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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
2009-12-04 08:33 am UTC (link)
A noncommittal sound of acknowledgment sounded in the back of his throat.

Well, at least there was some practical reason, then. That it was temporary was a good thing, at least. Satisfied, his curiosity drifted back to a less insistent, dormant state.

He couldn't help wondering if maybe he was pressing his luck, if maybe he shouldn't leave while neither one of them was particularly cross. Or at least, while she still seemed to smiling. Her amusement was perplexing. He was fairly certain neither one of them had said anything funny. In fact, he couldn't think of anything funny to say. That hardly seemed like a good sign.

Sirius was fond of signs, even if he viewed them more as excuses than actual communications from the gods or some such. It was another one of those things he only seriously believed in when he was betting on something-though really, at the moment, a sign would have been helpful. Whether to go, whether to stay. It wouldn't look good, though, if he went home in a mood. James would just see it as further proof that this was a bad idea.

A little longer couldn't hurt, right? Maybe just till he sorted out what he was going to do once he left. The trouble with James was that he was often far too good at accurately gauging Sirius's mood, so to pass things off as fine, he'd have to actually be fine. At any rate, he'd give it a little longer. If she had nothing else she wanted to say to him and he had nothing else he was willing to say, overstaying his welcome seemed like a decidedly poor idea.

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[info]first_andromeda
2009-12-04 08:50 am UTC (link)
What else was she supposed to say? It seemed as though they had come to a stale mate today and unlike the other times when silence had stretched between them this was not as comfortable or as stable as it had been then. Perhaps it would be best to stop for the day while they were ahead rather then trying to push anything else and have things get beyond repair. As much as the idea appealed to her to end the day on a semi good note she would not be the one to make the first move and so instead she picked her mug back up and took another drink from it as she watched him out of the corner of her eye while trying to appear as though she was zoning out. And really she should have been paying more attention than she was for if she had been she might have caught Dora in time. As it was it wasn't until a brilliant flash of pink out of the corner of her eye caught her attention and she swore loudly, spilling her tea all over the place as she spun around just in time to catch Dora tugging on his pants leg, her hair running through every colour in the rainbow as she stared silently up at Sirius.

In a flash Andromeda was across the room and scooping Dora up into her arms who seemed to be unfazed by it all and continued to cycle her hair through every colour of the rainbow. Until this point she and Ted had managed to keep her ability a secret from everyone, including his parents as they were terrified that if someone found out that Dora would be turned into a lab rat or worse but it seemed as though her daughter was determined to make things better as she squirmed about in Andromeda's arms and reached out for Sirius, her hair still changing colours at a rapid pace. Andy kept a firm hold on the girl as her gaze settled on Sirius. It was guarded but calculating at the same time as she waited to see how he would react to what she was doing.

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[info]first_sirius
2009-12-04 09:23 am UTC (link)
Sirius's body had finally started easing back into a more relaxed state when there was a sudden flurry of something going on, because Andy was abruptly swearing and moving and he'd actually drawn his wand and-

Oh.

It was a little uncanny, how small people started out. Sirius's head was tilted to the side as he looked down at the very small girl who'd found - now that was an interesting shade of purple - a grasp of his jeans. Huh. He'd never seen a metamorphagus in person. He'd read about them - he'd had to. Him and James and Peter. Transformative magics, after all, certainly had their fair share of overlap. Come to think of it, Sirius didn't think any of them ever really expected to see a metamorphagus in person. Then again, he reckoned if he had, he probably wouldn't have known. Dora had seemed perfectly normal only moments before.

But just as quickly she was swept away. His first concern was that Andy didn't want him touching her daughter. Not that he blamed her. After all, it wasn't as if he was ignorant of the way his just being around tugged at Andy. Even if it was a bit diluted, there was still Black blood in Dora. Maybe enough to be... reactive. It was why he'd avoided taking too keen an interest in Dora, why he hadn't yet actually touched her at all. Sirius just couldn't shake the sense that proximity to their own somehow exacerbated things. He didn't want to go unintentionally stirring things up in her that didn't need provoking.

A glance from Dora to Andy told Sirius little about how she felt about him getting close to her daughter. Only then did it occur to him, as she reached out at him with those small, grasping hands, that Dora might have some kind cognitive awareness worth being concerned over.

Aiming for distraction, Sirius pulled the tip of his wand across his fingertips, streaking what looked like glowing paint upon his skin. The pad of each finger of his right hand lit up like blue tinted lightning bugs. After all, kids liked things that glowed, didn't they? He extended his charmed hand a bit toward Dora, wondering if her hair would change to mimic the shade, but not close enough for her touch unless Andy chose to take a step closer. A flutter of his fingers moved in front of Dora's gaze.

"Does she understand who I am?" he asked quietly, as if he hoped that by speaking softly his words would go unnoticed by the child. He meant his relation to Andy- after all, understanding how much kids could tell and when was really, definitely not his area.

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[info]first_andromeda
2009-12-04 09:33 am UTC (link)
It wasn't that Andromeda didn't want Sirius near or touching Dora, in fact it was the exact opposite as she hoped that one day her daughter and her cousin we be able to get along rather well it was just that she was so used to protecting Dora and making sure her secret didn't get out and that she stayed safe and happy that it was an automatic reaction for her to jump as she did when Dora started to randomly show off her metamorphagus abilities. The need and urge for caution for secrecy had been there from the day Dora had been born as Andromeda was terrified of what her family would do if they ever found out what Dora was and what she could do. After all the blood that ran through her veins was primarily Black and if any of them learned what she could do Andromeda feared that there would be an all out battle for her daughter and she could not allow that to happen. She did not want Dora tainted by the likes of her parents or sister and so every moment of every day was spent on constant alert and watchfulness to make sure that no one noticed Dora and that no one thought her to be anything other than the normal little girl she appeared to be.

Dora just grinned up at him, her face lit up brightly as she continued to struggle to get closer to him. She had no idea who he was but he seemed friendly enough and she wanted to play with him. After all if he was friends with mummy why couldn't she play with him? Her eyes widened though and she stilled as she watched the blue glow her hair immediately changing to match it and an excited squeal came from her as her arms reached out for him even more eager now than she had been before.

"I don't know if she understands but I've told her stories. I'm not sure at two how much she retains or even how well she understands but she's seen pictures of you when you were younger and heard stories and tales and what not of summers in France and holidays spent together. I've not kept you a secret from her and I won't either. I've told her she has other family but that most of them she won't ever meet. After all how does one exactly explain such a thing to a two year old? Hell I'm not even sure how to explain it all to her when she's older and starts asking questions about it all. Luckily I have a bit of time to come up with how to explain it all. I hope any how."

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