It had been with her grandfather's death that Aurelia had rarely walked the family graveyard as frequently as she would as a child. The truth was something that she didn't like to admit, the idea that he would still be amongst the living something that hurt her heart every time she thought of it. The two had always been close, the former miner often taking it upon himself to make his uniquely different grandchild laugh. Esric Sr was the first one to realize that Aurelia had not been so normal, that she wasn't simply spacing out - that she was only seeing the unseen. He hadn't believed it at first, given that the girl had seemed to completely ignore him on occasion; conversations had been dropped midsentence as her blue eyes would focus on something else, but when she'd repeat what had been said, it became clear she was special.
The first ghost that Aurelia's grandfather had learned his grandchild had met was a little girl named Mathilda, not too much older than the living girl. It was with his help searching through records that they learned the child's fate. Typhoid fever had claimed her life in the late 1700's, a fact that would lead to a temporary fear of germs from Aurelia that would only cease at the age of thirteen. The revelation had been bittersweet as the spirit would be the first that she learned would occasionally know that she was not dead; the girl had insisted that she was different, her german more advanced than Aurelia's own, who had been still at the time learning - knowledgeable enough to hold small conversations.
Her grandfather had been helpful to break the news on multiple occasions before Aurelia would later entrust her odd ability to her sister, Arielle, and her cousin, Judah. But, it had been the other blonde, blue eyed von der Marck child that had always stuck close to Aurelia's heart - and the grounds of the estate, still unable to accept the truth of life after death.
Before her grandfather's passing, she had gone to deliver flowers to the graves of spirits had passed on regularly. Although there were many, she did not mind braving the influex of the deceased lingering around. After his death, however, she'd started taking her time and making excuses - something that she had been embarrassed to admit and had begun to hate as the anniversary of the man's death approached slowly and steadily. And so, one evening after work, pressing a kiss to Evangeline's lips with the promise to catch up with her later, the blonde had headed out to the family estate. The only pause she had made was to purchase a few dozens of freesia and lily bouquets - making sure a set of pink lily and red roses to her girlfriend as a surprise would be sent - before going to her destination.
The paths she'd always taken were not lost on Aurelia despite the years that had passed as she made her way to her grandfather's first, setting down the flowers as a shriek reached her ears. A woman in a blue dress was ignored as she silently said a prayer, pressing a kiss to her fingers once they were brought to her list before being set against his name on the cold stone. It was with habit that she began to tune out the noise, her gaze focusing on the engraved lettering.
Beloved father, grandfather, and brother bringing a smile to her face as she stood, her long jacket hanging on her slender frame while she began to make her way towards the older portion of the graveyard.
"Papa?" A soft voice called out as she heard it, paying no mind to her surroundings as she headed towards another familiar grave. The name hadn't been worn out quite yet, but it was fading from sight despite the well kept grounds that had always made Aurelia proud of her family for. Even in death, they looked out for each other - they took care of their elders. Mathilda's intended resting place had been under a tree, a child's laughter ringing out as Aurelia remembered her first meeting with the restless spirit. She'd been running through the grassy areas and fallen over a branch. That soft laughter scaring at first before the weirdly dressed pale girl appeared.
""Hello Maddie." Aurelia said, the moisture of her breath visible in the cold, wintery weather as she set a few flowers down.