*A bit of light blinks out in the dark, only a lantern but looking more like a confused star come too close to the earth. It's impossible to tell how far from the house it is, air stretches on for miles over the moors that isolate the Black's gothic getaway from the rest of civilisation. Distance is only interrupted here by scrub and heather and bog, and what looks far away might actually be gaining on you faster than you expected.
Regulus's face feels stiff from not blinking, and with a twig-like arm he raises the heavy light to the level of his eye, looking for any patches of darkness that might contain the towering figures he's asked to meet him here. It's over the silhouette of the rooftop that he finally sees something, a black mass whispering between too thin chimneys and back into shadow as it bypasses Barty inside and glides over the cold, wild ground toward Regulus.*
*The inexperienced have used musty, incomplete words like 'smoke' and 'velvet' to describe what happens next. However, it's more like spilling ink - all shrapnel and fast-expanding thickness. It doesn't come closer. Instead, it unfolds in Regulus' line of vision until there's only scabbed arms, a blank hood and briny tide pushing against the back of his knees, heavy and cold.*
*Alone in the night, in the dark places of England without the constant light of London that Regulus had grown up with, one little lantern to light the way can seem like the brightest thing in the world. As the cloaked figures move in to it's circle however, Regulus feels like for all intents and purposes that his lamp has been extinguished. Light still falls on the sparse ground, but it seems as dark as midnight even so.
As always, there is a brief stutter of panic in his chest as he worries that he's forgotten how to speak to the creatures towering around him, blocking the shape of his family's home from view. Soon enough it comes to him, though, and his memories come with hasty sloppiness to make up for that dangerous pause of stage fright.
*There is no waste in preamble, no time sacrificed in plunging Regulus back into the cold lake. Instead, the water drains around his ankles and is replaced by slightly itchy, woollen socks. The grass around him juts upward, rushing until it meets a now vaulted sky, colours and textures draining into stone. Most of all, it's humid - a sudden, awkward combination of stuffy overheating and a chilly January night.
His peripheral is nothing but Barty. Eyes and yellow hair and a pouting voice, "-I knew you didn't find it yet."*
*Regulus creeps hesitantly into his own mind's eye, younger but pale hands clutching just as nervously to gloves he has long grown out of as his hands grip the lantern handle now.
*The next memory is suddenly heavy, a consuming wet cold thickness. He can hardly see through the rain and the mud - it's everywhere, slopped against his robes like frosting on a layered cake. There's the distant sound of shouts, the electric snap of spells and all around him a press of people he can't see, their bodies ducking and weaving through the blindspots of his mask. It's a battle. Somewhere behind him, someone pushes him forward at the base of his shoulder blade - an attempt to make him faster, to get him back to his allotted position.
*He sways forward slightly, the vehemence of the memory's command almost compelling him to physically run. In this case, however, there's nowhere he can run, no more books or manuscripts he can turn to for answers. Whatever other objects Voldemort has turned into vessels for his soul, Regulus hasn't seen a single trace of them, no matter how hard he's looked, since his trip underground for Hufflepuff's Cup. Out in the open like this, stared down by Dementors from under their tattered hoods, Regulus feels exposed, a failure, terrified. When his arm begins to shake, it's not just from the strain of holding the heavy lantern aloft.
A classmate, a Hufflepuff who Regulus is quite confident he has never spoken to, alarms him in the library seat next to him by slumping forward, melting onto the table and over his unfinished homework in hopelessness. "I've tried everything. This is impossible..."*
*The glass-panelling is strangely half-hearted, constructing itself around Regulus with a cautious reluctance that leaves the Hogwarts greenhouses grey, colourless and somewhat surreal. Professor Sprout swims in front of him, her plump shape undulating like a rippling pond, grotesquely unsettled. Behind, there's a sudden flash of darkness, the dim shapes of a muggle living room beyond fake glass walls. It flickers out but the voice of the the muggle woman remains. She screams, the sound travelling through Sprout's throat, ricocheting off her wagging tongue until it's choked off, burning Sprout's lips with it, the whole image shrivelling into bright, white singularity. There's the sound of a gasp - desperate, unplanned and rattling. It fills Regulus' lungs with lead, the sudden press of water faster and more complete then any he's experienced in the past, middling there for crucial seconds until there's only rocky, grass spurted turf. The very real, present, English moors pressing against his cheek, ghostly paws like twin flag poles
( ... )
*A clod of rock-solid earth jabs into Regulus' thin cheek and some manner of lichen is shoved into one nostril, but he's too surprised to lift his head off them. His first reaction looks as though it's simply staying still, but inside his mind he's hailing memories faster than lightning, trying to ask what's happening.
It's only when no response comes, no connection is out there no matter how hard he tries, that he turns his head to look up at the pale beast standing half over him. Stars and clouds are visible though it, but Regulus can see the very spots on it's fur from how close it is to his face.*
*The spots are familiar, distributed with that same sporadic disorganization, so reminiscent of something just past the cusp of recognition. It's a hyena, awkward and gangly - proportions unexpected and hodgepodge in every direction. Cocking its head playfully it bends to snuffle him, glowing nose overwhelming his view, only giving him the occasional glimpse of long, formidable fangs, exposed as the creature pulls back its lips. Then it sneezes. The force of it travelling all the way down its over-long neck and ending with a twin sneeze from someone just behind it.*
*The sneeze feels like nothing more than a tingle of something Regulus will very later recognise as joy spreading down onto his face, but he remains frozen for a moment, expecting a rain of snot.
When none comes, he snaps back into life, and scrambles out from under the luminescent animal, looking wildly around for the Dementors but only seeing Barty instead, standing just behind his patronus and probably in need of a handkerchief.*
*The lantern is broken, lying on its side at Barty's feet, all shards and still-warm wax. Only the slightly wriggling patronus illuminates the pair of them, casting his face into sharp relief from below. It makes craters of his eyes, bringing out something pale and fragile and always there. He's wearing his Wimbourne Wasp pyjamas, the tiled pattern of garish, cartoon insects staring out every-which-way from the fabric, distracting from the smudged redness of his upper lip.
*Regulus scrambles with very little dexterity out from under the fearsomely protective ribcage, and crouches awkwardly in the scrub amid broken glass.*
No. At no point did I see the enormous, soul-sucking horror-wraith. I was just taking my patronus out for a lovely, coincidental jaunt along the moors.
*When two worlds overlap the result is usually not particularly pleasant, nor expected. Unable to meet Barty's eye, he stares down at his hands, palms dirty from the earth, and tries to stop his embarrassing stammering.*
How did you know there were... How did that happen.
Regulus's face feels stiff from not blinking, and with a twig-like arm he raises the heavy light to the level of his eye, looking for any patches of darkness that might contain the towering figures he's asked to meet him here. It's over the silhouette of the rooftop that he finally sees something, a black mass whispering between too thin chimneys and back into shadow as it bypasses Barty inside and glides over the cold, wild ground toward Regulus.*
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As always, there is a brief stutter of panic in his chest as he worries that he's forgotten how to speak to the creatures towering around him, blocking the shape of his family's home from view. Soon enough it comes to him, though, and his memories come with hasty sloppiness to make up for that dangerous pause of stage fright.
"You heard-" "-me-" "-calling..."*
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His peripheral is nothing but Barty. Eyes and yellow hair and a pouting voice, "-I knew you didn't find it yet."*
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"Yes... That's what I wanted to talk about."*
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"KEEP GOING!"*
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A classmate, a Hufflepuff who Regulus is quite confident he has never spoken to, alarms him in the library seat next to him by slumping forward, melting onto the table and over his unfinished homework in hopelessness. "I've tried everything. This is impossible..."*
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It's only when no response comes, no connection is out there no matter how hard he tries, that he turns his head to look up at the pale beast standing half over him. Stars and clouds are visible though it, but Regulus can see the very spots on it's fur from how close it is to his face.*
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When none comes, he snaps back into life, and scrambles out from under the luminescent animal, looking wildly around for the Dementors but only seeing Barty instead, standing just behind his patronus and probably in need of a handkerchief.*
Where- what...
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All in all, Barty makes for an unlikely saviour.*
That's what I came to ask you.
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Did you see-?
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How did you know there were... How did that happen.
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