She couldn't do that though, it wasn't possible. How do you change the person you were for seventeen years? It was something Andromeda had been struggling to do and after a while she just gave up trying to change it, trying to change who she was to fit what everyone else wanted her to be and instead she just repressed it all and pretended that it was all fine. There were days it wasn't though and there were situations that occurred when it wasn't all fine and as much as she hated to admit it, being around him made it all not alright. It reminded her far too much of the way things used to be and it reminded her far too much of everything she had given up to have what she had now and even though she loved her husband more than anything and wouldn't trade her daughter for anything and was happy with her life as it was now....she still missed everything else and there was a part of her, a part of herself that Andromeda hated with everything that she was that wished she could have it all back. That she could take everything back to have just one more moment with them all, to once again feel as though she truly belonged.

She blinked rapidly, the world coming back into sharp focus at the soft feel of his fingers against hers. Under any other circumstance she might not have noticed the touch as much as she did but with the lack of words and sounds to distract her from it she was acutely aware of it all. Her gaze slid from where it had been staring blankly at the wall behind his head to focus on the small patches of skin that touched each other and all she could do was stare. It was a simple touch, nothing more than a few fingers touching but for them, for this situation, it was a huge thing and one that at that moment she couldn't even begin to understand. In the first few days after she had been disowned she had craved human contact, had craved the closeness that came from another human touching her but it had never been enough. None of it had ever been enough to make her feel whole and normal again and the fact that such a small thing like his fingers resting against the backs of hers went a long to making her feel some small sense of normality had her hating her family for doing such a thing to her and making her feel like she did.

After a long moment her gaze from their fingers and rested on his face. She said nothing but she felt as though she didn't have to that anything and everything that she could have said or might have even began to say was written on her face. It was a bit unsettling to think that she could have been read so well but when it came to family they had always been like that and even though six years of silence lay between them there were some things that not even time could change.

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[info]first_sirius
2009-12-03 12:08 am UTC (link)
The longing painted across her features only served to highlight the contrast between Andy and the sisters who never spoke her name. His eyes meeting hers, Sirius simultaneously understood and balked at the idea, or at so openly showing that... ache. At least he had the decency to hide it, or at the very least, to be ashamed of it. But the two of them were different, he found the grace to recall. Andy had never needed to be hard or strong or aloof, never needed to be coolly calculating; she'd had Bella to protect her. She'd had a family, one that took care of the softer parts of itself. So maybe it was okay for her to show what he couldn't, even if it was only between them, that they hadn't just left their family- they'd lost their family.

Not that those words could ever be said out loud, not by him. Because Sirius did have family, he had James. But that somehow felt very different from the family she had. It was very much for the best that Ted wasn't around, something Sirius had only just considered. Ted Tonks was probably some perfectly nice guy, but for Sirius that was nothing more than an intellectual abstraction that had no chance of overwhelming the title 'the man who stole my cousin away.' Sirius was working on it, he really was, but it was difficult. It was difficult, with her sitting there, wanting things that couldn't be. She'd said she was happy, and he believed her, but when people said they were happy, they usually just meant they were more often happy than they were sad.

He couldn't help wondering if she'd been able to have both, her pureblood family and her muggle husband, if she'd have stayed. Neither answer would have made him happy, neither would have made him feel better, the implications were just too convoluted. And there was no point in asking, it wouldn't have changed anything, knowing either way. It would have just been more to think about, or more to try to not think about.

With something like a sigh, Sirius leaned his face against his other hand and let his eyes fall shut, concentrating on the warm places where their skin connected, applying just a little more pressure, one of his fingers settling a little more atop hers. Like he was testing out how much was okay, as if he was ingraining the exact amount of pressure into his memory.

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