February 14th, 1891 — Dom & Matilda's Home, London
Married life had not been the same since 1881. A decade had passed, but it didn't feel like it; she still remembered how she'd hugged a toddling Zenobia against her chest the night the scandal broke as Domitian had scrambled to separate the truths from lies. She remembered hoping the rumors would disappear, that their family could move forward without the stain of muggle blood attached to their name.
They never did. The rumors became truth and their family had never moved forward quite the same. Her marriage never did, either, and it was more apparent now than ever.
The silence in the sitting room was almost painful. Without their children around to talk about, evenings were often spent separate and dinners at opposite ends on the table. Every year she hoped, just a little, that this day—Valentine's Day—would be the one where Dom spent the evening at her side talking, laughing, and opening up to her. She hoped that every year would be their new beginning, that he would make an effort to return to the early years of their marriage.
He never did. She hadn't expected him to, and this year she'd accepted that he wouldn't—but as she was beginning to prepare for Mrs. Finch's garden party someone from the floristry had delivered a bouquet with her name written on a small tag attached to the string.
"I appreciate the roses," she said, the first word spoken in minutes. I wish you would have given them to me yourself, is what she wanted to say, but it might have started an argument, and Matilda did not like to fight, most especially with her husband.