“And I do not think that it is appropriate for you to have no idea who I am or what I am capable of,†she retorted, the curtness in her words not discreet in the way that she voiced them. “Yet, here we are,†she added, her mouth tightening just slightly, the cute pouts were reserved for the love of her life but this wretched Ministry worker certainly did not deserve even half of the politeness she had been granting him and so she looked at him with disdain and would have looked down at him if he had not been such a gigantic figure hovering over her like a troll. It was a strange juxtaposition, the desire to find privacy and live far away from the prying eyes of the world, a contradiction to her desire for glory, recognition of her family name.
“Are you blind?†she retorted instead, raising an eyebrow delicately in question as she held up the mirror in her hand slightly higher. It was her flavor of cooperation—the gesture of compliance perhaps contradicting the provoking words that she spoke in turn, after all, the Lovecraft women never went down without a fight. Then again, the young witch had already decided that she would not simply turn over her things, Ministry guidelines be damned. But, there was no reason to let anyone in on her plans, especially not the overgrown child that stood before her in regulation uniform he obviously had no business in.
She was reluctant, but only for a moment, before carefully handing the mirror for inspection. It would not grant him any of her or her mother’s secrets, Hesperia had made certain that only her daughter would be capable of accessing its charms, but it did not make her any less ambivalent. This item held memories and allowing them to be in the possession of another, even if ever so briefly, filled her with a mixture of emotions that she could not quite explain. It might have been fear, the same sort she had felt as a child when her mother had been so cruelly ripped away from her arms. Or, perhaps, it was the sort of anxiety that plagued her thoughts when she considered losing the only connection she had to the past. The realest depiction of her mother as she remembered her.
But rather than lend insight into her thoughts, the young heiress became filled with irremediable indignation.
A part of her expected him to take the mirror regardless of its value to the Ministry; after all, it would not have been the first time that someone came into her home and made a mess of things, in both the physical and psychological sense. And so, when he returned it she looked at him suspiciously, rather than to take it for the gesture of good will that it probably was. The Ministry is not the hero of this story, he said, and frankly, the words caught her off guard. Had she not been jaded from years of malignant intention, she might have wondered if in another life, they were kindred spirits destined to great conversations over the failures of British politics.
But that Genevieve had only existed when she was much too young to know better. “Why thank you, its nice to know that the Ministry feels the authority to decide what part of my property I may or may not keep,†she frowned a little, her tone dramatically sarcastic as she closed the secret compartment as she led him to other items. Anything, she decided, to draw him away from the precious item in her hand.
Genevieve paused, mulling over her options. Though she hated to admit it, he was right, the faster he left her home on whatever wild goose chase he had arrived on, the quicker she could return to her life. “There are no horrific items to be found,†she said firmly, certainly aware that there was indeed plenty of it in the very room that they stood but being wise enough to not let such thoughts show on her face.
“Like I said, you may take whatever you’d like on that shelf, those are the only things my mother could have possibly cursed and surely, it was done for good reason,†she said decisively, daring a brief glance at the mirror in her hand and slowly bringing it up to stare into it, the shadowy figure of a woman almost visible from the corner of her eye. Bringing a hand quickly to tuck a few loose strands of hair behind her ear as she pretended to be appraising her appearance, she nodded at the shelf again.
“I do hope I never have the displeasure of having to see you again, Mr. Donnelly,†she said, wrinkling her nose a little as she glared at him. “Take the items and leave.â€