Rating:
PG
House:
The Dark Arts
Characters:
Draco Malfoy Lucius Malfoy Narcissa Malfoy
Genres:
Angst
Era:
The Harry Potter at Hogwarts Years
Spoilers:
Order of the Phoenix
Stats:
Published: 01/16/2005
Updated: 01/16/2005
Words: 1,726
Chapters: 1
Hits: 462

Family History

IsabelA113

Story Summary:
After the events of the Order of the Phoenix, Draco Malfoy returns home to discover that his father has left him an unexpected gift.

Posted:
01/16/2005
Hits:
462
Author's Note:
Thank you to my beta Zsenya, and also to Kirixchi for inspiration and Fatima for encouragement.


His mother came into the room as Draco was unpacking his school trunk. It was an unusual thing, the custom being to let him have the afternoon to settle before dining with his parents and recounting the events of the past term. He searched her face. As usual, her expression gave little away, but years of experience allowed Draco to discern the tightness across the brow, the slight downturn of the mouth. She was angry.

"Your father wishes for you to read this." Draco barely checked his shocked expression. She held out a book; it was thin and leather-bound, with gilt pages. The creases on the spine showed that it was very old, or very well read, or both. He reached for it, inadvertently taking the tips of his mother's fingers into his grip. They stood, eyes locked, fingers touching, and for a moment, she looked as though she might say something. Then she simply dropped her hand and left the room.

He stared at the blank cover for a moment. Draco could feel anger begin to knot the pit of his stomach. A book? He had been humiliated and hexed, his father was in prison, no one would tell him a bloody thing about what was going on, and he was supposed to read a book? Bugger that. He threw it as hard as he could towards the opposite wall. As the book flew across the room, an envelope slipped from between the pages and fluttered to the ground. Draco recognized his father's seal.

With a sigh he went to his trunk and pulled out a silver letter opener and a clean, white handkerchief. He picked up the envelope and made a halfhearted attempt at slicing it open. As expected, the blade slid across the paper. Sighing again, Draco collected the book from where it had fallen, toed off his shoes, and went to sit on the bed. He settled cross-legged, took a deep breath, and then brought the letter opener swiftly across the pad of his left index finger.

It took a moment for the blood to bloom in the narrow well of the cut. Draco pinched the finger and let the blood drop on the dark seal of the envelope. Two more drops and the seal began to dissolve, with a faint hiss, into a thin plume of red vapor. With a muttered curse, he wrapped the corner of the handkerchief around his finger twice, then wound the rest around his palm and tucked in the loose end.

Draco unfolded the letter and ran his hand over the elaborately worked "M" at the top. Lucius' personal stationery was hand illuminated in Italy. As a child, Draco had found its beauty deeply impressive. His mother used to enjoy telling him the story of the time that Lucius had gone to the continent on business, and she had passed by the study only to find the wards down and the door ajar. Drawing her wand and peeking carefully inside, she had come upon a charming scene: little Draco, emulating his father's habitual pose behind the mahogany desk and scrawling "important letters" on the expensive parchment. Breaking into his father's study had been Draco's first sign of magic.

He never told anyone, but he remembered that day. Though he couldn't have been more than five, he had a distinct recollection of standing in the corridor, staring at the study door. He knew it would be locked, his father always locked the study in his absence, but Draco had wanted so badly to go inside. Suddenly, the air in front of the door began to glow. It grew in intensity until he had to shield his eyes from it, and then the light splintered into thousands of pieces and a gust of air pushed him right onto his bum. When he looked up, the light was gone and the study door had swung silently open on its hinges. The fireplace crackled to life as little Draco settled himself at the enormous desk. He had pulled out a handful of the beautiful parchments and a fine quill, and decided that "Father" was the best game there was.

When Lucius had returned from his trip, he had been so pleased that he hadn't punished Draco for his trespassing. A few days later he had even brought home Draco's very own parchment, not so nice as his, but with a swirling green "M" at the top that had thrilled Draco. For the remainder of the summer, whenever Lucius was at his desk, Draco would sit on the floor beside him, mirroring his father's posture over the antique ottoman he had commandeered for a desk. There had been something in the room that summer that Draco later recognized as pride. His father had been proud of him. Lucius' rarely bestowed smiles had intoxicated the little boy, and he had been chasing them ever since.

The crackle of parchment under his fingers brought Draco back to himself. He looked down at the crumpled letter in his hands. It didn't matter what his father thought of him. Lucius was in prison, and no matter if he broke out tomorrow, it didn't change the looks of scorn Draco had received from his schoolmates, or the fact that Aurors had swept through the Manor, or that Potter had got one over on him yet again. His father had disgraced them all, why should Draco listen to anything he had to say? He threw the book and the letter off into a corner and finished unpacking.

Dinner was a tense affair, though it would have been indiscernible to an outside observer. They sat in the informal dining room, another break from custom, but Draco was glad of it. Lucius' absence was pronounced enough; it would have been unbearable in the cavernous formal dining room. As they talked politely about the events of the previous months, avoiding all mention of unpleasantness, Draco got his first good look at his mother. She seemed fragile, a realization that surprised him. Narcissa was elegant, delicate featured, but never weak. She was the only one Draco knew that could bring his father to heel.

Draco returned to his rooms feeling unsettled. It was disturbing to see a chink, however small, in his mother's perfect veneer. The implacability of both his parents had been an anchor in his life. But if Draco understood anything, it was that things were changing. He would learn to adjust. He was a Slytherin after all, and a Malfoy. Even as he thought it, his eyes fell upon an elaborate "M". The letter was sitting on top of his desk, the creases carefully smoothed. The elf must have retrieved it from the floor when it came to take his trunk. Draco regarded at the letter; he would have no peace if he didn't read it. His shoulders sagged as sat down and took the parchment in his hands.

Draco,

I will not waste my time, or yours, lecturing about Pureblood pride. I have said what I have said, you know what I believe. I am not in the habit of giving an accounting of myself to anyone. I feel no shame for the things I have done in the name of my ancestors. However for you, my son, I will make an exception. You are owed an explanation of the choice that I have made.

Like my father before me, I have watched as wizards of inferior blood have infiltrated our world. Tainted by Muggles, they bow down to their gods of progress and innovation, chasing a nightmare they call the future. For every new thing they have brought into the magical world, some of the old ways have fallen aside. The poison of the Muggles has slowly strangled the traditions of our forbears. The Mudbloods would draw that poison into the Wizarding world until there is nothing left of our noble heritage. I would stand and fight.

The book I have given you is a family chronicle, commissioned by Augustus Malfoy in the late nineteenth century. It records the Malfoy line as far back as it is possible to go. My father gave it to me when I was sixteen, as did his father. When I read it for the first time, I suddenly understood myself. A Malfoy stood with the Merovingians when Paris was born from the muck of the Seine. In the court of Arthur the Briton, close to Merlin himself, was a Malfoy. A Malfoy studied under the tutelage of the great Salazar Slytherin in the first class at Hogwarts. There have been Malfoys in the Triwizard Tournament, on the Wizard's Council, as counselors and as kingmakers. You will find that where there was magic, where there was power, there were also Malfoy.

This is who I am. It is what I fight for. For the old gods, the ancient magics, the traditions spanning centuries. For Diagon Alley, Hogsmeade, even Hogwarts. For a world that is our own. For that, I believe, is a cause worthy of my life or death.

Read the book. It is time for you to decide what you believe.

LM

Draco was on his feet, picking up the book and crossing to the bell-pull before he could even put clear words to his thoughts. It didn't take long to get the elf to do what he wanted; after all, Draco was now the master of the manor. Still, when the heavy door swung open he paused on the threshold of the room. He felt like an intruder here, in this room that was undeniably Lucius', but he stepped inside anyway. The sconces on the wall flickered to life as he moved towards the mahogany desk, and the elf moved silently to the hearth and lit the fire.

There were no wayward parchments on the desktop, not a quill out of place. It was exactly as Lucius had left it; complete with a copy of the Daily Prophet from the day he was...taken. Draco waited until the house elf shuffled out and closed the heavy door behind it, then with shaking hands he pulled out the chair and sat. For a moment he was overwhelmed. He was five years old, crouched in his father's chair. Then he placed the book on the desk, opened it, and began to read.