amourpropre: (Default)
lucius malfoy ([personal profile] amourpropre) wrote in [community profile] multiversallogs2011-09-03 03:31 pm

100 problems.

Who: Lucius Malfoy(?) and Narcissa Malfoy
What: A denizen of Baedal of relative newness evaluates his options and goes with this one.
Where: Sobek Croix
When: Sundown
Notes: None
Warnings: Nnnot yet

It's getting late.

Vague concern of becoming lost in the dense woods, so different than the other neighbourhoods he had seen, is a distant kind of worry and the least of the current concerns that Lucius Malfoy is currently working through. There are spells and enchantments for that sort of thing. There are also things for which there are not any spells and enchantments at all, magical principles dictating that nothing comes from nothing. Everything comes of something. That's actually rather the problem.

Rather than move upon the beaten road, Lucius moves in parallel to it, relying on trees and long shadows to keep him at least partway concealed from those who aren't looking for him to begin with. Boots will become filthy in damp dirt and scratching bramble, but they are also only one of two sets that he's been wearing for the last little while, and most of their polish and what made them fine has long since scrubbed down in scuffs and wear. Fabrics of good make and dark tone don't exactly blend in with his surroundings, but he isn't really counting on this either.

Nor has he ever done this before.

But sometimes he reads.

A Homenum Revelio charm is currently why he is moving with any certainty, the presence of the charm making itself subtly known to the person it detected like a chill, or a predatory shadow over her head.
vanities: (knotted ₪ and he took me to the river)

[personal profile] vanities 2011-09-04 08:17 am (UTC)(link)
"Positive," she assures him. "You'll glow a little where it touched you, a day or two, but it'll do you no ill. People swim in it, Merlin knows why." Perhaps the most reassuring part of this will be how unconcerned she is at having stained her own hands with it, if he's inclined to be reassured by anything.

Upstairs, then; she points out the spare bedroom where she'll lay out clothes (her husband's, she's decided on his behalf that he won't mind) and shows him the guest bath. This, as the rest of the house, still has the pristine crisp air of newness and it's evident enough in subtleties that they haven't been long settled in.
vanities: (stress ₪ paris is burning after all)

[personal profile] vanities 2011-09-04 08:55 am (UTC)(link)
At that, she's still a moment - it is a small betrayal of her own anxieties tonight, but if he needs more than that to see that she isn't so blasé as she plays at...

Narcissa busies herself, promptly, with seeing that there's a towel in the guest bath and preparing to take and clean his things. "I do." A beat. "I do have my reasons, yes. You aren't the first." To have a future to tell her about.

The way she gazes at him for a long moment is somehow both distant and unnervingly present- it seems as though she'll say something, affected and important, but she breaks it off and steps away toward the door.

"Do you want something to drink, when you come down?" She does.
vanities: (brow ₪ ever a prey to coincidence)

[personal profile] vanities 2011-09-04 09:35 am (UTC)(link)
Once safely downstairs, Narcissa opens a bottle of wine to keep her company while she puts something together in the kitchen; something simple seems best, both for the sake of being quick and because she's not sure if he's up to anything too rich or heavy. There's fish, and it'll only take a half hour or so for parcels she can put tomato and capers over, light enough that she can eat a bit too (it'd be so awkward to make him eat alone) without being overfull.

She allows the details to distract her, and by the time he's done, there'll be food (she prepares it, serves it, and then casts a charm over it to keep until he's properly done - she doesn't anticipate him being in a hurry), wine, a pitcher of water on the table in an unsubtle hint to drink it, since he could probably use that too, and the lady of the house standing at the door out into the back garden, smoking.

It's not one of her better habits- but Merlin take it all, this night.
vanities: (discuss ₪ a mind like a diamond)

[personal profile] vanities 2011-09-04 10:26 am (UTC)(link)
Exhaling and setting what's left of her cigarette in the ashtray, Narcissa shuts out the evening air, drawing the door closed behind her before she joins him, one hand still bearing that faint glow despite a good scrub before she went in the kitchen.

"Bellatrix thinks-" not Bellatrix says or Bellatrix knows, "-that there'll be victory." Hers. Theirs. She doesn't know what to call it any more, knows better than to think her sister would be inviting Lucius along with any victory of hers, real or imagined.

She goes on, as she sits down with her own plate and her own glass (of wine, not water), "We arrived in the midst of a plague- I caught up to her in the streets. She told me, then. Alastor Moody - he isn't here, you needn't worry - told me how I died."

These two realities are, she presumes he can conclude, somewhat at odds.
vanities: (shielded ₪ down to my knees)

[personal profile] vanities 2011-09-04 11:44 am (UTC)(link)
"More often than I expect any of us would care to have it." A pause. "I have Evan's wand, from the last city." Her expression softens, minutely, at the mention of her favourite cousin; theirs was always the mostly-platonic mutual adoration of two borderline sociopaths, based on largely on Evan's willingness to go along with Narcissa's notion that the entire world revolves around her.

But he's dead (but Moody killed him), and in the present, she attends her meal more delicately.

"The other Narcissa-" there has to be a less unwieldy way of putting that, somehow, she'll think of it, "-is living a life I don't remember, too. It's strange. I feel as if I'm my own older sister." And this situation somehow makes that less frightening than it ordinarily would be.

(She won't talk about that fear, not ever, but it's evident so very briefly in the rueful expression that crosses her face as she considers how unusual it is that she can say those words here, in this context, without feeling it.)
vanities: (alone ₪ who knows what's best)

[personal profile] vanities 2011-09-04 12:26 pm (UTC)(link)
The situation with the Narcissas is different in many ways, not least of which being how much easier it is to separate their realities - to step apart just enough to relate to each other that way. She'll teach her to cook and try to manage her a bit, without interfering too much, and she supposes that's sort of sisterly, isn't it? Bossiness and all...

...but these Malfoy men, that's another story entirely.

"I don't believe there's a Lucius Malfoy in existence I'd consider myself obligated to," she says, lifting her wine glass. "Surely you don't imagine I do anything it doesn't please me to do."

She'd said something very similar to her younger self, quite recently.
vanities: (agreeable ₪ a medal for my valor)

[personal profile] vanities 2011-09-04 01:06 pm (UTC)(link)
...Narcissa finds herself momentarily stymied.

"You are a hateful man," she informs him, but she's trying, very hard, not to smile at him.
vanities: (thoughtful ₪ you could be a piratess)

[personal profile] vanities 2011-09-04 01:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Retiring from the field while you're still the victor, she doesn't say, realizing a moment later that it's actually easier to navigate this conversation when they're slightly at odds. At least then the boundaries are clearer, when she isn't searching for the safe middle ground between standoffish and too familiar. She doesn't owe him anything, no, but he's Lucius and he's hurt and her instinct-

-well, all right, her instinct has always been to burn down whatever hurt him. But after that, to help. To soothe. Only he isn't hers, precisely, and she doesn't know what's allowed, and she isn't used to having to think in terms of needing permission. It's unfamiliar and disconcerting, which automatically makes it annoying.

That isn't his fault, but that's annoying, too.

"I'll see you in the morning, then," she says, setting her own glass down beside her plate. At least this'll give her an opportunity to speak with her husband before the two of them meet. That- she thinks that would be best. "Do you need anything?"