“I do hope he will,” Maja replied with a smile. “He may think something’s gone wrong, though, for me to show up unannounced.” Her expression faded ever so slightly at the thought, remembering the scare they’d had at Durmstrang just a few months earlier. She had returned to her desk after running several hours of various errands to find a hastily-scrawled note from her brother, saying that Jürgen’s safety was at stake and asking her to meet him in the village at once. She fought back a shudder, even though it had turned out all right in the end, but felt the ice cube slip down her spine all the same.
Instead, the brunette smiled pleasantly at the subsequent compliment on her domesticity.
“I’m glad he liked it enough to tell someone else,” she replied, laughing softly. “He must have meant it, then. Even if it tasted like Flobberworms, he’d likely lie about it through his teeth to me.”
‘Sorry I couldn’t make it.’
If Maja had possessed any less self-control, her eyebrows would have disappeared into her hairline. Elias had invited her to dinner? Not that she didn’t like Edith – all things considered, she found she did genuinely like her brother’s friend – but she was Muggleborn, and as pleasant as their parents could be, Maja wasn’t quite sure how they’d handle it. Elias knew, of course, just as well as she. Why would he consider subjecting Edith to such a potentially tense situation? Maja was aware that Edith’s experience with the Dome had been distressing (she had been polite enough not to ask for particulars, and Elias did not provide them)… perhaps he had invited her to help with that? Maja was at a loss; and so preoccupied with pondering this that she’d nearly missed the next surprising tidbit.
‘Too soon for what?’
She bit the words back sharply before they had a chance to roll off her tongue. Too short-notice, did she mean? Too soon after the Dome? And was she, Maja, supposed to have known about it?
The German witch racked her brain for any mention Elias may have made to her, but came up empty. The obvious response would have been to ask what Edith was referring to, of course. Simple and to the point. But she had a nagging sense in the back of her mind that this is something she should have been looped in on, and asking would highlight her ignorance of the matter. Maja abhorred that. It was egotistical and petty and absurd and she knew it… but there it was. She felt a small surge of annoyance toward her brother: why had he not mentioned any of this to her? Inviting anyone to the family home for dinner was no casual ordeal in the Dörfler household.
Edith had changed the subject rather abruptly, though, which raised the slightest suspicion. Perhaps Elias had asked her out of sympathy or something of the sort, and now she was feeling like a charity case; Merlin knew Maja might feel similarly, were she in that situation. Regardless, her brother was about to have a lot of explaining to do…
Maja couldn’t not acknowledge the older woman’s apology, though, however perplexing. She’d have to concede something in order to avoid looking like an utter fool if she simply played along.
“Oh, no need to apologize,” she dismissed with a casual flutter of her fingers, smiling pleasantly. “I— ah, Elias hadn’t actually mentioned it, but it would have been a pleasant surprise all the same,” she added graciously, genuinely hoping her perplexity over the circumstances was not the dominant emotion.
Having accomplished that, she fielded the change of subject deftly.
“London is lovely,” she replied sincerely. “It feels very modern but also very… historic, with the layout. Berlin doesn’t feel as though has retained as much of that history of architecture and layout,” she added thoughtfully. “Much of the city needed to be completely rebuilt after the Second Muggle War, and so it lost much of that historical fingerprint. Parts of London were destroyed too, of course,” she added, frowning slightly, “but the layout seems… retained. I suppose what I mean is that London still feels like an ‘old’ city, whereas parts of Berlin don’t seem to have that same impression.”
The German witch lifted a shoulder casually. Despite being Pureblooded, she did have some knowledge base with regard to the goings-on that affected both Muggle and magical worlds – an effectively global-scale war was certainly one of those goings-on.
Maja became (very belatedly) aware that Edith had not yet touched her lunch, and gently flapped a hand encouragingly in her direction. “Please, don’t let me detract from your lunch hour! Never seems to be long enough, as it is,” she continued ruefully.
“Busy week here?”