Amelia Croft (Legend Timeline)


 * For Lara's mother in the other continuities, see Lady Croft disambiguation page.

Lady Amelia Croft, née DeMornay, was the wife of Lord Richard James Croft and the mother of Lara Croft until her disappearance when the family's plane crashed on The Himalaya mountains in Nepal when Lara was young about 8 or 9 years old.

Story
After the plane crashed, Amelia and Lara were in an abandoned temple in the Himalayas of Nepal, they were looking for something to make fire and warm themselves up, Lara found the sword in the stone and touched it un-intentionally which activated it, Lara's mother Amelia came in and told her to stay back, Lara pointed her finger while saying "there's something in the light" but it was actually the future Lara telling her mother not to touch the sword, Amanda Evert (from the future) told Lara to pull the sword, else it would explode, though she was talking to Lara, but Amelia from the past overheard this and desperately pulled the sword without hesitating thus causing her disappearance.

Lara figured all of this out when she collected the sword fragments of Excalibur, and reforged it with her mother's amulet (the Ghalali Key).

Lara decides to find out about what happened to her mother and in Tomb Raider: Underworld, Natla tells Lara that her mother is in Helheim and that Helheim and Avalon are one and the same.

In Tomb Raider: Underworld, after searching for her lost mother, Lara finds her overlooking the Sea of Eitr. Lara calls to her, but realizes when her mother turns around, that she's been partially turned into a thrall. Lara states, "You are not my mother, my mother died a long time ago." The thrall proceeds to attack, and a melancholic Lara shoots her several times knocking her back towards the ledge where she falls into a pool of Etir.

After escaping from Helheim using the Dais, Lara and Amanda return to Tibet, where Amelia was transported to Helheim from. After Amanda leaves seeing that there was no point holding on to the past, Lara takes a moment to say goodbye to her mother, accepting her death and gaining closure before leaving.