The Quiet Wife
ă S.B x Arranged Marriage! Reader ă Angst // SLOW BURN // one sided relationship // happy ending! ăAn arranged marriage kept them under the same roof, but years of quiet indifference left them strangers in their own home. When Sirius finally shows a new, unexpected vulnerability, Y/N must decide whether to trust himâor let the distance between them become permanent. ă8.3k ăRequest: ashdreams2023 ăTaglist: @littlemadamred @raiweasley @iluvhrj @hoeforlifee @a1ienmush @pottermagiczz ăA/N: i apologize for how long this took but i absolutely loved this angsty little piece <3 Much love, Saige [masterlist]
The Black family had always been bound by blood, but Sirius Black had long since learned that blood was a chain, not a comfort.
He had escaped its pull once â stormed out of Grimmauld Place at sixteen, slammed the door behind him, and sworn never to return. But the irony of fate, as it often did, found its way back to him years later in the form of a signature on parchment.
An arranged marriage.
A peace offering.
A way, his motherâs letter had said, to ârestore the Black familyâs dignity.â
Heâd laughed when he first read it; a dry, humorless sound that didnât reach his eyes. He had no reason to humor her, no reason to involve himself with the ghosts of his lineage. But the war was ending, the Order was quieter now, and his defiance had dulled with exhaustion. Somewhere between the funerals and the rebuilding, he had stopped fighting everything on sight.
So when the proposal came, a match arranged years ago by family tradition, meant to bind the Black name to another ârespectableâ pure-blood house, Sirius didnât tear it up. He didnât even scoff.
He simply signed.
And thatâs how he met you.
You werenât cruel. You werenât vain. You werenât anything the Blacks had been known for. That, perhaps, was the problem. You were polite, careful, quiet â an echo in a house that had once been full of shouting.
The wedding was small, the kind that left more whispers than memories. Sirius had shown up late, smelling faintly of smoke and expensive cologne. Youâd worn a soft gray gown that your mother said was âunderstated but elegant.â
He hadnât said you looked beautiful.
He hadnât said anything at all.
Now, months later, Grimmauld Place was too big for two people who barely spoke.
You slept in the same bed. You ate the same dinners. You smiled at the same guests who came to call â old friends, new acquaintances, members of the Order who congratulated you both with a knowing grin. You called him husband in public, the word tasting foreign every time. He called you wife with that easy charm of his, voice smooth enough to make anyone believe he meant it.
But behind closed doors, it was different.
There were nights he reached for you, only because it was expected â because you were his wife, and he was your husband, and that was what married people did. His hands were always gentle, his kisses practiced. But they were never for you. They were obligations wrapped in warmth. When he turned away afterward, falling asleep without a word, you lay awake staring at the ceiling, counting the cracks in the plaster.
It wasnât hatred that lingered between you. It was something worse â indifference.
He treated you kindly, almost too kindly, as though afraid to bruise a fragile thing. He asked about your day, but not because he wanted to know. He complimented your dress at dinner parties, but only when someone else might overhear. He never yelled. He never scowled. He never cared enough to.
And yet, somehow, you couldnât bring yourself to despise him.
Because sometimes, in the smallest, most fleeting moments.. you caught glimpses of the man beneath the distance. The way his voice softened when he spoke of James. The quiet grief in his eyes when he thought no one noticed. The way he always made sure you walked on the inside of the pavement when you went out together, as if protecting you was a reflex he couldnât suppress.
Those tiny fragments of tenderness were enough to keep hope alive â a cruel, fragile thing that refused to die.
You had been married six months when the silence began to feel heavier than the walls around you. You tried to fill it; with books, with chores, with conversation. Youâd talk about the garden you wanted to plant, or the stray cat that came to the window sometimes. Sirius would nod, half-listening, and then disappear into his study.
He was always disappearing.
Sometimes, youâd hear the low murmur of his voice from that room â old friends, most likely. Sometimes Remus, sometimes Order business. You never asked. You werenât sure if it was your place.
You had stopped expecting warmth. You simply learned to exist in the spaces between his life and yours.
Until one evening, something shifted; not enough to change anything, but enough to make you notice.
It was late, the fire low and the house quiet. Sirius came in from the cold, shaking snow from his hair, his shoulders dusted with frost. You were reading by the hearth, blanket wrapped around your legs, when he paused at the doorway. For a brief moment, he just looked at you â as if seeing you properly for the first time. The flicker of recognition in his gray eyes startled you.
âYouâre still up,â he said, voice rough from the cold.
You nodded. âCouldnât sleep.â
He hesitated, then moved closer to the fire. You watched the light play across his features â the tired eyes, the faint scar along his jaw, the weight he carried like a shadow. He smelled faintly of smoke and winter.
For once, the silence didnât feel entirely unbearable.
âYou should rest,â he murmured after a while. âItâs late.â
âSo should you,â you replied quietly.
He almost smiled. Almost.
And then, as quickly as the moment had come, it passed. He turned away, retreating toward the stairs.
âGoodnight, wife,â he said, not looking back.
You closed your book, heart aching at how easily the word wife could sound so empty.
âGoodnight, husband,â you whispered into the quiet.
And though he didnât hear you, you wished â more than anything â that he had.
âââ ââ ââ â âââ
You began to take notice of some little things first.
The way Sirius preferred his tea â black, no sugar. The way he leaned back in his chair when he read, one ankle crossed over his knee. The music he sometimes played in the study, low and scratchy, old records of Muggle rock bands he mustâve picked up in his wilder years.
You didnât know when exactly you started trying to please him.
Maybe it was the silence, heavy and constant, pressing against your ribs. Maybe it was the small ache that came from watching him laugh at something Remus said, a laugh that never seemed to belong to you.
So, you started small.
You brewed his tea the way he liked it â dark, strong. When you brought it to his study, he barely glanced up from his parchment. âThanks,â he muttered absently, taking the cup without looking at you.
He didnât notice the way youâd taken the time to warm the mug beforehand.
Next came dinner. You asked Kreacher to prepare things Sirius liked â roast chicken, potatoes, buttery rolls, dishes that made him nostalgic for the meals at the Pottersâ home, before everything went wrong.
When you called him to the table, he was late. You waited, watching the food cool until finally his footsteps echoed down the hall.
âThis looks good,â he said with a faint smile, taking his seat. You smiled back, foolishly relieved. But halfway through the meal, you realized he wasnât really tasting it. He was just⌠eating. Like it was habit, like you couldâve served anything and he wouldnât have noticed the difference.
Still, you tried again.
You found a record he might like â one of those old Muggle albums with a guitar riff he always hummed under his breath. One evening, while he sat by the fire with a book, you put it on quietly.
His head lifted a little, gray eyes flicking to you, something almost surprised in them.
âThis is⌠good,â he said softly.
You smiled, heart thudding. âI thought youâd like it.â
He nodded, the faintest curve of his mouth there for only a second. And then he went back to reading.
The record spun on, filling the empty house with the sound of something that used to mean freedom. You sat nearby, pretending to read too, though your eyes stayed on him instead. Watching the way his thumb traced the edge of the page, the way his hair fell into his eyes, the way he seemed entirely untouched by the effort youâd made.
You werenât expecting gratitude. You werenât even expecting affection. You just wanted something â a flicker of interest, a trace of awareness that you were trying to reach him. But he stayed the same, polite and distant.
It was almost worse than anger.
A few nights later, you wore something new. A soft dress in a color heâd once mentioned liking, a passing remark months ago that had somehow stayed with you. You joined him for dinner again, nerves making your hands shake slightly as you poured the wine.
He didnât seem to notice.
His eyes skimmed over you with the same detached politeness he offered anyone else. He asked how your day had been. You told him about the book you were reading. He nodded. That was all.
The next morning, you woke before him. He was lying on his side, turned away, hair messy against the pillow. The light from the window traced the line of his back beneath the sheets. You stared for a long moment, wondering what it might be like to reach out â to touch him just because you wanted to, not because it was expected.
But you didnât.
Instead, you slipped quietly out of bed, dressing in silence, pretending that the ache in your chest wasnât growing heavier by the day.
Later that week, you overheard him talking to Remus in the study. You hadnât meant to listen, you were passing by, tray in hand, but his voice caught your attention.
âSheâs been⌠different lately,â Sirius said, tone uncertain. âDoing things I like. Playing old records. Cooking things I used to eat with James.â
Remusâs voice was low, thoughtful. âSheâs trying, Sirius.â
âI donât know why,â Sirius admitted after a pause. âWe both know what this is. I didnât ask forââ He stopped, exhaling. âShe deserves someone who looks at her properly. I canât force that.â
Your heart sank before he even finished. You moved away before you could hear Remusâs reply, blinking hard against the sting behind your eyes.
That night, you said nothing at dinner. Neither did he.
When he reached across the table to refill your glass, his hand brushed yours by accident. He looked up, startled â and for a moment, you thought you saw something flicker in his expression, something softer than pity, something almost human.
But then it was gone. He drew back, clearing his throat. âYouâre quiet tonight,â he said.
âIâm just tired,â you answered, forcing a small smile.
He nodded, as if that explained everything.
Later, when you lay beside him in the dark, listening to the faint sound of his breathing, you wondered if heâd ever notice you for more than the space you occupied â if there was ever going to be a day when being his wife didnât feel like pretending to be someone elseâs ghost.
And though you didnât mean to, you whispered it into the night anyway.
âI wish youâd see me.â
He didnât stir.
But in his sleep, Sirius shifted just slightly closer, his hand brushing yours beneath the sheets â unaware, unintentional, but enough to make your eyes sting all over again.
âââ ââ ââ â âââ
For the first time in months, Sirius noticed you. Maybe it was because of the humility Remus gave him in conversation that night, or the small whispers of prayer from you that slipped into his mind as he slept beside you.
But he didn't see you properly, not the way a man notices a woman heâs in love with â but in fleeting, unguarded moments that slipped past his defenses before he could reason them away.
It started in the mornings.
Heâd come downstairs to find you already awake, hair pinned back neatly, sunlight falling across your face as you poured tea. Youâd glance up when you heard him, offering that same quiet smile â the one heâd always taken for politeness. But lately, he realized, it wasnât polite at all. It was gentle. Earnest. Real.
He didnât know when heâd stopped believing sincerity could exist in his world.
âGood morning,â you said one day, voice soft.
âMorning,â he replied automatically, rubbing the back of his neck. He hesitated before taking his cup. âYouâre up early.â
âI wanted to watch the sunrise,â you said. âItâs clear today.â
He nodded, pretending he didnât notice how peaceful you looked in that light, like you belonged to something he could never quite touch. He turned away before it could mean anything.
But it did.
He caught himself watching you sometimes. At dinner. In the garden. When you passed him a dish and your fingers brushed. There was no reason for it â no desire, no spark he could name. Just a strange, quiet awareness that had begun to unsettle him.
Heâd been trying not to think about what Remus had said the other day.
âSheâs trying, Sirius.â
He hadnât meant to sound cold, but he knew he had. He hadnât wanted a wife. He hadnât wanted this. But now that he had it â now that you were here, so careful, so patient â something in him began to shift.
It made him uncomfortable.
Guilt had a way of doing that.
He started noticing details heâd missed before.
How you always tucked your hands into your sleeves when you were nervous. How you hummed softly while reading. How you looked up when he entered a room, like you were waiting for something â even if you didnât expect it to come.
You never asked for more. Never demanded affection. You simply existed quietly beside him, filling the house with the sound of someone who was trying not to disturb.
He caught himself wondering what it would take to make you smile, really smile. Not the one you gave for the sake of peace, but something that reached your eyes. And then heâd curse himself for caring, because he wasnât supposed to.
Not like that.
One evening, he came home earlier than usual. You were sitting on the floor by the fireplace, legs folded beneath you, an open book in your lap. You looked up, startled, when you saw him.
âOh,â you said, standing too quickly. âYouâre home early.â
He gave a small shrug, shedding his coat. âThought Iâd give Kreacher the night off from cursing me.â
You smiled faintly. âHe does seem to enjoy that.â
For the first time, Sirius chuckled â a real, genuine sound. You blinked, as though you hadnât heard it before. Maybe you hadnât.
He moved closer, leaning against the mantel. âWhat are you reading?â
You showed him the cover. âSomething Muggle. A novel about second chances.â
He tilted his head. âDo they get one?â
âIâm not sure yet.â You looked down, tracing the page. âBut I hope they do.â
Something about that, the quiet longing in your tone, stuck with him. He nodded slowly, eyes lingering on you longer than they should have.
You turned back to your book, pretending not to notice.
The next day, he found himself in Diagon Alley without a plan. Heâd meant to pick up parchment and ink. Somehow, he ended up in a small shop that sold both Muggle and wizarding books. He wasnât sure why he was there, but when he saw a display of novels near the window, his hand moved before his mind caught up.
He bought one. A simple paperback â something about a woman who wanted to be seen.
That night, he left it on the armchair beside your favorite reading spot. He didnât say a word. You didnât mention it either, but the next morning, he noticed the book was gone â and a small vase of fresh flowers sat on his desk in return.
Neither of you acknowledged the exchange. You didnât need to. It was the first unspoken language youâd shared since your wedding day.
After that, things changed in subtle ways.
Sirius lingered at breakfast a little longer. You waited up for him a little later. Conversations stretched a bit past formality. Once, his hand brushed yours as he handed you a cup, and instead of pulling away, he let the contact linger â a second too long, not enough to be called affection, but enough to make you look up.
He didnât say anything. Neither did you.
That night, he couldnât sleep.
He lay awake, staring at the ceiling, listening to your breathing beside him. He thought about your whisper from nights before â the one heâd half-heard in the dark, soft and almost broken.
I wish youâd see me.
He hadnât meant to hear it. Heâd been half-asleep, mind adrift. But heâd heard it, and it stayed with him.
He turned slightly, looking at you in the faint moonlight. Your back was to him, shoulders rising and falling in steady rhythm. You looked peaceful. He wondered if you ever dreamt of something better. Someone better.
He reached out, hesitated, then gently brushed a loose strand of hair from your face.
You stirred slightly but didnât wake.
âMaybe I do see you,â he whispered.
It wasnât quite true yet, but it was closer than yesterday.
He lay back, eyes open in the dark, wondering what it meant that he finally cared.
âââ ââ ââ â âââ
The first thing you noticed was how quiet youâd become.
Not the ordinary kind of quiet that had defined your marriage since the beginning â the polite, companionable silence of two people pretending they were fine. No, this was different. This was the sort of quiet that pressed down like a fog, heavy and endless, swallowing the edges of every word you tried to say.
It wasnât that youâd stopped trying overnight. It was more like the effort had finally worn you thin.
There had been hope, once. Little, foolish hope â fragile as spun glass. Youâd let it grow in secret, fed by small gestures and half-seconds of warmth. The book he left for you, the soft look in his eyes that night by the fire, the way he said good morning with something almost tender behind it. You had clung to those moments like a lifeline.
But days turned into weeks, and the small warmth faded back into routine. He was kind, yes. Always kind. He would hold the door for you, ask after your day, pour you wine at dinner. But kindness wasnât closeness. It wasnât love. It wasnât seeing you.
And maybe, you thought one evening as you brushed your hair in the mirror, maybe it never would be.
You stared at your reflection â the strands falling neatly around your shoulders, the gown youâd chosen carefully because you knew he liked the color blue. You looked⌠fine. Ordinary. Unremarkable. You wondered if that was what he saw when he looked at you â something decent, polite, unmemorable.
The sound of the front door opening echoed faintly through the hall. Sirius was home.
You straightened instinctively, brushing invisible wrinkles from your dress. It was pathetic, this reflex, the way your body still wanted to impress him, even when your heart knew better.
He came in, shaking off his coat, smelling faintly of the outside â cold air, tobacco, a trace of something smoky. His hair was mussed, his expression tired.
âYouâre home late,â you said softly.
âOrder meeting,â he replied, voice distracted. He glanced at you briefly, then away again. âYou didnât have to wait up.â
âI wasnât,â you lied.
He nodded absently, already halfway to the stairs. âLong day. Iâll see you in the morning.â
You opened your mouth to respond, but the words caught. You just nodded, watching him disappear up the steps. The ache that followed was familiar -- dull, patient, merciless.
That night, when you joined him in bed, he was already asleep. Or pretending to be. You lay on your side, facing away from him, and realized you hadnât really been touched, truly touched, in weeks. Not since that last night heâd reached for you out of obligation. Not since youâd stopped pretending it meant something.
Something inside you broke quietly, the way glass breaks under water â soundless, invisible, absolute.
The next morning, you didnât make his tea.
You didnât wait for him at breakfast or join him in the study. You spent the day in the garden instead, sleeves rolled up, hands in the dirt. The cold bit at your fingers, but the ache was grounding â honest in a way nothing else in that house was.
When Sirius passed by the window that afternoon, he paused. You were kneeling by the rosebushes, brushing soil from your palms, the faintest trace of color in your cheeks. He hadnât seen you like that before â not the quiet, graceful figure who filled his house like furniture, but someone alive. Someone else.
He almost stepped outside. Almost. But the uncertainty stopped him, as it always did. He told himself you wanted space. He told himself you looked content. He told himself a dozen things to make the hesitation easier.
You didnât see him watching. You didnât care if he did.
By evening, you were exhausted â not from work, but from feeling. You had spent so long trying to be good, to be patient, to deserve his attention. And for what? The house still echoed the same way it always had.
When you came in for dinner, Sirius was at the table, a glass of wine in hand. He looked up, startled â maybe because you hadnât joined him in the morning, maybe because you hadnât waited.
âYou were gone all day,â he said.
You nodded, sitting down without meeting his gaze. âI needed air.â
âSomething wrong?â
You gave a faint laugh, bitter and soft. âYouâd notice?â
The question hung in the air. He frowned slightly, not defensive, just lost. âOf course I would.â
You looked at him then, really looked, and realized how tired he seemed. The faint lines around his eyes, the weight in his shoulders. You used to think that if he looked at you like that, youâd feel closer to him. But all it did now was make you feel smaller.
âI donât think you would,â you said finally. âNot really.â
He opened his mouth, but no words came.
You stood before he could find them, gathering your plate. âIâm going to bed.â
âYou havenât eaten,â he said quietly.
âIâm not hungry.â
Your footsteps echoed on the stairs, steady, final.
In your room, you undressed in silence. The mirror reflected someone you didnât recognize anymore â someone whoâd tried so hard to become what he might want that sheâd forgotten who she was before.
You thought of the girl youâd been before the marriage, the one who still believed in love, in choices, in warmth that came freely instead of being earned. You wondered if sheâd hate you now.
Sirius didnât come up right away. He sat alone at the table long after the candles burned down, your words replaying in his mind. Youâd notice?
It wasnât an accusation â it was too soft for that. It was worse. It was the sound of someone who had given up.
When he finally came to bed, you were already asleep, or at least pretending to be. He hesitated at the doorway, looking at you the way one looks at something fragile, afraid to touch it.
He wanted to say something. Anything. But he didnât know where to start. So instead, he sat at the edge of the bed and buried his face in his hands.
You opened your eyes then, just barely â enough to see the shape of him in the dark, hunched and lost.
He didnât see you looking.
And for the first time, you didnât feel the urge to comfort him. You just closed your eyes again, letting the distance settle like dust between you.
Maybe it was too late.
Maybe heâd finally started to notice, but youâd already run out of hope to give.
âââ ââ ââ â âââ
Sirius woke to an empty bed.
The sheets beside him were still faintly warm, the faint indentation of your body visible against the linen, but you were gone. The house was quiet in that thick, unsettling way that meant something had shifted. It wasnât the usual morning silence â the calm, habitual hush that came before the day began. No. This was absence.
He sat up slowly, rubbing a hand over his face. The space between you felt wider now, heavy with things unsaid.
It wasnât that he hadnât noticed you pulling away. He had, in the way one notices a draft under a door, or a missing sound theyâd long since tuned out. It had started small: the empty teacup that used to wait for him on the desk, the soft hums that no longer filled the corridor, the way your chair at dinner was often left empty, replaced by a polite note on parchment: Ate earlier. Donât wait up.
He told himself it was nothing.
That you needed space.
That it was better this way.
But now, standing alone in the kitchen, with no trace of your quiet domestic presence, Sirius felt something sharp twist in his chest â not guilt exactly, not yet, but something close to it.
You had always been there, he realized.
In the rhythm of the house, the steadiness of each day. In the way the curtains were drawn back each morning to let in light. In the quiet meals that appeared when he forgot to eat. In the peace that existed despite him â despite his ghosts, despite the coldness heâd let settle between you.
You hadnât asked for much. Youâd never demanded affection or comfort or truth. Youâd just stayed. That was what made it worse.
He remembered your voice at dinner, low and tired.
âYouâd notice?â
He had no answer for it then. He still didnât.
Because the truth was simple: he hadnât.
Heâd built walls long before your marriage, and heâd let you live behind them like a polite stranger, all under the pretense of sparing you â as if indifference was a kindness.
But when had it turned into cruelty? When had he become his own familyâs ghost story, a man who could not love the person heâd vowed to protect?
By midday, Sirius found himself pacing the halls. He told himself he was looking for a book, but his eyes kept catching on traces of you instead.
A ribbon left on the windowsill.
A half-read novel by the chair.
A faint scent of lavender that lingered on the air.
He followed it into the garden.
You were there, kneeling among the rosebushes again, wearing that worn cardigan he always thought was too big for you. Your hair was loose today, a few strands caught by the wind. You looked⌠peaceful, he thought. And that was what scared him most.
âDidnât think you liked the cold,â he said quietly.
You turned your head slightly, but not enough to meet his eyes. âItâs better than sitting inside.â
He hesitated at the doorway, hands deep in his pockets. âYou shouldâve woken me.â
âI didnât see the point.â
The words were soft, but they hit harder than anything she could have shouted.
He wanted to say something, anything, but his throat tightened. So instead, he watched as you stood, brushing dirt from your palms. There was no anger in you, no spark left to fight with. Just quiet exhaustion.
âY/N,â he started, but you were already walking past him toward the house.
âIâll have dinner ready later,â you said.
And then, after a pause: âYou donât have to join me if youâre busy.â
He turned to watch you go, a strange panic settling in his chest.
For months heâd thought this distance was safety â that as long as you were polite and calm, things were fine. But now he realized how silence could rot a home faster than any fight ever could.
That evening, he didnât go out. He sat by the fire instead, alone, his mind restless. The house felt too large without you moving through it. Too hollow.
He thought about the little things youâd done â all the things heâd dismissed without a second glance. The dinners that had been for him. The music that had been his. The small, thoughtful gestures that had gone unnoticed because heâd decided they didnât matter.
How many had there been?
How many times had he looked at you and chosen not to see?
He thought of you sitting across from him at dinner, wearing that blue dress â the one that had made him pause for a heartbeat before looking away. Youâd looked beautiful that night. He hadnât said a word.
A low ache formed in his chest. Regret, sharp and unfamiliar.
When the clock struck ten, he went upstairs. The door to your room, your room now, he realized, was closed. A line had been drawn, silently but surely.
He knocked once.
âY/N?â
Silence.
He almost turned away, but then your voice came, quiet and careful: âYes?â
âI⌠wanted to say goodnight.â
There was a pause, long enough for him to feel foolish. Then: âGoodnight, Sirius.â
No bitterness. No warmth. Just polite distance, the same tone heâd used with you for months.
He closed his eyes, hand still resting against the door.
He had no one to blame but himself.
Later, lying awake in the dark, he couldnât shake the thought that this was how people left you. Not in anger or grief â but by degrees. Slowly, quietly, until one day you looked up and realized they werenât waiting for you anymore.
And maybe that was what scared him most of all.
Because for the first time since your wedding day, Sirius realized he didnât want you to leave.
Not the version of you who sat across from him like a stranger, but the one who had tried â the one whoâd smiled at him in the sunlight and hoped heâd look back.
Heâd missed her.
Heâd missed you.
âââ ââ ââ â âââ
The air in Grimmauld Place had grown thick with silence. Not the cold, angry kind that follows a fight, but the kind that grows quietly, like dust settling on things left untouched.
You had stopped trying to fill the void between you and Sirius. The effort had become too exhausting, and each attempt had been met with the same soft, polite indifference that had slowly chipped away at your hope.
Heâd always been civil, even kind at times. That was the worst part. Sirius wasnât cruel. He just wasnât there.
He sat across from you at dinner most nights, eating quietly, sometimes talking about work or things that didnât matter. And youâd nod, smile faintly, sip your wine, and tell yourself you were fine with that. Because if you didnât, you might shatter.
Lately, though, youâd begun to fade in your own home. You dressed simply, you spoke less. The fire in you, that quiet but persistent desire to be seen had dimmed.
You woke one morning before him, lying in bed staring at the ceiling. His arm was draped across your waist, heavy and absent, like muscle memory rather than affection. He looked peaceful, and you almost envied that.
You slipped out from beneath his arm carefully, dressing in silence. You didnât bother with your hair the way you used to, nor with the perfume he once called ânice.â
You made breakfast. For both of you, as always. But you didnât wait for him to join. You ate quietly by the window while the sky outside stayed pale and sleepy.
When he finally came down, shirt half-buttoned, hair a mess, you barely looked up.
âMorning,â he said, voice still low from sleep.
âMorning,â you murmured, setting your cup down.
He hesitated. Normally, youâd have smiled â asked about his plans, tried to make conversation. Instead, you stood, placed your cup in the sink, and said, âIâll be out for a while.â
His brow furrowed slightly. âOut? Where?â
âJust⌠out.â
And then you left.
That became the new rhythm. You spent your days wandering the nearby streets, visiting small cafĂŠs, sitting in bookshops until the afternoon light began to fade. You didnât buy anything. You just⌠existed somewhere other than that cold, echoing house.
When you returned, he was often gone, sometimes at headquarters, sometimes out with James or Remus. When he was home, the two of you exchanged words out of habit more than desire.
He noticed the shift, but he didnât know what to do with it.
Heâd catch you humming softly while cleaning the sitting room, only to stop when he entered. You no longer asked him if he wanted tea, or if heâd eaten. You didnât press your hand against his arm in passing. You didnât fill the silence with pleasantries.
Youâd gone quiet.
And somehow, that silence was louder than anything heâd ever heard.
One evening, he found you in the study, seated by the fire. You didnât look up as he entered. Your book was open, but your eyes werenât moving across the page.
He lingered by the door, watching you for a long moment. The firelight made your features soft, tired, distant. You looked⌠older. Not in years, but in weariness.
âYouâve been out a lot lately,â he said finally.
âI have.â
âEverything alright?â
You nodded once. âYes.â
He waited for more, but nothing came.
âY/N,â he said, softer this time. âDid I do something?â
You blinked, finally looking at him. âDo something?â
He shifted, uneasy under your calm tone. âYouâre⌠different.â
You closed your book gently, setting it aside. âIâve stopped trying, Sirius.â
His brow creased. âTrying what?â
âTo be someone you might notice.â
He froze, lips parting, but you went on before he could speak.
âIâve spent months trying to make this⌠marriage something more than a name on paper. I tried to make you comfortable, to be kind, to be what I thought you wanted. But itâs exhausting trying to be chosen by someone who never wanted you to begin with.â
He exhaled slowly, guilt flickering across his face, but you werenât finished.
âI donât blame you,â you continued, voice trembling despite your effort to keep it steady. âYou didnât ask for this either. I know that. But I canât keep pretending that this life doesnât ache. I canât keep setting a place for you in my heart when youâve never once stepped inside it.â
Siriusâs throat worked around words he couldnât form.
You stood, smoothing the front of your skirt. âYou donât need to say anything. Iâm not angry. Iâm just⌠tired.â
And with that, you left him in the flickering firelight, the faint scent of your lavender soap fading in the air.
That night, he couldnât sleep.
He lay awake staring at the ceiling, the same way you had that morning. The bed felt too large, too quiet. For the first time, he realized he hadnât actually seen you in weeks. Not really.
He thought of the mornings you used to hum while setting out breakfast, the gentle curve of your smile when he came home late. He thought of your perfume, the way it lingered on his robes even when he didnât notice.
Heâd taken it all for granted.
Now, all that warmth had goneâand the house felt like what it truly was: cold stone and obligation.
And Sirius Black, who had once sworn he would never be like the rest of his family, realized with a sick twist in his chest that he had become exactly like them.
âââ ââ ââ â âââ
Sirius returned home one late afternoon, the sound of the front door closing softly behind him. He didnât slam it, didnât curse under his breath about the endless creak of the hinges like he usually did.
There was something quieter about him. Something careful.
You noticed it first in the way his boots didnât drag against the floors; how his voice, when he greeted you, didnât echo through the hall like an afterthought.
âEvening,â he said from the doorway of the drawing room.
You looked up from the book in your lap, blinking at him. âEvening.â
He hesitated before stepping in. You could tell immediately that something was differentâhe didnât move with the same restless energy, that constant need to fill the silence. Instead, he seemed almost⌠hesitant.
He looked at you as though seeing you properly for the first time in a long while.
âI saw you walking back from the market earlier,â he said after a pause. âDid you... buy flowers?â
Your brow furrowed slightly. âYes. Just a few.â
âI havenât seen flowers in the house for months,â he murmured, glancing toward the vase on the mantle. The lilacs were small, delicate, the faintest trace of life against the gloom of Grimmauld Place.
You didnât answer.
Sirius shifted, running a hand through his hair. âThey look nice,â he said softly.
You nodded. âThank you.â
The silence stretched thin between you, full of unspoken things.
Over the next few days, you noticed little things, small shifts that didnât make sense.
The breakfast dishes were washed before you came downstairs one morning. He started leaving earlier, but returned at more reasonable hours. He no longer reeked of smoke and firewhisky. He lingered near the kitchen sometimes, asking if you needed help.
It wasnât much. But it was something.
And you didnât know what to do with that.
You had built your own armor, piece by piece. Indifference had become your refuge. Now, suddenly, he was showing cracks in his own, and you couldnât decide whether to look through them or turn away.
One afternoon, you were in the library, dusting shelves half-heartedly when he appeared in the doorway again.
He stood there a moment, arms crossed loosely, watching you. âYou still clean in here?â
âSomeone has to,â you replied, voice even.
He smiled faintly. âSuppose thatâs true.â
You turned back to the shelves. His footsteps approached slowly until he stood beside you, close enough that you could smell the faint scent of his cologne â something he hadnât worn in so long.
âYou know,â he said quietly, âthis house never feels alive unless youâre in it.â
You froze, your hand pausing mid-wipe.
It was the sort of thing he mightâve said once, offhandedly charmingâ but this time, it sounded earnest.
You didnât look at him. âYou donât have to say things like that, Sirius.â
âIâm not saying it because I have to.â
You swallowed. âThen why now?â
He hesitated, and for a moment you thought he wouldnât answer. Then, softly:
âBecause Iâve been a fool. And I donât think I realized how much until you stopped looking at me.â
Your breath caught. Slowly, you turned to face him. His expression was unreadable â no smirk, no easy charm. Just quiet sincerity that unnerved you more than anything.
âI didnât think you wanted me to look at you,â you said carefully.
âI didnât know what I wanted,â he admitted, voice low. âBut I do know that this house feels colder without you in it. Thatâs not nothing.â
You stared at him, unsure what to believe. His words sounded genuine, but youâd built too much of yourself around disappointment to trust the warmth too quickly.
So you said nothing.
After a long moment, he nodded once, as if accepting that. âAlright,â he murmured. âIâll give you space.â
And then he left â quietly, like a ghost who knew better than to haunt too loudly.
That night, you lay in bed on your side, staring at the wall. Sirius came in late but sober, moving carefully so as not to disturb you.
You pretended to be asleep.
You felt the mattress dip as he settled beside you. Then, for the first time in months, his hand hovered uncertainly over your back. It didnât touch â but it stayed there, as though he wanted to bridge the distance but didnât yet feel entitled to.
And strangely, you found yourself listening to his breathing.
You didnât move. You didnât speak. But somewhere deep inside, something fragile stirred, a flicker of something that was not yet forgiveness, but not entirely indifference either.
In the morning, he was gone again, but the lilacs had been replaced with new ones.
And on the kitchen counter sat a folded note in Siriusâs handwriting:
âI know I canât undo the years I wasted. But Iâm here now. For whatever thatâs worth.â
You stared at it for a long time, unsure whether to smile or cry.
Because after all this time, you werenât sure if it was worth anything at all â or if it might finally be the start of something real.
âââ ââ ââ â âââ
The house had been quieter lately, but not empty, more like the air had shifted into something waiting.
You could feel it every time Sirius walked into a room â the tentative calm that followed him, like he was trying not to disturb something fragile.
It was strange to witness. For years, youâd grown used to the thunder of his presence: the loud laughter that filled corridors, the careless charm, the weight of his footsteps echoing off stone floors. Now, that recklessness had been replaced by patience.
You didnât know what to do with patience.
You decided to test it. Not cruelly, not to punish him â but to see if the new calm he wore so carefully was real, or just another mood that would pass like all the others.
It began with breakfast.
You rose early, as always, and made tea. You didnât expect him to join you â he rarely did â but halfway through your toast, you heard him coming down the stairs.
He looked surprised to see you still at the table. You normally finished before he ever appeared.
âMorning,â he said gently.
âMorning.â
He hesitated, then gestured toward the seat across from you. âMind if IâŚ?â
You nodded once. âGo ahead.â
He poured himself tea, quiet and careful, and when he reached for the sugar, you noticed something: heâd started taking three spoonful's.
You blinked. âYou like it sweet now?â
He glanced up, a faint smile tugging at his lips. âTrying to be less predictable.â
You huffed a soft, unexpected laugh â small, but real. And he looked almost startled by it.
The silence that followed wasnât sharp this time. It was calm, like two people finally learning how to breathe in the same space.
You began noticing him more after that, not as the man youâd built from memory, but as someone different.
Heâd fix little things around the house: oil a hinge, mend a loose latch, clean the old family frames that had gathered dust. Youâd walk into a room to find him standing quietly, sleeves rolled up, hair falling over his face, muttering at stubborn screws or paint chips.
You didnât speak much, but you lingered.
One evening, you caught him in the kitchen, sleeves rolled, trying to cook. The air smelled faintly of garlic and smoke. He looked up when you entered, eyes widening slightly.
âIâm aware this looks like a crime scene,â he said, motioning to the pan.
You leaned against the counter. âThatâs one word for it.â
âRemus swore I could make pasta,â he muttered, poking it with the spoon like it had personally offended him.
âRemus has too much faith.â
Sirius laughed, properly laughed, and it startled you. It wasnât loud or wild like before; it was softer, almost shy. He rubbed the back of his neck. âYou could always show me how itâs actually done.â
You tilted your head. âYouâd let me?â
âIâd beg you, if thatâs what it takes.â
So you did. You took the spoon from his hand, brushing fingers by accident, and tried not to think about how that tiny contact made something flicker in your chest.
The nights that followed were calmer. You still slept with space between you, but it didnât feel like a void anymore.
Sometimes, youâd find him reading in bed when you came in. Heâd glance up, offer a quiet âgoodnight,â and youâd answer without the cold edge that used to linger on your tongue.
There were no grand gestures, no sudden declarations. Just small moments that began to stitch themselves into the rhythm of your days.
One afternoon, you found yourself walking with him into the garden. The sun had made a rare appearance through the London haze, and Sirius looked almost younger in the light.
He paused beside the lilacs youâd planted, crouching slightly to touch a leaf.
âTheyâre surviving,â he said, almost to himself.
âTheyâre resilient,â you murmured. âI think they learned to adapt to this place.â
He glanced at you then, eyes soft. âYouâre talking about the flowers, or yourself?â
You felt your throat tighten, but you didnât look away. âBoth, maybe.â
His smile faltered into something sad and fond. âYou shouldnât have had to adapt to me.â
You didnât answer right away. The breeze rustled the lilacs. âPeople do what they must.â
He looked like he wanted to say more, but he didnât. Instead, he stood beside you in the sunlight until the moment felt whole again.
That night, you stood at the vanity brushing your hair. Sirius sat on the edge of the bed behind you, quiet, hands clasped between his knees.
You met his gaze in the mirror for a second â long enough to see hesitation in his eyes.
He rose slowly, stepping behind you. His reflection hovered close, uncertain.
âMay I?â he asked, nodding toward the brush in your hand.
Your heart stuttered. You hesitated, then passed it to him.
He began to brush through your hair carefully, gently, as if afraid you might break if he pressed too hard. His touch was slow, deliberate, reverent in a way that made your chest ache.
It wasnât intimate in the usual sense. It was quiet, almost sacred.
When he was done, he set the brush down and said softly, âYou deserve more than what Iâve given you.â
You swallowed hard, unsure what to say. âMaybe,â you murmured. âBut Iâm still here, arenât I?â
His breath caught. You stood, brushing past him gently, and slipped into bed.
For the first time in years, when he followed, you didnât turn away.
You werenât ready to believe in him fully. Not yet. But you no longer flinched from the hope that maybe, just maybe, he was trying.
And for now, that was enough.
âââ ââ ââ â âââ
It had been weeks since Siriusâs quiet transformation began, and though the walls of Grimmauld Place still loomed heavy with its shadows, something in the air had shifted entirely.
You felt it every time he was near, that almost-electric awareness, the ache of something unspoken sitting just beneath the surface. Youâd begun to move around each other like magnets, careful not to touch, careful not to draw too close, because you both knew what might happen if you did.
But tonight, the restraint frayed.
The storm outside had rolled in quietly, the kind that hummed low through the walls, making the lamps flicker and the air hum. You were in the study, pretending to read, the sound of rain tapping against the window.
Sirius stood by the fireplace, half in shadow, his shirt sleeves rolled, the amber glow cutting along his jaw. You could feel his eyes on you â not the absent kind of looking he used to do, but something heavy and searching.
You turned a page you didnât read. âYouâre staring.â
He didnât deny it. âYouâve changed.â
âSo have you.â
He smiled faintly, but it wasnât playful. âNot enough, maybe.â
You looked up then, meeting his gaze. There it was â the weight of years spent circling one another, all the longing and exhaustion and quiet affection tangled into something that finally demanded to be seen.
âWhy now?â you asked softly. âWhy only start trying when I finally stopped?â
Sirius took a slow step closer, then another, his voice low. âBecause I was afraid of wanting something I didnât think I could have.â
âAnd what is it you want now?â
He was close enough for you to feel the warmth radiating off him, the scent of rain and smoke in his clothes. He looked down at you, his voice barely above a whisper.
âYou,â he said. âBut not the way I was supposed to. The way I do now.â
Something inside you cracked â a quiet, fragile thing that had been holding everything in place for years. You rose slowly from your chair, and suddenly, the space between you was gone.
He reached out first, fingers brushing against your jaw as if asking permission. When you didnât pull away, he cupped your face fully, thumb tracing the edge of your cheek.
âYou shouldnât look at me like that,â you whispered.
âLike what?â
âLike you mean it.â
âI do,â he said, and then he kissed you.
It wasnât gentle at first, it was desperate, all the years of silence and unspoken words breaking open in one sharp exhale.
His hands tangled in your hair, your fingers caught against his collar, and you kissed him back like youâd been waiting a lifetime to remember how. Lips parted, tongues grazing each others teeth in rushed decisions, hands gripping each other as if never needing anything more in the world.
The storm outside cracked loud against the windows, but neither of you moved from each other.
When he finally pulled back, his forehead rested against yours, both of you breathless.
âI donât deserve this,â he murmured.
âThen earn it,â you said, voice trembling but sure.
Something in him broke at that , you felt it in the way he kissed you again, slower this time, as though memorizing the taste of forgiveness. His hands slid around your waist, drawing you closer until you could feel the steady, heavy beat of his heart against yours.
You didnât think. You didnât need to. You just let yourself fall into the warmth youâd both been starving for.
The book slipped forgotten to the floor. The fire cracked and flared. His lips found yours again and again, hungry, reverent, lingering â each kiss more certain than the last, each breath a confession he couldnât speak aloud.
When you finally broke apart, neither of you spoke for a long moment. His thumb traced your bottom lip, still swollen from the kiss, and he smiled faintly.
âI think,â he said softly, âthis is the first time this house has ever felt alive.â
You pressed your forehead against his chest, closing your eyes as his arms came around you.
For the first time, there was no distance left to bridge.
And in that quiet, storm-lit room, the two of you finally let the walls crumble â not in anger or obligation, but in something that felt dangerously close to love.






















