"Lost?" Beatryx narrowed her gaze, a flicker of irritation registering on her features before they smoothed once more into her impassive default expression. Of course one would consider the whole effort
lost if the benchmark of success was whether Lord Voldemort had succeeded in his life aims. For a short, breathtakingly glorious time Gaius and his comrades had held true power in the grasp. She supposed that losing such a position would feel like losing the entire endeavour. But Britain hadn't been
ready for the change. There was too much hope, too much resistance; figures such as Albus Dumbledore and Harry Potter to flock to and worship as false prophets who promised rainbows and happiness. The Dark Lord had been heavy handed and, eventually, insane - and had paid for it in the end. Too many confused being feared with power. It was a feature not unique to wizardkind; in her lessons on muggle history - for yes, even though they were deemed savages, knowledge of the creatures that posed such a threat to their very existence would be foolish to deem unimportant - she had learned of many a muggle dictator who had taken the same crazed path that Lord Voldemort had. One in Russia stood out in particular, with followers too scared to enter his room dooming the man to death when he needed medical attention.
Yes, Lord Voldemort had lost.
But how could Gaius be so short-sighted? Perhaps that was the curse of this place. A man locked away without a prospect of life on the outside ever again could be forgiven for feeling more than a little pessimistic. Likewise, he had tasted the chance to craft a better world, and had it snatched away all too early. Yes, it was unduly rash for her to be disappointed in the wizard's outlook. As Gaius had just moments ago, Beatryx gazed contemplatively at their surroundings. Could he still feel the history in this place? Her eyelids lowering meditatively, she considered the blood soaked origins of Azkaban. Records of the atrocities that Ekrizdis had carried out in his personal incarnation of hell on earth were hard to come by; certainly no public comments had ever been given in detail. Of course, a little thing like redacted records had never stopped a family with the money and influence of the Abercrombies. Beatryx had been seven years old when she'd first got her hands on a copy of the original reports from the investigators in her father's study. She'd had nightmares for months, and the nanny responsible for letting her find the records had been dismissed. Now over ten years later she was living at Dalemain, and had a chance to read the manuscript in full. No nightmares this time, but the ancient wizard's deeds made the recently vanquished Dark Lord look like a kitten. She snapped her gaze back to Gaius.
"Ekrizdis spilled more muggle blood than the Dark Lord even dreamed of, and embedded enough misery in this forsaken place to keep dementors here for centuries." She paused, fingers delicately tracing around the outline of a royal blue
ring that she wore on her left hand. "That was the fifteenth century, and here we are now in the twenty-first. Humans are mortal. Ideas are not."
Oh, there were definitely times where Beatryx felt impatient. Where she raged internally against the folly of those who had frittered away the power they had in hubris and madness. Things could have been different. She could have lived to raise children in a world where blood was respected, and the mudblood threat was dealt with once and for all. It needn't have stopped at blood, either - after the immediate threat there had been dealt with, magical society could have focussed on returning to its glory days. Beatryx was, as many in the upper class, a staunch conservative. Small government, minor if any regulation on the use of dark magic, a greatly widened syllabus on the magical curriculum with privately funded academies encouraged as competition to force that doddering old institution Hogwarts into ending the practice of wrapping its students in happy-clappy liberal cotton wool... The witch had been on the precipice of witnessing all of that greatness in her own lifetime. Her heart felt bitterly robbed when she considered that her own children would be raised as she was; taught the right and proper ways to think but taught in equal measure to keep those ideas to herself amongst everyone but allies. But Bea wasn't a dreamer - she was a pragmatist. Yes, Gaius Purcell had gambled and lost. But one man's loss need not be a loss for wizardkind.
"We trace the Abarcrumbach line back over two thousand years, you know. Two millennia later, and the Abercrombie line remains pure. How many losses do you think we have sustained in that time? The survival of lines such as mine would never have been possible if we were taught to measure success in as little a space of time as one life... Our ideals are not lost until our blood is." As she spoke, Beatryx paused the circling motions on her ring, suddenly grasping either side of the stone between her thumb and forefinger and twisting sharply. It
opened, revealing a hollowed out space in which there was a small quantity of deep purple crystallised powder. She dabbed the ring finger of her right hand delicately in the powder to pick some up, before closing the ring once more whilst she held the aforementioned finger out of the way. Watching the wizard opposite her carefully, Bea turned her left arm over slowly and deliberately, exposing the smooth, blank expanse of her forearm. The skin was pale enough to show the network of veins beneath it. Making sure that he was paying attention, Beatryx delicately smoothed the purple granules over the exposed skin, and a cool tingling sensation spread as the magic in the powder was activated. A symbol that Beatryx knew Gaius would recognise appeared on her skin.
The powder was an evaporated form of a potion enchanted with an anti-concealment charm. In this form, the powder enabled Beatryx to wandlessly reveal the truth of the mark on her arm. Additionally, as the charm was not being directly cast, the effects were temporary. The small amount that Beatryx had used meant that the mark was already fading from view. She was rather pleased with herself for figuring out how to get around the inconvenience of the Azkaban guards inevitably taking her wand. The ring itself was an heirloom; not inherently a dark one that would set off any wards or sensors, but goblin-made and resistant to any probing
revelios that might be cast her way. It had done its job flawlessly. The concealment on Beatryx's arm was considerably more powerful, and had been placed with the help of Pyxis. It was only fair after all, given he was the reason it was on her arm in the first place.
"I'm told by Pyxis that this particular project has largely failed to come to fruition. Consider it a sign that I am committed to a cause greater than myself instead. Teach me what you have to share, Gaius, and I in turn will teach it to my children and their progeny."