TITLE: “Crossroads”
AUTHOR: Emmyjean (emmyjeanb@yahoo.com)
CLASSIFICATION: J/L
RATING: PG-13
SUMMARY: The long journey of James Potter and Lily
Evans over the course of their last year at Hogwarts.
DISCLAIMER: Without JK Rowling,
none of this would exist. Thanks to her
for letting me play with her creation.
AUTHOR’S NOTES: This started as mere speculation and
developed, over the course of MANY drafts, into a full-flegded story. I hope you enjoy it.
Chapter Seven
Lily didn’t sleep much that night, which wasn’t a
foreign situation to her but it seemed more damaging this time all the
same. She wasn’t even trying to
sleep...she merely lay there, staring out the window at the small slice of the
night sky of which she was afforded a glimpse from her position in bed. The moon was bright as it illuminated the
dorm, and she wished that she could go out walking underneath it. People used to think that staring at the
moon brought insanity...but to Lily, the soft orb was and always had been a
calming influence. She buried her face
further into her pillow as she remembered how she used to lie in her bed at
home, staring at it through the dark branches of the magnolia tree outside her
window.
She closed her eyes briefly as she thought once
again about Petunia. The more time
passed since the day she’d found out about their parents, the sharper and more
painful her need for her sister became.
She needed to speak with her...Lily knew that she would listen. She had to...they had no one else but
each other now. Petunia had never
understood about the wizarding world...but who could blame her? How can someone understand something they’re
not allowed to be a part of...something they’re not really even allowed to see
with their own eyes?
She had never even seen Hogwarts.
Turning onto her back, Lily grappled with the urge
to simply run away. What was magical
ability worth if she was going to be alone in the world? Images flashed through her mind...of class,
of the Great Hall...a pang of homesickness hit her at the idea of not having
any of it anymore.
But she wouldn’t have it after this year was over,
anyway, she thought grimly. Where was
she to go after that?
More thoughts drifted in and out of her head...of
the castle grounds, and of all the professors.
Of Arabella. James...
Her eyes closed again as she thought of him, and
the urge to escape coarsed through her with renewed force. She didn’t know what she was going to say to
him...but she had to say something. She
could see now how horribly she’d been treating him...and she’d never been one
to hold grudges. She’d acted unfairly
and had refused all of his attempts at reconciliation...and it made her want to
be sick when she thought of it. When
she thought of how he’d acted in that bathroom...how his only intent had been
to help her somehow.
Turning over, she resolved that running wasn’t an
option this time. She would have to
speak with him as soon as she could...the very next time she saw him.
~~
She bit her lip as she looked around the Great
Hall, trying to spot either him or any of his friends. She didn’t know exactly what she would say
to him if she did see him...or even if she’d say anything at all. Last night had been the second time James
Potter had seen her at her lowest point, and she didn’t quite know how to
approach him anymore. Not that she ever
had, but...somehow, this was different.
The first time, she’d been convinced that the only
way to handle it was to act as though nothing had happened. Not only had this tactic failed miserably,
but for some reason, she didn’t feel as though that was what she wanted this
time. She felt less...embarrassed. Less vulnerable. He didn’t know how it was possible that another incident would minimize
her fear of appearing weak, especially to him, but...it had. Perhaps it was the way he’d spoken to her in
that bathroom...or the way he handled it.
It was as though he’d known exactly what she needed in that moment, and
he’d done everything he could to give it to her...even if it wasn’t his
help she needed.
She thought
about it all day, every time she looked at him in class. He, for his part, seemed to be avoiding
looking in her direction. Obviously, he
was taking his cue from what she’d said she wanted last time, after that night
in the common room...he was leaving her completely alone.
Lily didn’t know what she wanted from him...but she
knew that it wasn’t this. This couldn’t
go on.
After dinner, they had a meeting in McGonagall’s
office. It seemed horribly awkward,
although Lily doubted the professor noticed anything out of the ordinary. Perhaps it was just her own mind playing
tricks on her...but something about his demeanor, his tone of voice...she
scarcely believed it, but it was clear that he was somehow...hurt. Then again, as the past few weeks were
clearly demonstrating, perhaps she hadn’t known him as well as she’d thought at
the beginning of the year. So much had
changed since then.
“Oh, one more thing before you go,” McGonagall
called out at the end of the meeting, as they were about to walk out the door,
“I want one or both of you to clear out the north tower balcony again
tonight. It’s getting out of hand.”
There was a pause, and then James said quietly,
“I’ll do it.”
McGonagall looked at him and added, “I want you to
go up there late...eleven or so. It seems
to be the busiest time. Don’t just go
up and come right back down, either...I want you to stay there for awhile and
catch people coming in. Understood?”
He nodded, and Lily followed him out of the
office. Once in the corridor, James
said, “I’ll just go. You don’t have to
bother with it.”
She was about to offer to go with him, but
something in his eyes stopped her. She
knew he wasn’t angry at her, but he seemed somehow resolved. He didn’t want her to offer...he
would think she was doing it because she thought she owed it to him. So, she simply nodded her head in weak
agreement, and then they went their separate ways.
By the time that evening came around, however, she
felt weighed down by the feeling of guilt that wracked her. Bella finally threw down her gobstones in
frustration and asked, “What in the
world is the matter with you, Lil?
You’re acting strange.”
Lily looked at Bella and opened her mouth to deny
that anything was bothering her, but instead sighed and pressed a hand to her
forehead. “I don’t know. I’m just reflecting on how I’ve...changed.”
“Changed?”
Lily nodded and threw her own gobstones on the
table next to Bella’s. “For the worse,
I’m afraid.”
Bella frowned.
“Changed for the worse? What are
you talking about?”
“Don’t tell me you haven’t noticed,” Lily
challenged mildly, looking Arabella in the eye, “How I’ve been treating
everyone like dirt, including myself. How I’ve been acting like I belong in a
madhouse, I’m so paranoid about every little...”
“Lily,” Bella interrupted quietly, “You’ve been
through some rough times. Stop being so
hard on yourself.”
Lily shook her head slowly, rolling the gobstones
in her hand and staring at them as though they held the key to everything. Taking a breath, she replied, “Everyone goes
through rough times, Bella. It’s the
way life is...but it doesn’t give someone the right to treat other people
badly.”
“What?” Bella asked, confused, “Who have you been
treating badly?”
Lily didn’t respond, but looked across the room as
James Potter stood up and grabbed his cloak, heading for the portrait
hole. Arabella swiveled in her chair to
see what Lily was looking at, and then turned back to face her with
comprehension in her eyes.
“He wasn’t exactly a prince to you before, you
know.”
Lily turned her eyes back to her friend, who was
looking at her in all earnestness. She
knew Bella still held a grudge against James for everything that had happened
before her parents died, but then again, Bella was all for Lily. She didn’t care what else had been happening
at the time...in her mind, Lily was the one to stand up for. Lily herself knew deep down that she had
made up at least half of the unpleasantness that had existed between them
then...and she created every last bit of what was strained between them now. She had become afraid...she didn’t know of
what, exactly, but it was a general fear that consumed her at every moment of
every day. Fear of being hurt, she
supposed, coupled with fear of being seen as vulnerable...and as a result, she
was making herself look weaker than she knew she was.
She didn’t want this. She needed to overcome it...for herself, and also for those she
was indirectly and unjustly punishing.
Standing up suddenly, she muttered some parting words to Arabella and
ran to the portrait hole through which James had just left. It swung open, and as she stepped out into
the corridor, she could see him walking at the far end of the passage, just
about to turn the corner.
“James!” she called, and he turned. Even from this distance, she could see his
surprise. She hurried to catch up with
him, and his black brows furrowed as she drew nearer.
“What is it?” he asked, concern tinting his
tone. She hesitated for only a moment
before replying,
“I thought I’d go with you.”
He didn’t say anything for a moment, but his eyes
betrayed his conflicting thoughts.
“No...it’s alright. You don’t
have to...”
“I’d like to, if you don’t mind,” she
interrupted. He shut his mouth, and
then simply nodded a concession as they began walking toward the staircase. Lily had planned what she was going to say
to him as she ran over, but now that she was actually walking beside him she
forgot everything. She knew she wanted
to apologize, but she also knew he wouldn’t accept an apology. She wanted to set the record straight, to
thank him properly for everything he had done for her...she wanted to
accomplish a lot of things. She simply
didn’t have any idea where to begin. As
the awkward silence stretched on, she knew she had to say something, and
decided to start small and work her way to a comfortable place from there.
“Um,” she ventured, and her voice sounded like a
whipcrack in the oppresive silence, “I, uh...I never did get to tell you about
my exam.”
His step faltered almost imperceptibly, and there
was a brief silence before he asked confusedly, “Sorry?”
She prayed that this wasn’t the most idiotic thing
she had ever done, as she couldn’t think of anything else to say at the
moment. She wanted to make up for her
previously cold attitude, and this seemed like it might work. She needed to start small...she didn’t want
to just blurt everything out. Taking a
small breath, she continued, “You...you asked about my arithmancy exam the
other day?”
“Oh,” he said in a low voice, “Oh...yeah. That’s right.”
She wondered briefly if he even truly cared about
her stupid exam or if he had merely been asking to be polite...but the brief
memory of the look on his face when she had spilled her worries to Arabella in
class after having brushed him off was enough to keep her talking.
“Well, I was a bit preoccupied when you asked
before...sorry about that,” she said quickly, then went on in something of a
rush, “The truth is, it was absolutely horrible.”
She paused to give him a chance to either end the
conversation or encourage her to continue, thinking that she could at least
give him the choice. After a second, he
responded, “It was horrible?”
This was enough.
She proceeded to tell him all about her troubles with Professor
Abernathy, and she didn’t even really care for once that she was rambling. She figured anything was better than
stony silence, and besides, it eased what would otherwise have been an awkward
walk to the north tower. She never
looked at him...she was afraid of what she’d see if she looked him in the face.
“Anyway,” she finished as they climbed the last
staircase leading to the balcony, “Do you think that was wrong of me, to
question her? I mean, it’s not as if I
did it in front of the whole class...and shouldn’t I be allowed to ask
questions? Or...I don’t know, what
would you have done?”
There was a short silence, and she thought for a
brief moment that he hadn’t been listening to her at all and wasn’t aware that
she had asked him anything. Just as she
was about to repeat herself, he said quietly,
“I wouldn’t have taken arithmancy.”
She shot her gaze up to his face, and found that he
was looking at her with a definite twinkle in his hazel eyes. He was teasing her. Relief flooded through her veins with
surprising force, making her feel warm in the face. Perhaps she didn’t have to drag everything up again...perhaps it
was enough just to show him that she wanted to move forward. Perhaps he didn’t want to talk about
everything, either.
They finally got to the door, and she discovered
that she didn't want to go through first.
This was her least favorite duty of Head Girl, and she had usually let
him do it in the past. He seemed to
enjoy it. He noticed her hesitation and
went through the door ahead of her. All
she could see in front of her was his back, and before she could even look
around she heard surprised gasps from a few feet away.
“Come on,” James said, “You know the risks of
coming here...everyone does. That’s ten
points from Hufflepuff, and have a lovely evening!”
Lily smiled discreetly...he truly did enjoy
this. As they walked around the length
of the balcony, which wrapped all the way around the tower, she didn’t have to
say a word...he did everything himself.
“Jones,” he called to one older-looking Ravenclaw
boy, “Didn’t I catch you here last time?
With a different person?”
The boy turned red, as did his girlfriend. Lily stifled a giggle as they walked swiftly
past them. James turned to look at
her, and she shot him a disapproving look.
“Really nice.”
He shrugged and replied, “He’s a self-important
prat. Otherwise I wouldn’t have said
it.”
They turned the last corner to find one more
couple, huddled behind a statue. James
shook his head and said,
“Allman...guess what?”
The boy, Christopher Allman, stepped out from
behind the statue with a dissheveled-looking Hufflepuff girl. Lily recognized him as a sixth-year
Gryffindor, and he gave her a polite smile when he saw her. She smiled back, arching an eyebrow at his
grace-under-pressure.
“Aww...come on, Potter.”
James quirked a brow of his own and replied, “No
points, but only this time. Go and find
yourself an empty classroom.”
Chris grinned at them, then took his girl by the
hand and dragged her behind him inside the tower. Lily looked around, then commented, “Is that all?”
James glanced about as well, then nodded. “I guess so...but we have to stay here.”
“Yeah,” Lily confirmed, recalling what McGonagall
had said that afternoon. She sighed as
she walked over to a nearby ledge and gingerly perched on it’s edge. She looked up at him then, and found him
looking back at her with a pensive look on his face...even slightly
perplexed. He quickly averted his gaze
to the mountains beyond the castle grounds as their eyes met, but not quickly
enough to prevent cold realization from washing over Lily. She didn’t have a choice...she had to talk
to him. Really talk to him. She owed him that much. Swallowing the clog in her throat, she said
softly,
“James.”
He returned his eyes to her face, and she could see
in the dim light that his expression was expectant...and slightly nervous. Taking a breath, she began, “I wanted
to...thank you.”
He shook his head immediately. “There’s no need. Really.”
“No, there is,” she contradicted, her voice coming
out stronger now, “You’ve been nothing but considerate and...”
“Look, please don’t do this,” he interrupted
firmly, “I don’t want gratitude from you.”
She must have looked a bit thunderstruck at his
unexpectedly virulent tone because one look at her face and he hastened to
explain himself further.
“I don’t...I never expected anything from you. I’ve been feeling like a prat ever since
that day...outside the Great Hall. You
didn’t want coddling, and you certainly didn’t need a fight. I should have known both those things.”
“James...”
“Really, Lily,” he said, taking a step closer to
her as he softened his voice, “I don’t want you to apologize.”
She briefly contemplated ignoring his protesting
and insisting on the apology, but she could see that it would make him
uncomfortable. Perhaps even angry. If this was what he wanted from her, then it
was the least she could do. After
all...he had never pushed her. Not in
front of the fire in the common room, and not in the bathroom. She would give him the same respect.
Nodding,
she decided to just let silence reign for a moment instead of making inane
small talk. Reaching into her robes,
she took out the book she had brought up here with her...she had grabbed it as
she was rushing out of the common room.
Her thought was that if the ‘breaking the ice’ plan with James hadn’t
worked, she would at least be spared from sitting in uncomfortable silence the
entire time – but she really did need to get some reading done. This book was due back at the library in a
couple of days, and she wasn’t even halfway finished.
“Which one is that?”
She looked up to find James lounging on the stone
bench across the way, and he inclined his head at the book in her hand. She glanced at it and replied, “Oh...it’s
called, “Chinese Charmwork – A Cultural Guide”. It’s really very interesting to compare the historical
development of magical techniques over the centuries, and how they’re seperated
by geographical influences. I’ve found
that it’s very helpful to...”
She broke off, checking herself sternly. She would not go into a long,
rambling speech about all this, as she tended to do with Arabella and Helen all
the time. It was a dangerous thing, to
ask her about her newfound quest in defense charms – she often lost track of
herself. Shrugging sheepishly at him,
she said, “I’m sure you didn’t need that much information...sorry. I tend to get carried away when people ask
me about these things.”
He raised his eyebrows and replied simply, “I wouldn’t
have asked at all if I wasn’t interested.”
She regarded him for a moment, trying to gauge his
seriousness. It occurred to her that he
might be asking about this because he still harbored some sort of guilt
complex, but decided that she simply wasn’t going to think about that
anymore. From now on, she was just
going to work with what he showed her...not assumptions that she made about his
motives. That not only went for him,
but everyone else as well.
“I s’pose not,” she conceeded after a moment, “I
just wouldn’t want to bore you.”
He smiled slightly, and then asked, “Have I ever
hesitated to inform someone if they’re boring me?”
Lily smiled back and replied, “Well...not as far as
I’ve seen.”
James nodded his head and stood up, walking over to
where she was sitting to stand beside her.
Looking out over the grounds, he replied, “So...if you were, I
would. Tell you, I mean.”
She bit her lip as she looked at his profile. “I um...if you did tell me I was
boring you...”
He turned his head and looked at her, and she was
surprised suddenly by how warm his hazel eyes seemed as they regarded her. She somehow couldn’t quite understand how
she had always found them so cold before.
Looking back down at her lap, she said,
“I promise...I won’t be offended.”
He didn’t say anything for a moment, and when she
turned to look at him again he was still watching her. He looked away quickly, stepping back and
running his eyes over the wall she was sitting on as he replied, “You won’t?”
There was a brief silence, and then she replied,
“I’m just saying...I’ll make an effort not to be. From now on.”
His gaze shot back up to hers and, after a moment,
he said, “That’s good enough for me.”
She felt an odd sensation in her stomach...it was a
strange amalgamation that felt something like joy and nervousness at the same
time. They were finally coming
to an understanding. She cleared her
throat and said simply, “Well...there it is, then.”
He nodded slightly, and then went back to perusing
the wall. She wondered briefly what he
was looking at, and then remembered all the carved names that were covering the
stone. Not wanting to stop the
conversation just yet, she asked, “Anyone interesting?”
He looked up and let out a laugh, “No...no
surprises yet. Just people I figured
would be up here...look. Here’s Mark
Reiley up here five times.”
“Five?” Lily repeated, craning her neck so that she
could see without leaving her perch.
“With five different girls, too.”
She laughed at this, and he along with her. They spent a few minutes reading names off
the wall and laughing about them...from the obvious to the unlikely. He shook his head finally and commented,
“You know...I never understood this.”
“What?”
“This,” he replied, gesturing to the wall, “Writing
your name on the wall. What’s the
point?”
She shrugged and replied, “It’s just evidence that
you broke school rules by being here.”
He quirked a brow at her and said teasingly, “How
did I know you’d say something like that?
But really, it’s just...why would you want to set something in stone
like that? I never...”
He stopped, narrowing his eyes at something on the
wall behind the Cupid statue on her right.
“What?” Lily asked, “Who is it?”
He inched a bit closer to the stone, his eyes
widening a bit behind his glasses.
“Arabella Figg and Lily Evans were here?” he
read incredulously, and Lily felt her cheeks burn as she was hit with the
realization that this was indeed the same statue they had hid behind that one
evening. She grew even more embarrased
at the memory of from what – or rather, whom – they had been
hiding. James, meanwhile, was looking
at her with an expression of laughing disbelief on his face.
“You have to tell, now.”
Lily grimaced as she replied, “Oh, it’s so
silly...that happened months ago.”
“The sillier the better,” he replied, leaping up to
sit beside her on the ledge. It made
her feel slightly uncomfortable, but she hid it in the interest of patching
things up. Rolling her eyes, she
relented.
“Alright...but it doesn’t leave this balcony.”
He shook his head gravely, and she smiled a bit as
she explained. He asked for it.
“Well, it was all because Arabella made this bet
with this girl...anyway, we had to come up here and see for sure whether this
girl was here or not. She wasn’t,
and...” Lily broke off, trying to
decide how to say this properly.
“Yes?” James prompted impatiently.
“Well...before we could get out of here, a couple
came up to...whatever they do up here, and we got stuck. We hid behind that statue for about an hour,
and...well, I didn’t do it.”
James was laughing, and Lily could feel herself
getting caught up in his good humor.
His laugh was contagious. He
took a breath and asked, “You do know
that’ll never come off, right?”
Lily sighed and replied, “Yes...I know. Like I said...I didn’t write it. Bella did.”
“Yeah, okay...but having your name up on this wall
is just proof that you were up here in direct violation of school rules. I should probably take points.”
She let out a huff of laughter and replied, “Just
try it. Go on.”
He grinned broadly and replied, “Nah...I’ll let it
go this once. On one condition...”
Lily looked at him and asked, her eyebrows up,
“Which is?”
Even though she hadn’t thought it possible, his
grin broadened as he demanded, “Tell me who it was that you were hiding from
that night.”
She blanched...this was exactly what she had been
trying to avoid. How had she managed to
lose control of the conversation?
Looking back down at her book in case she was turning pink, she replied
sternly, “Absolutely not.”
“Why?”
“Because,” she said, praying he would drop it but
not really expecting he would, “It would be breaking a confidence...I can’t do
that.”
“Oh, come on,” he persisted, leaning forward a
little to try and catch her downcast eyes, “They deserve it...they were the
ones that snuck up here. Besides,
they’ll never know.”
“No.”
“Lily,” he said in a persuasive voice, “You know
you want to tell...I can see it all over your face. Besides, I’m not going to let up until you do...and you have
almost all of your classes with me, so you might want to consider that a potent
threat.”
She looked up at him and found his eyes twinkling
playfully...he was having too good a time taunting her. She suddenly changed her mind about telling
him who it was...she had been adamant that she wouldn’t and was just cursing
herself for starting the conversation at all, but now she thought maybe she’d
give him a taste of his own medicine.
He wasn’t the only one who could play with blackmail. Smiling slightly, she asked,
“You really want to know, eh?”
He nodded slowly, holding the challenge in her
gaze. She went on, “Alright, I’ll tell
you who the girl was...but you’ll have to figure out the boy on your own.”
His eyes lit up momentarily and he replied, “Even
better. This happened...what, in late
October?”
She nodded, and he smirked at her. “Don’t think I won’t guess it, Evans. I’m very good at that kind of thing.”
She looked back down at her book and replied
cryptically, “I’ll bet.”
Hopping off the ledge, she took a few light steps
away from him, pretending to be engrossed in her book. Keeping her face neutral, she said clearly,
“Carmelina Thompson.”
There was a pause in which she assumed he was
putting two and two together in his head.
She bit her lip to keep from laughing as she waited for him to say
something...but he didn’t. After a
moment, she looked up to find him immobile, staring blankly at the ground near
her feet with the oddest expression on his face. He didn’t exactly look shocked...but he definitely wasn’t
smiling. He didn’t find it funny. She felt a sinking feeling in her stomach as
she realized she must have made him angry...perhaps it couldn’t be avoided. She closed her book, keeping her page with
her finger, and ventured hesitantly,
“James?”
He swallowed and asked quietly, “Why didn’t you say
anything?”
“Sorry?” she asked. He surely couldn’t mean to say she should have told him about
this before if she didn’t have to.
“I mean...you didn’t have to sit there all that
time.”
He wasn’t saying it in an accusatory manner...it
was almost like he was sorry for making her wait, which was ridiculous. He seemed mortified, and that wasn’t what
she had wanted or expected. Embarrased,
a little chagrined perhaps...not mortified.
She shook her head and tried to make light of it, thinking that she
didn’t want to ruin the feeling of comraderie they had managed to achieve over
the past hour or so. “Well...I didn’t
think it would go over very well, under the circumstances.”
Rather than laugh or even smile looked up at her
and held her gaze steadily. “That was
before...before everything changed.”
He was completely serious. She stopped smiling and nodded slowly,
casting her eyes down to stare at the names on the wall below where he was
sitting. After a moment, he went on,
“Where did we go wrong? I mean...when did we get off on the wrong foot?”
She was surprised at the question, but thought
about it for a minute. “I don’t
know...I think it was just a matter of conflicting personalities,
actually. We were never friends.”
He sighed, and replied, “Yeah...much to my constant
annoyance. I fancied you, then. Remember?”
She could feel her face coloring...she’d forgotten
all about that. Laughing shortly, she
replied, “Yeah...I remember.”
He smiled wryly at himself, and then said quietly,
“Then there was that one night, fifth year...with that fire.”
She cringed thinking about that night...it had been
one of the worst of her young life.
Before she could say anything, he continued, “I always resented you for
going to McGonagall about it, but now I see that I was truly the one at
fault. You had every right to report
that. I only wish I was that
responsible.”
She looked him in the eye now, and he was looking
right back at her. It was almost as if
he was making a confession or something...and she found that she had yet
another thing to be guilty for as she looked back on that night. She thought briefly about all the times she
had accused him of taking his duties lightly, of being a lax Head Boy...she
regretted saying it now, as it had apparently had more of an effect that she’d
thought. Taking a breath, not certain
that this was a good time to bring this out into the open, she nevertheless
said,
“There’s something else you don’t know about that
night, though.” He raised his eyebrows
slightly without breaking eye contact, and she admitted, “I never told
McGonagall about that fire.”
He frowned at this, and then asked, “Then how did
she find out?”
“She found out from Madam Pomfrey.”
James looked at her as though he thought she was
going mad for a moment, he was so utterly confused. She suddenly realized how silly it was that he didn’t know this
already, and before he could ask her to elaborate she clarified, “When the
curtains came down off the rods, they fell right on my arm. I...I got something of a bad burn, and had
to go to the hospital wing. Madam
Pomfrey wouldn’t let me leave until I told her how I got it, and so I had to
say it. She knew already, anyway...but
I didn’t give her names. She must have
told McGonagall before I was even out of the room, because the professor was in
the common room by the time I got back that night.”
He just stared at her. She swallowed nervously, wondering if he was angry, wishing he’d
say something. After a moment, he did.
“Why didn’t you tell me?”
She shrugged slowly. “I really don’t know. I
guess I...I was rebelling. I didn’t
think you deserved to know if you didn’t bother to ask.”
He looked down at the ground then, his brow
furrowed in concentration. She couldn’t
stand the silence and blurted, “It was stupid...I realize that now. I should have told you straight away.”
He shook his head and responded, “No...no, you were
right. I should have asked for the
whole story before making accusations.”
They were silent for a moment, and then he looked
up at her. There was great emotion in
his eyes...veiled, and Lily couldn’t tell in the darkness exactly what he was
feeling. His voice was quiet as he said
simply, “I’m sorry.”
He meant it.
She nodded in return and replied sincerely, “Me, too.”
They looked at each other for a minute before Lily
began to feel uncomfortable again.
Shaking her head in an attempt to cast off the gloom, she said lightly,
“Such a waste, isn’t it? I mean, it
could have prevented a whole lot of things.
If we hadn’t been so filled with self-righteous indignation, we could
have gotten to know each other enough to dispel a lot of assumptions.”
She smiled a little, and he nodded. “Yeah...I know.”
After a brief pause, he said idly, “You know why I
hated you?”
She shook her head, a bit taken aback by his
bluntness. It was true, of
course...they had hated each other. He
explained in a low voice, “I think it started before the fire incident, but
that solidified it for me. I used to
think you were the most stuck-up, swotty, snobbish girl I’d ever met.”
He glanced up at her to take the edge away from
what he was saying, his eyes friendly.
She smiled and replied, “Well...you probably weren’t too far off with
some of those.”
“Oh, yes I was,” he said softly, and she felt the
odd feeling in the pit of her stomach again.
She was so relieved that they were making such progress. He went on, “It was just because I liked you
so much, and you wouldn’t give me the time of day, and I just didn’t get
it. I was a complete arse.”
She laughed and said, “You weren’t the only one,
you know. I don’t even want to say what
I thought you were.”
“Do it anyway,” he said, coming down off the ledge
and walking closer to her, “It’s theraputic.”
She smiled hesitantly and looked at the now-closed
book in her hands as she replied, “I don’t know. I guess I just thought you were a...prat. I didn’t like the attitude you took with
your responsibilities as Head Boy...but only because I was so uptight about the
whole thing.”
“No...you weren’t.”
“Yes, I was,” she insisted, knowing he was being
overly forgiving with her now, “I took the position entirely too seriously.”
“You were right, though...I was too
lenient,” he said, and she shook her head.
“Then we were both at fault.”
There was a momentary lapse in the conversation,
and then James said, “I was terrible to you, wasn’t I?”
She opened her mouth to lessen the truth behind it,
but he held up a hand and went on, “I know I was...you don’t have to say
it. I really regret a lot of the things
I said, now. I guess...I suppose it was
a defense mechanism. You were always
criticizing my way of doing things, and deep down I knew you were mostly
justified. Rather than admit it to
myself, I simply proceeded to try and tear your self-esteem to shreds.”
She looked up to find him looking at her earnestly,
with guilt tainting his expression. She
shook her head and replied, “You don’t have to apologize.”
He laughed humorlessly and retorted, “Yes, I
do. Mostly just to ease my own guilt.”
She looked back down at the ground...he did still
feel horribly guilty. He was in the
process of clearing his conscience, as she had thought. Before she could reply, however, he added,
“But that’s not the only reason. I
really don’t want it to be awkward between us anymore...I feel like we should
just let it go, once and for all. I’d
like to...,” he paused, and then finished, “I’d like things to be different.”
She took a few steps away from him, suddenly
feeling like she needed space. She went
to the ledge and looked out over the Hogwarts grounds...it really was a lovely
night. She could see the black outlines
of the forest trees against the night sky, and the moonlight reflected off the
lake. After a moment, she said, “I shouldn’t have been so critical. I had no right...and I wasn’t
justified. Not at all. You’re...”
She looked over her shoulder at him then, and found
him standing with his hands in the pockets of his cloak. She smiled a small smile and finished,
“You’re not who I thought you were.”
Turning back to look at the Quidditch field in the
distance, she watched the flags ripple in the cool breeze. It was just nearing the end of March now,
and she could smell spring in the air already.
It was unseasonably warm. She heard
footsteps behind her, and soon James was standing beside her at the ledge. They stayed quiet for a moment, thinking
their own thoughts, until finally he said softly,
“I guess we were both pleasantly surprised, then.”
She couldn’t remember feeling this much relief in a
long time...it was as if it was the first thing that had gone right for her in
months. As they stood there, she
thought about how odd it was that she was able to feel so at ease with him
after only an hour or so of decent conversation. She surprised even
herself at how willing she was to open up to him, and how much she had ended up
revealing about herself. He made her
feel that she could trust him, which was something she never would have dreamed
possible.
Perhaps she could be his friend. She turned to glance at him, and found him
already looking at her. She asked,
“What time is it?”
He looked down at his watch, then a smile crept
across his face as he replied, “It’s one o’clock.”
She jumped at the response and exclaimed, “In the morning!?”
He nodded, and she pushed herself away from the
stone railing and headed for the door.
“We’ve been out here for two hours!
We should be getting back...this doesn’t look good.”
“Doesn’t look good?” he repeated, following
her. She shook her head and felt her
cheeks get warm – that hadn’t come out sounding right.
“You know what I mean...we were supposed to be
clearing the place out, and then we stay up here talking for two hours? It’s not exactly fair.”
Upon saying this, she dropped her book. Bending quickly to pick it up, she
straighened and found him ahead of her.
Following his lead now, she almost crashed into his back as he stopped
abruptly in the doorway.
“Callahan,” James said, annoyed, “What do you think
you’re doing? It’s one o’clock in the
bloody morning!”
Lily tried to see over his shoulder, but he was too
tall. She assumed he was talking to a
student who had just shown up, and then she heard the boy’s voice answer
sarcastically, “Right, Potter...as if you’re any better. Head Boy or not...I’m sure you got
your time’s worth up here, as usual.”
Lily saw James’ back stiffen dangerously, and
before he had a chance to reply she sidestepped him and made herself
known. The boy – George Callahan – went
pale when he recognized her in the darkness.
“Oh...Lily.
I, uh...I didn’t see you...”
“You know,” she said, “We wouldn’t have to be here
at all if it weren’t for people like you who insist on coming up here
against school policy. Now, shall I
walk you down or can you find your own way back?”
He turned red now, and glanced at the
disappointed-looking girl he was with as he replied, “No...we’re going. Come on.”
Once they were gone, she turned and smiled at
James. “It’s a good thing we did
stay up here, I suppose...it wasn’t a total waste.”
But James didn’t seem all that enthusiastic...he
looked extremely uneasy. “Um...sorry
about that. He didn’t know what he was
talking about.”
He was taking it with less humor than she would
have expected – perhaps he thought she was offended. She smiled and replied, “Oh...don’t worry about it. We really should go, though...it’s late.”
He looked
at her for a moment, then nodded. They
walked back to the common room in relative silence, as if the conversation they
had just had had worn them both out.
For once, however, it was a comfortable silence that Lily didn’t feel
the need to fill. She once again
marvelled at how easy it was to be his friend...if that was indeed what she was
becoming.
~~
She woke up groggily the next morning to Arabella
shaking her shoulder.
“Come on...time to get up.”
Lily lifted her head from the pillow and threw a
look out the window at the overcast sky.
It looked like it was raining.
“What, already?”
Bella smirked and replied, “Yeah, already. We don’t want another episode like we had
last week, do we?”
Lily rolled her eyes and threw off her covers. Standing, she grabbed her uniform and robes
and headed for the showers. Once they
were all dressed, they went down to the Hall for breakfast. For the first time in days, Lily didn’t have
a nervous stomach and actually found herself to be hungry. As they walked to a spot at the table that
was clear, they passed James and his friends.
He looked up at Lily as she passed and gave her a small wave. She returned it with a small smile, and then
almost slammed right into Bella as she stopped suddenly.
“Let’s just sit here...end of the line,” she said,
seating herself on the bench at the very end of the table. Helen went to sit across from her, and Lily
followed. After she sat down and was
already eating a piece of toast, Bella asked, “So, you and Potter aren’t at
each others’ throats anymore, I see?”
Lily shook her head and replied, “No. We’re not.”
Arabella said nothing, just nodded. Lily had to
admit she felt better now that she and James had really talked, although the
sight of him still pricked her conscience a bit as she was reminded of the way
she had acted. She decided that it was
past, however, and that she shouldn’t dwell on it. Nor should she dwell on the fact that he still seemed preoccupied
with her. Later, at lunch, she found
herself hit with a strong fatigue, as usual.
She picked at her food, trying to do something with her hands so that it
would give her something to focus her attention on...but she couldn’t fight it. Her eyelids felt like they were made of
lead. As she heard the bell ring and
stood up with everyone else, feeling groggy and unhappy, she wondered if this
was ever going to end.
The
following day was Sunday, and Lily spent it sitting in the library reading her
newest book about charmwork. She had
spent the last couple of days pouring over it, as it was one of the most
interesting she had read yet. Truth be
told, she was getting a bit worried, as she had read almost every volume in the
charms section and quite a few from the defense shelves. What she was going to do when she was
through them all, she didn’t know...she didn’t really like to think about
it. Perhaps she’d ask Professor
Flitwick to give her a bit of extra instruction outside of class...between
that, Dumbledore’s class, and her reading, she was bound to get a good and
realistic feel for how the business of defense charms was carried out.
She
smiled slightly to herself...she never thought she’d see the day when she would
be using reading to pass time between other things. She reached to turn the page in her book
when suddenly it was snatched from her hand.
Looking up, startled, she found James standing there smirking at her. Lazily taking the seat across the table, he
remarked,
“So this
is what you’ve been doing all day. I
was beginning to think you’d been expelled or something.”
She
smiled at him and replied, “Expelled? I
should think I’d have to do something truly horrible to fall from being Head
Girl to being kicked out.
He
shrugged as he handed her back her book, his index finger still holding her
place. “Nothing’s impossible, right?”
She shook
her head at him, and he smiled back at her.
She had to admit that life progressed a lot easier with her newfound
determination to refrain from analyzing everything that everybody did. She had learned quickly in the past couple
of days that not everything was about her all the time, and she liked the
feeling of freedom it allowed her. On
top of that, she was quite enjoying the newfound comraderie she had with James
Potter...she found they truly seemed to enjoy each others’ company. It made her wonder constantly why they
hadn’t settled things years ago.
“What are
you doing in here?” she asked him as she marked her page with a scrap of
paper. He frowned, glanced around, and
replied,
“I don’t
know...I must have taken a wrong turn somewhere. I was looking for food.”
She
laughed...which she had been doing much more lately. Shooting him a look, she commented, “Hmm...yeah, you took the
wrong staircase. Better hurry, too...I
heard they’re serving pot pie for lunch.”
He
regarded her for a moment, then asked, “You haven’t eaten?”
She shook
her head in the negative, and he invited, “Want to walk down with me?”
She hesitated
for a moment...she was planning on trying to catch a half hour of sleep, as she
still wasn’t over her insomnia. He
seemed to read her mind and declared, “You’re not going back to the Tower.”
She
raised an eyebrow at him. “I’m not?”
“No,” he
said flatly and stood up, “And come to think of it, I think we should start
having the points meetings over lunch instead of in the evenings.”
“Why?”
she asked, indignation creeping into her voice despite her best efforts to
quell it. He seemed unconcerned as he
replied,
“Because
you can’t sleep through lunch every day.”
She
stared at him for a moment, then released the breath she’d been holding and
shook her head. “Well...that’s fine,
but that’s only one day a week. What
about the other four days of the work week?”
He shot
her a look and replied, “Maybe I’ll suddenly get really strict with
people. Triple the number of points I
give out.”
She
smiled and said, “But only to members of other houses, of course.”
He
grinned at her. “Well...I can’t help it
if Gryffindors are perfect.”
Lily
laughed and conceeded, “Just let me get my things together.”
He waited
in silence as she threw her books into her bag, and then she stood up. As they were walking out of the library, he
asked, “Where are your friends?”
She shrugged
and replied, “Probably off somewhere talking about what a bore I am.”
“You?” he
repeated, laughing, “Why?”
She
arched an eyebrow at him and replied, “What do you mean, ‘why’? Because I’ve spent the last two days in the
library reading when there were plenty of other things to do. Plus, I sleep through lunch...that’s
what a bore I am. Now you can pass
judgement accordingly.”
Chuckling,
he decided, “Nah...I think I’d better not at this point.”
They
walked in silence for a moment before he spoke again. “So...the book’s that good, huh?”
She
nodded enthusiastically and replied, “Oh, yes...the chapters fly by. Or, they seem to while you’re reading,
anyway.”
“Are
defense charms more complicated than regular charms, or is it just a matter of
a different type?” he inquired. She
felt her stomach do an excited little jump...no one had ever asked her about
this before. She would love to have
someone to talk about it with, but it seemed none of her friends felt qualified
to ask...well, except Bella, but she couldn’t burden her with everything.
“It
depends on the charm, but the main reason they aren’t available to the general
public is due to their power...you have to be specially trained.”
He nodded
thoughtfully, then asked, “So, none of these books actually tell you how to do
any of these charms?”
She shook
her head, and he blew out a breath before declaring, “I don’t think I could
live with that. I’d have to figure out
how to perform some of them.”
She
smiled and said, “Well...you’d probably get expelled.”
He
glanced at her and smiled a bit cryptically.
“You’d be surprised what rules you can break without getting expelled.”
“I would hope
I’d be surprised...but I’m beginning to think I wouldn’t. Anyway, it’s not a matter of what rules are
broken...it’s whether or not you can avoid getting caught.”
His smile
spread into a sly grin. “Ah...that’s
where the skill’s involved. That’s
where I excel.”
She
laughed and replied, “I’ll pretend I didn’t hear that.”
“Thanks.”
They
turned the corner and went through the Great Hall doors. Lily glanced around to find that Arabella and
Helen weren’t there yet, but Remus Lupin was sitting at the table waiting. He looked up and smiled pleasantly as he saw
them approaching. Lily took a seat a
little ways down from where he was sitting, and James slowed a bit as he
glanced across the table at her. To her
slight surprise, he straddled the bench across from her and started searching
through his bag for something.
“I just
remembered...I have a note to give you from McGonagall.”
“Oh?”
Lily asked, her eyebrows shooting up, “What is it?”
He sent
her a look and shook his head as he replied, “Don’t worry - I think it’s just a
list of things she wants us to get done before the end of the month...I got
one, too.”
She
nodded, and he handed her a roll of parchment across the table. Before she could take it, he pulled it just
out of her grasp and, with a smile, asked, “Where’s my thank you?”
She shot
him a mock glare and grabbed the parchment out of his hand. He laughed softly, and she said,
“Thanks
alot. Now, don’t you have people
waiting for you?”
“I should
think so.” The voice came from right
behind James, and Lily looked up in surprise to see that it was Arabella...but
Arabella didn’t look at all happy. She
was regarding James coldly, her eyebrow arched. Something told Lily that this wasn’t going to end well, but
before she could say anything, Bella continued in a voice dripping with
disdain, “Now...you’re in my seat.”
Even the
most horrible imbecile couldn’t have missed the animosity in her tone, and Lily
could feel herself going dark pink.
James, for his part, didn’t say anything...but after he got over his
initial surprise at her sudden and harsh interruption, his eyes narrowed into
dangerous slits as he matched Arabella’s intense stare. Her eyebrows going up now, Arabella changed
her expression to one of feigned unconcern.
“So,” she
said expectantly, “Goodbye.”
If there
had been a way to shut Arabella up without killing her, Lily would have done
it. As it was, the damage was
done...James looked as furious as Lily had ever seen him look. His jaw was set, and his brows were drawn
together in a dark frown. The hate
generated from each of them was palpable...but it wasn’t a heated dislike. It was cold and unemotional, and more a
battle of wills than anything else. She
watched James closely...Arabella was a spitfire and occasional loudmouth, but
Lily knew that James was more than a match for her in that regard. She had been on the receiving end of his
razor-sharp tongue and quick-witted condescension too many times to count, and
there was absolutely no doubt in her mind that if he wanted to, he could cut
Arabella down...although it would be a close fight.
Instead,
he remained stonily silent...and she knew that the only thing preventing him
from responding the way he probably wanted to was his fear of offending
Lily. If Bella had been anyone but
Lily’s best friend, she would have had her head bitten off by now. After what seemed like a million unbearable
years, James stood...slowly, almost insolently, to his full height. Arabella didn’t flinch. Finally breaking eye contact with her, he
looked at Lily and his features visibly softened, although they remained tense.
“I’ll see
you later, okay?”
She
nodded mutely, and watched uncomfotably as he walked away. As soon as he was sitting with his friends
and well out of earshot, she leaned across the table and hissed, “Why did you do
that?”
Arabella
narrowed her eyes at Lily, obviously having expected a negative reaction of
some kind. Leaning back slightly,
almost as if she wanted Lily to have to raise her voice to be heard, she
replied calmly, “I just don’t want him to get too comfortable, that’s all.”
“All this
work I’ve been doing in the past week to get this relationship to a place where
we can at least be at ease around each other, and you’re about to ruin the
whole thing!”
Bella
leaned in then until they were almost nose to nose over the table. “Relationship...is that what it is now? What are you...friends, all of a
sudden? Look, I know what it’s like to
lose sight of reality when you’re wrapped up in a situation...believe me, I
do. I’ll not have you taken advantage
of...you’re still really vulnerable, you know.”
“What?”
Lily repeated, unable to believe she was having this conversation. Bella arched an eyebrow at her and said,
“Well, you
are.”
Lily
shook her head, “Look, thanks for looking out for me, but...well, leave me
alone!”
Bella
snorted, and Lily continued, “I know you don’t like him, but you have to admit
that he’s been very good to me lately.
Bella...come on. You can’t deny
that.”
Bella
rolled her eyes and glanced over at where James was sitting with his friends,
and Lily could see grudging agreement in her blue eyes.
“So,”
Lily finally interrupted Arabella’s thoughts, “Just leave him be,
alright?”
Bella
shrugged and stabbed her fork into a cherry tomato. “I just don’t want him getting big ideas about himself, that’s
all. He has a big enough head without
thinking that you need him desperately.”
“He
doesn’t think that. Besides, I can take
care of myself, Bella...I’m not made of glass, and you should know that,
of all people.”
Bella
merely sat there studying her for a long time, and Lily didn’t look away from
her scrutiny. She needed Bella to be
able to trust her to make her own decisions, to have faith in her when so many
people didn’t. If her best friend
didn’t believe in her ability to think rationally, then she didn’t know how she
would build enough confidence to face the world every day. Finally, Bella sighed.
“Alright...alright,
fine. But I still don’t like him.”
Lily smiled.
“That’s alright. You don’t have
to like him.”
They went
through the rest of the day without incident, and despite Lily’s worry, it
didn’t seem that James was holding any kind of grudge against her. He grinned at her on the way out of Charms,
and she smiled back at him and shook her head, hoping he would take it as it
was meant...as a kind of apology for what happened earlier. He gave her a little shrug to show her he
took her meaning and that he wasn’t angry...and left her to marvel at what was
possible to communicate without words.
She turned at the familiar voice and found
Professor Dumbledore standing not five feet away from her. He smiled, and she returned it. Every time she saw the headmaster now, she
ws reminded of the day he persuaded her to get out of bed and meet the world
once again after her parents died. She
would be eternally grateful to him for it, and she didn’t like to think about
what might have happened if she had been allowed to go on in the state she was
in for much longer.
“Yes, Professor?”
He beckoned to her and said quietly, “I wondered if
you’d join me in my office for a moment before you go down to dinner. It won’t take long.”
She shrugged at Bella and Helen, and then followed
him to the doorway to his office. When
she walked inside, she found she had to take a calming breath. The sight of the room made her
heartsore...the last time she was in here was when she had found out about her
Mum and Dad. Swallowing hard, she
walked up to Dumbledore’s desk and stood, unsure of whether or not she should
sit down. He walked to the other side
of the desk and bent down, lifting something from the floor. Lily watched as he set a brown box in front
of her, then stepped back and regarded her with soft eyes.
“Lily...I received this in the mail earlier this
morning. It was accompanied by a note
from your sister, explaining that it was intended for you. That I was to give it to you.”
Lily started.
For her?
“What is it, Professor?” she asked as she studied
the box, even though it was closed. He
shook his head slowly and replied,
“I don’t know, Lily. I didn’t open it, and the letter didn’t explain further...I’m
merely the messenger in this case.”
“Oh, of course,” she murmered, feeling silly. Why would Dumbledore want to open a package
meant for her? She wondered briefly why
Petunia had sent it to the school rather than just addressing it to her
personally, but then she grimaced to herself as she realized it was probably to
avoid a response on Lily’s part.
Pushing the thought away, she looked up at the Headmaster as though
waiting for further instruction. He
smiled slightly and said,
“I imagine you’re eager to see what’s inside. Go on...but don’t forget to eat dinner. My sources tell me it’s good tonight.”
She smiled faintly and thanked him before she took
the box and walked out of his office, her stomach churning at the thought of
what might be inside. She had a fairly
good idea about what it probably amounted to, but she was afraid of being
correct. Wanting to open it without
having to deal with the prying questions and staring eyes of anyone else, she
carried the surprisingly lightweight parcel outside. It was a lovely April day, and the weather was just right for a
picnic. Lily walked all the way out to
her favorite reading tree and knelt beneath it, placing the box carefully in
front of her. Taking another deep
breath, she opened the top and peered inside.
It was exactly what she had thought it would be,
and she felt her throat go dry as she plunged a shaking hand carefully
inside. Her fingers encountered an
envelope, and she opened it with wary eyes.
It was from Petunia, and it contained a note and what looked to be quite
a bit of money.
Here is your half of what the
property and what was left of the furniture brought in. I’ve also sent along some of the things we
were able to salvage that belonged to you – there’s not much. Everything else is gone.
~
Petunia
Lily
sighed, blinking back the stinging in her eyes...she knew her sister didn’t
expect a response. Pocketing the
envelope for examination later, she reached into the box again. The first thing she pulled out was a
frame...which just happened to have a picture in it. She turned it over and looked at the smiling faces, and they soon
blurred as her eyes welled up with tears.
Her mother stared up at her, her youthful face the epitome of
contentment...and wrapped in her arms was Lily herself. She was still practically a baby in this
picture...a chubby toddler with red curls.
They were sitting on the rocking chair that had belonged to Lily’s
grandmother...she remembered rocking on that chair as she watched her Mum get
dressed for the occasional dinner party.
They would talk about various things, from birds to shoes to the ocean
to Daddy. Mum would let her try on
every piece of jewelry that was in her box, and Lily would pretend she was a
grown-up movie star with ten strings of beads around her neck at once. Her mother would laugh...she had a musical
laugh. Lily smiled just remembering
it...she could almost hear it now, carried on the wind.
Setting the picture aside, she reached in again and
pulled out a book...and this one had nothing to do with defense charms. It was the collection of fairy tales that
had been her bedtime story staple for all her young life. The pages were yellowed and the cover was
beaten and worn...but the pictures had somehow remained as vibrant as the day
it was published. She flipped through,
memories flooding back to her as she remembered lying between her parents on
their big bed as they read to her and Petunia.
Cinderella’s dress, Snow White’s apple, Jack’s beanstalk...they were all
there, illustrated in full color, exactly as she remembered them. She turned to the inside of the front cover,
and read the inscription for what must have been the hundredth time in her
life.
To Lily ~
We hope
your life will always be filled with princes, palaces, and magic...and NO evil
stepmothers!
Happy
Birthday and Love Always,
Mum and
Dad
She smiled and sniffed slightly...the message had never
meant more than it did at this moment.
She decided that before she read anything else about anything,
she was going to read that book from cover to cover, starting when she got into
bed that night. With that resolution in
mind, she set the book carefully in the grass beside her and reached into the
box again. This time, she retrieved
something that had belonged to her father...a tie. It wasn’t just any tie, but the tie that Lily had given him for
Christmas when she was eight years old...and as she looked at it now, she
realized it was the most atrocious thing she’d ever laid eyes on in her
life. Laughing to herself, she recalled
how Dad had put it on right over his pajamas...and he didn’t remove it for the rest
of the day. Not once...and he’d worn it
to every family function for years after that, telling people proudly that a
beautiful girl had given it to him.
Then he’d wink at her, and she’d smile at their little inside joke. Intimidating as he sometimes was to other
people, with his booming voice and large stature, she had never personally been
able to see how anyone could fear him.
She sighed and gazed out at the lake for a moment,
swiping lightly at the tears which now ran silently down her cheeks...the
twinkle in his blue eyes had rivaled that of Dumbledore’s. His eyes were always the last thing she saw
before falling asleep at night, and it made her feel completely and utterly
safe. She was never even afraid of the
dark, knowing her father was sleeping in the next room. She closed her eyes and tried to picture
them once again...and found that it was shockingly easy.
She couldn’t believe they were gone. She still couldn’t fully accept it...she
hadn’t seen a funeral. She hadn’t been
to a burial...she hadn’t even been able to look upon the ruins of her
house. It was all so surreal...and she
couldn’t help thinking wildly sometimes that perhaps it had all been a
mistake. They would be there when she
finally finished school, just as she always imagined they would be.
It was wishful thinking, and it was silly. She knew it...but she couldn’t seem to talk
herself out of thinking it
sometimes. She sat out there with that
box for what must have been hours, spending ample time examining every trinket,
every piece of jewelry, every book, every picture. This smallish box was all she had left...and she cherished every
single solitary thing in it. Finally,
she looked up and realized suddenly that it was dark now...she had no idea what
time it was. Sighing, she gathered
everything carefully together and walked back to the light of the castle. When she got to the portrait hole, the Fat
Lady scanned her face and asked,
“Are you alright, dear?”
Strangely, she felt better than she had in
months. Stepping through the portrait
hole, however, the feeling of optimism abruptly drained away...James and his
friends were sitting at a table playing cards.
They were the only ones in there.
They looked up, and seemed quite taken aback to see her. James’ eyes ran over her face, and she
belatedly realized that she should have gone to the bathroom and washed herself
up...she probably looked like she’d had a good cry. He frowned slightly and asked,
“Is everything okay?”
She decided she might as well dispel any notions
the others might have about scattering and leaving her alone with James right
then, so she gave what she hoped looked like a bright look and replied,
“Yeah...everything’s fine.”
Hoisting the box up on her hip, she saw Sirius
Black glance at it and decided it would be better if she just went to bed...but
somehow, she couldn’t bring herself to go up there. She knew Arabella was asleep, and she knew the dorm was dark and
uninviting...at least to her. Looking
awkwardly around, she chose a chair in the far corner of the room and went to
it, thankful that she had the book she’d been reading to give her a reason to
stay. In between bouts of reading it
over the following hour or so, she listened inattentively to the progress of
their game. After they had apparently
lost most of their sickles to Remus, Sirius yawned loudly and said,
“Enough...this is getting pathetic, now.
I’m going to bed before I gamble away my entire savings.”
Peter agreed, and Remus stood with a sly
smile. “Quitter.”
Sirius shot him a glare and growled, “Cheater.”
“Bed,” Peter reminded, heading off to the staircase. The other two followed...and soon Lily was left once again with James. Rather than following his friends upstairs, he walked right over to where she was sitting and sat himself down on a chair across from hers. She couldn’t help feeling relieved as she smiled at him a bit awkwardly...she didn’t want him to thi