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firecracker สฐสฒแต–

By xonarciso

20.3K 927 90

Elestara Lyra Black was everything a proper pureblood girl should be: elegant, cunning, coldly brilliant, and... More

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BEST MAN
19 YEARS LATER

3-20

131 6 0
By xonarciso

Regulus had not tried to talk to her in person. Not yet. Lyra knew he wouldn't. He understood her too well. He wouldn't come until she allowed it.

But Lyra knew he would try if he saw her, and he was currently a Professor. She didn't want to run into him in the halls.

So she stayed in bed.

She hadn't spoken properly to anyone since the lake. She had returned, soaked and shivering, and gone straight to her room. Pansy had tried first, bringing tea and slippers and chatter about classes. Then Daphne, with a firm hand on her shoulder and an offer to braid her hair like they used to when things were simpler. Draco told them what happened, hiding details where it mattered.

Lyra had turned to the wall.

Even Theo hadn't gotten through, and Draco—who had come storming in the night before with his usual fire and fury—had stopped short when he saw her face. He had left again just as quickly, muttering something under his breath that no one quite caught.

And then, the whispers started.

"She hasn't been down to meals."

"She's sick."

"She's not."

"She's pretending."

"She's broken."

No one said it out loud, but everyone knew something had happened. The dynamic had shifted. The girl who once carried herself like a crown wasn't rising from her sheets. The girl who never wept now did so in silence, with the curtains drawn, the world locked out.

Draco had had enough. He wrote to their mother.

Narcissa skimmed through her son's letter with a raised eyebrow and sighed shortly after. It turns out both their children both had quite a flair for the dramatics.

Narcissa knew this would come, she knew Lucius didn't know the extent to which she and Regulus planned this before the twins left for school.

Lucius hadn't been himself.

He was careful, always had been. Reserved. Precise. But Narcissa knew the difference between stillness and unease. When he sat too long in the drawing room with the same untouched glass. But the shift in his voice whenever Regulus's name came up—the rare moments it did—was enough.

She knew immediately had happened. The truth had broken out.

"Severus," Narcissa said, sweeping into the Potions office in a blur of velvet and ice blonde hair, "I need a word."

Snape glanced up from the cauldron simmering on his desk, the faintest arch to his brow. "Narcissa. What a charming surprise."

"Don't waste my time."

His lips twitched. "About Lyra, then."

"You've noticed."

"She's missed three lessons. Pansy claims she's ill. Daphne says she's mourning. Draco, as usual, is useless."

"Which is why I'm here," Narcissa said smoothly.

"She won't speak to Regulus," he told her quietly. "And she hasn't left her bed."

Narcissa said nothing at first. Her face was unreadable, but her eyes were cold. Not angry. Not surprised. Just... steeled. She had always known it would come to this eventually.

"Let me in," she said.

Severus nodded once.

She moved through the hallway with practiced silence. Her heels didn't click. Her sleeves didn't brush the stone. She walked as though the castle belonged to her.

At the entrance to the girls' dormitory, Daphne stepped aside.

"She hasn't left her bed," she said without needing to be asked. "Not even to yell at Draco. We're... concerned."

"Thank you, darling," Narcissa murmured.

She swept past the green velvet curtain, heels silent, fingers ghosting along the edge of the bed.

Lyra lay curled toward the wall, motionless.

Narcissa sat beside her, smoothing the covers with an absent hand.

"I brought your favourite tea."

No answer.

She reached out and tucked a strand of white gold hair behind Lyra's ear. "And I wore your favourite perfume. I thought it might make you scowl."

Lyra said nothing. Her eyes stayed closed.

Narcissa sighed. "You're doing that thing again."

"What thing?"

Her voice was faint, cracked at the edges. Narcissa smiled.

"Punishing yourself so thoroughly that no one else gets a chance to."

There was a long pause.

"When I was your age, I thought the world was made of stone."

Lyra didn't turn.

"I thought right and wrong were carved into it. I thought family was something you bled for, something you never questioned."

Silence.

"And then your uncle left."

Lyra's breath hitched, barely.

"I didn't speak to him again after that. Not once. I told myself I couldn't. That I shouldn't. That it was weakness."

Narcissa looked at the curtains, the faint line of light where the edges didn't quite meet.

"But I never stopped missing him," she said. "Even when I hated him."

Lyra finally spoke, voice rough. " That's different. Sirius was disowned. Regulus lied to me."

"I know."

"Every day."

Narcissa nodded slowly. "Yes."

"He was everything. I believed in him."

"And he believed in you," Narcissa said. "Which is why he couldn't tell you."

Lyra turned then, just slightly, her eyes red but dry.

"He made me believe in something that wasn't real."

Narcissa leaned back slightly. "Do you want to know what I believe?"

Lyra didn't respond.

"I believe you're allowed to be furious. I believe betrayal cuts deeper when it comes from someone we trust to never do it. And I believe the truth meant every word, even if it hurts like hell to hear them."

Lyra turned her face slightly, eyes half-open. "He destroyed a piece of the Dark Lord."

"Yes."

"With Dumbledore."

"Yes."

"He never told me."

"No," Narcissa said gently. "Because he thought it would break you. Instead, hiding it did."

A tear slid down Lyra's cheek. She didn't wipe it away.

"I threw his brooch into the lake."

"I know," Narcissa said. "Draco told me."

"I thought I hated him."

"And now?"

"I think I still do."

"Good."

That startled her.

Narcissa brushed her fingers down Lyra's braid. "Hate is honest. Hate means it mattered. Hate means you loved him enough to be hurt by it."

Lyra turned fully then, burying her face into her mother's shoulder.

And Narcissa held her.

No words. No spells. Just arms, steady and warm, in the coldest part of the castle.

Later that night, a knock came at the common room door.

It was Regulus.

Draco met him with a sigh. Regulus could tell he was annoyed by how stubborn Lyra was being.

"Sorry Uncle, she's still not ready."

Regulus didn't try to enter.

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