A/N: This was written for a friend, the lovely Kirixchi, goddess of Lucius/Narcissa and many other things. It is an odd ship, but if I might say so myself, this is better than Sirius/Marauder-Sue, so¡ hope you like it!
Disclaimer: No, I do not own, have never, will never.
~*~
She almost couldn't bear to look at the pictures pinned on
the door of her establishment.
Sirius Black, the murderer of a dozen people, bearded and pale-faced, fiery
obsidian eyes gleaming over too-sharp cheekbones, escaped from Azkaban, a
dangerous man, pursued by even more dangerous monsters.
Rosmerta had a smile on her face, every day, all day. Even now, as the last
patrons of the Three Broomsticks waved merrily before making their way out of
the pub (before those Dementors pursuing that deadly murderer could get into
their paths), she was smiling, determinedly bright like the fading sunlight, as
she wiped the countertop with a sodden rag.
"Good night, Rosmerta," the slightly oily voice of Cornelius Fudge
reached her ears as the Minister made his way out of the Three Broomsticks.
"Make sure you lock all doors... wouldn't want Sirius Black to get
you." Chortling at his own self-perceived humour, the Minister departed,
shutting the door behind him, and Rosmerta 's eyes met the picture of Sirius
staring back at her on the closed door.
She wondered what Fudge would think if she had burst out with something along
the lines of a defiant "he's already GOT me".
The Sirius she had known was not the one staring at her with that odd,
unnerving intensity (she wondered nervously for a moment if photos could
recognize people). Sirius Black had been a young man of eighteen then, herself
about the same age, all wit and cheerful arrogance and a devilish glint in his
dark eyes. Rosmerta smiled slightly to herself, her pretty head bent over a bag
of empty bottles.
They'd both been the bright, dazzling sort of people of the spotlight. Back in
the day.
Perhaps that was why she loves him still.
Perhaps it was easier, she reflected as she started to levitate the empty
bottles towards the back door and dustbins outside, to feel the real depth of
love after the loved one was gone. Absence making the heart grow fonder didn't
quite cut it, though.
"No, absence just makes you feel pain in love that you never thought you
could feel," she whispered aloud as the bottles landed with a strangely
quiet series of muffled clinks. Then silence, and Rosmerta was about to turn
back inside, to the warm and cozy emptiness that was her pub.
But there was a rustle of movement and a dark shape, stooped by the dustbins,
caught her eye. Cocking her head to the side, Rosmerta took a closer look.
A black dog, rather big, with the leanness and matted fur that came from
neglect (a stray without a home, rebellious), rooting through the dustbins with
snout and paws. Almost as if realizing that it was being watched, it looked up,
and Rosmerta frowned in slight confusion.
Strays were mean, hungry, unfriendly dogs, vicious and ruthless as criminals,
and their tails were held between their legs even as their manic eyes gleamed
in rage at the world, ears back, teeth clenched.
A stray didn't have almost-human dark eyes or abandon the heap of trash and
perhaps-food that was its domain to approach her slowly, an oddly warm look on
its face.
It was perhaps an instant, or perhaps more, but Rosmerta silently opened the
door wider and waited until the dog had stepped inside before shutting it
behind the both of them.
~*~
It was a simple matter, really. A few cleaning charms, and then a spoken word
for it to follow her up the stairs in the back.
"I guess this will be my charitable act of the season," she mused
aloud, giving the dog a slight smile as she put a pot on a stove, "I hope
you don't mind stew."
The dog nodded its head, and Rosmerta smiled at it, putting salt and pepper
into the pot. "Do you have an owner?"
No response. "I'll take that as a 'no'," Rosmerta declared.
"Alone for Christmas... well, that makes two of us."
The dog whined a little, eyes wide as it stared at her. Fresh vegetables,
bright greens and reds and oranges, cut into small pieces. Slice, dice,
julienne... drop into the metal pot, heat, burn... "Things weren't always
like this," Rosmerta told the dog, "We used to be the bright ones...
oh, those were the days..."
The dog tilted its head, and she poured a glass of wine (red like blood) into
the pot. "We didn't care about the future: what was there to worry about?
Whatever happened, we could make it out. Ride away from it all... he had a
flying motorcycle. It was so... glamorous and yet rebellious."
"Woof?"
"They said he killed thirteen people," the water began to boil, curls
of steam like ghosts rising upward. "Why would he do such a thing, though?
And... Peter. They were friends."
More steam rose from the pot now, and maybe that was why the scene in front of
her was blurry.
She abruptly extinguished the heat of the stove, and turned around to find
bowls from the worn cupboard. "But enough of that, I suppose," she
said softly. "No one stays eighteen forever, and being young and in love
doesn't equal immortality. I don't know if I regret not knowing that at the
time."
She gave the stew one last stir and filled two bowls. "Dinner's
served," she said wryly, walking towards the table.
She could have sworn the dog grinned at her.
~*~
For a stray, it was astonishingly neat in its eating habits. And then, it
wagged its tail and watched her with bright eyes as she put the dishes away.
"Are you sure you don't have an owner?" she asked, reaching out a
hand and patting its head. "You're smarter than most strays."
The dog snorted as if to say "As if anyone could own ME", and Rosmerta
laughed a little.
The one-sided conversation, not quite of ships and shoes and sealing wax, or
cabbages and kings, continued in snippets in the den.
"Well... I just hope that sometime, I'll find out the whole story,"
Rosmerta mused, looking at the dog. "Think that will happen?"
The dog nodded its head, and Rosmerta grinned before closing her eyes.
The last thing she was aware of was the dog pulling a blanket around her with
its teeth. Really, it was almost too smart for an animal...
~*~
About two hours after midnight, the dog raised its head, and had any lights
been on in the flat, someone might have been able to see a shadow shifting in
shape, taller, larger, head raising as the dark eyes glinted with a more
complex, conscious light.
"You'll hear it someday," a low male voice, hoarse from disuse,
whispered in the darkness, as a calloused hand (the hand of a murderer?) moved
a lock of fair hair with a whispery gentleness from the woman's face. She
didn't wake.
Two minutes later, and he was walking out the door, footsteps quiet and face
solemn. There was a taste of lipstick in his mouth, slightly sweet and slightly
bitter. The door shut behind him, and a moment later, the moonlight shone upon
a black dog upon the doorstep.
Waxing gibbous. The dog lowered his head, perhaps in guilt or sorrow, and
glanced at the Shrieking Shack silhouetted in the distance for a few long
moments before padding off into the surrounding darkness.
In the upper level flat in the Three Broomsticks, a beautiful woman no longer
quite so young or dazzlingly bright slept on, a glittering yellow rose resting
in her lap like a fallen star from the past.
