***Hi! I'm
sorry that I took so long to post, I've just been swamped. I suddenly went
from a part-time slacker to
a full-timer
with all sorts of responsibilities and it's taking me a little while to
adjust. Anyhoo... I know that some of
you have been
worried that I'm not going to finish this fic. Let me assure you that I
will... it just might take a while.
Their Room
by
aleximoon
Chapter
20
Pansy's
News
The last of
the snow had finally melted away. The winter season was coming to an end
and everyone knew that
spring was
beginning its tentative approach. However, winter had yet to give up it's
grasp of the Hogwarts' grounds.
The light
that was streaming through the trees did little to warm the air. A frigid
chill hung about them and yet Draco
was enjoying
himself.
"Here, try it this way." He turned Hermione's wrist so that her wand angled to the right. "Now say it again."
Hermione looked
nonplussed and repeated the spell. Her voice lilted musically over the
words that seemed like they
should be
sung instead of spoken. A green mist, more like a haze than anything else
shot from the end of her wand
and permeated
the ground at her feet. They held their mutual breaths and watched as tiny
shoots of green grass began
to spring
up around her boots. As they continued to watch in awe, the little sprigs
of grass withered away to dull
brown bits.
"It's sad,"
Hermione spoke after a moment, "We give them a push to live but it's just
too cold out. I feel like I've
betrayed them
somehow."
Draco looked at her in amusement, "Hermione, it's just a bit of grass."
Hermione glared
at him halfheartedly and sat down on a large rock. Several books and scrolls
of parchment were
scattered
around her. Draco watched as she pulled off her glove and dug through her
bag looking for a quill. She
groaned in
frustration and began to dig even deeper.
Draco felt
in his robe and pulled a black quill out of one pocket. "Here," he called
tossing it to her. "What are you
doing anyway?"
"I'm writing it down on the `useful spell' list."
"Didn't seem
that useful to me," Draco looked down at the ancient book in his hand and
the notes that he had made
himself. "All
it did was make some grass grow."
"Honestly,"
Hermione looked up at him in consternation. "If it doesn't set something
on fire or go boom you think that
it's useless.
Really, all boys are the same, Gryffindor and Slytherin."
"That's not
true," Draco, countered, "I liked that one spell that you did earlier,
you know, the one that almost sucked
your robe
right off."
Hermione blushed
darkly and looked away. "But really, this is a very important spell if
it can make plants grow faster.
Can't you
just imagine what Professor Sprout could do with a spell like this?"
Draco was still
smiling about the memory of Hermione almost losing her robes. "I suppose
so, if she could make her
plants grow
faster then I suppose that you wouldn't have had to spend so much time
in the hospital wing our second
year."
Hermione looked up in surprise, "how did you know that was in the hospital wing?"
"Well everyone
knew. Virtually the whole school was in a panic over that whole `heir of
Slytherin' thing." A nostalgic
smile flitted
across Draco's face.
Hermione looked at him in annoyance.
"Well it's always good to keep tabs on your enemies." Draco said.
Hermione crossed her arms over her chest and gave him a penetrating gaze.
"Now don't
get any ideas, it isn't as if I liked you then or anything." Draco added
nervously. The way that she was
staring was
beginning to make him very uneasy.
"Do you like me now?" Hermione was still watching him with that penetrating gaze but her voice had gotten very quiet.
Draco stared
at her with mouth agape and tried to think of something to say. He couldn't
just come out and say that
he liked her,
could he? He was never entirely sure. Draco knew that he thought about
her often, but was that what she
was asking?
"I think we should try this one next." He said standing up suddenly, a book clenched tightly in his hand.
Hermione looked
away from him quickly and nodded. Draco turned away from her and started
to recite the spell in
his head over
and over again. He tried very had not to notice that the smile that Hermione
had been wearing virtually
all day was
gone now and her eyes, that had been brilliant and open, were now guarded.
Draco was inwardly
kicking himself. He never knew what to say. Around most girls he was the
epitome of calm and
collectedness,
but with Hermione he often felt that he could never get his foot of his
mouth. But what did she expect,
really? That
he would just kneel down and confess undying love or some other such nonsense?
Draco would rather
kiss a blast-ended
skrewt then do any of that ridiculous romantic stuff that Pansy had always
wanted. And now
Hermione was
asking him to do the same thing. Wasn't she? Draco wasn't sure what she
wanted. He grumbled
lightly in
frustration.
Hermione sat
back down and began looking through her notes. "Yes, I suppose we can try
that one if you want.
What does
the translation say about it?"
With relief Draco read from his notes, "holding green".
"That's your translation?" Hermione crossed her arms over her chest. "Not very explicit is it?"
"Well the ink
on that page was splotchy." Draco argued in his defense. "And we'll find
out what it does in just a minute
anyway." He
added quickly as Hermione gave him a look that resembled Professor McGonagall
a bit too closely.
Draco pulled
his wand from his pocket and looked around for a suitable target. Next
to the rock that Hermione was
perched on
was a small, dried up bush that hadn't survived the harsh winter. Draco
smirked slightly and pointed his
wand at it.
"Inligo!"
For a moment
nothing happened. There was no shot of light from the wand, no shower of
sparks, nothing. Draco
frowned. Then
there was a sudden noise and the bush twitched. Hermione's eyes widened
and she watched it
distrustfully.
This was very wise of her because it gave another twitch and then sprouted
out in every direction. Dead,
bare branches
reached every which way. Hermione gasped and scrambled up the rock. The
crawling branches
followed her
and grasped her ankle. Hermione struggled to free her foot but it seemed
impossible. More branches
were reaching
thirstily for her and she cried out in fear.
"Finite! Finite Incantateum!" Draco cried out as he rushed forward to help having finally come to his senses.
The shrubbery
stopped its dire advance but did not retreat. It laid still and dead once
again. Hermione tried to wrench
her foot out
of its grasp, but even though the branches appeared to be brittle, she
found it quite impossible.
"Here," Draco
pulled a small black object from his pocket which turned out to be a little
folded up knife. He easily cut
the dry bough
and helped Hermione off of her rock.
"You have a knife?" She asked.
"Lucius always
thought it best to be prepared for anything. You never know when you might
be without your wand
and come across
an excellent opportunity to use it on..." Hermione's eyes narrowed and
Draco changed topics
immediately.
"Well that was certainly some spell wasn't it?"
"Oh yes very, I loved how the bush tried to eat me, very invigorating." Hermione snapped.
"Not to worry,
it couldn't have eaten you, hasn't got a mouth. Would have just pulled
you in and let you expire due to
exposure to
the elements." Draco grinned.
"That's very
comforting Draco." Hermione glared at him but could only maintain her frown
for a moment before she
smiled back
at him.
Hermione began
to brush the remnants of dry twigs from the hem of her robe but stopped
and then frowned. A
distant rumble
of voices could be heard approaching. Draco watched as she climbed back
onto the rock and peered
cautiously
over the edge. Hermione ducked back and scurried down the rock, pulling
her backpack with her.
"What're you doing?" Draco asked.
"Shh... They'll
hear you." Hermione was putting things away in a rather haphazard manner.
She finished and grabbed
Draco's arm,
pulling him behind her. The voices were becoming clearer.
"Who's going to hear?"
"Ron and Harry,
they're coming this way." Hermione pulled Draco behind a great tree a few
paces into the Forbidden
Forest.
"So what? Wonder-boy
Potter and that friend of his know that we spend time together. Or are
they that slow that it's
just now sinking
in?" Draco felt oddly insulted. He didn't feel like hiding from Potter
or Weasley.
Hermione, who
had been peering around the great trunk, turned back to glare at him. "Of
course they know, but after
that incident
in the hospital wing, I've been trying to avoid reminding them." She told
him. "Although I think that Ron
has just simply
repressed the memory to tell you the truth." She muttered.
"Incident?
What do you mean incident? You make it sound like it was nothing more than
getting an answer wrong on
your homework."
Draco glared at her, insulted.
"It's not that big of deal." She whispered, the sound of footsteps could now be heard.
"Not that big
of a deal? Of course not, your amazing little friends catch you kissing
the enemy all the time. I'll bet they
were thrilled,
probably even threw you a party because you proved that you aren't nearly
the good little girl that
everyone thinks
you are." Draco was furious now.
"Draco please," Hermione whispered desperately, "they're going to hear you."
"I don't care!"
He snapped. Draco grabbed her arms and shoved her against the tree. He
was so angry he could barely
see her. He
brought his mouth down upon hers hungrily. His hands squeezed her upper
arms tightly and he pressed
hard against
her, roughly pushing her. A distant part of his mind could hear Potter
and Weasley in conversation as they
past only
a few feet away. But Draco didn't let go of Hermione. He pressed harder,
kissing her in much the same way
that he had
the very first time. She whimpered against him and Draco suddenly stopped.
He let go. Draco stepped
back slowly
and looked at her.
Hermione was
still pressed to the tree; her eyes were wide and fearful. Draco's mouth
fell open as he realized what
he had done.
He had pulled the clasp of her robe completely off and the dark cloth lay
askew on her shoulders. The
red and yellow
sweater that she wore under it was disheveled. He hadn't known that hands
were wandering. That his
hands had
been roaming over her. Draco's eyes returned to hers and found that they
were flooding with tears. He
wanted to
say something, anything that would stop them but his mouth had gone dry.
A tear slid
down her cheek leaving a glistening trail in its wake and Hermione took
a deep, ragged breath through
bruised lips.
She pulled away from the tree and edged slowly around Draco, careful not
to touch him. Once she was
past him she
warily picked her bag up and backed away from him a few more steps before
turning and sprinting back
to the school.
Draco watched
her go unable to say what he needed to say. Unable to tell her that he
was sorry. That he hadn't
meant too.
He returned
to the large rock where they had been practicing and sat dejectedly on
it. He could almost pretend that
she was still
here and that the last few minutes hadn't happened. It was a much more
pleasant thought than knowing
that she was
somewhere far away in Gryffindor Tower hating him. Draco stood up and began
pacing. Really, he had
manhandled
her like he was some type of lovesick teenager. There were many things
that Malfoys did and did not
do. Acting
lovesick, or like a teenager were both taboo. But there he had been, pawing
at a girl without a care as to
what others
might think, let alone Hermione. And to make everything worse, he had been
so angry at the given
moment that
he could hardly remember it properly. There were his hands holding her
arms, then sliding up onto her
shoulders
and then down again. Draco stopped pacing and stared up at the distant
school with a slight look of awed
surprise.
"She's never going to forgive me for that," he said aloud.
The next several
days were long and gray. Time seemed to tick by in increasingly larger
intervals. The sky had
opened up
and the rain seemed that it was never going to stop. Not that rain affected
the dungeons any. It was always
rather cold
and drafty. The stone walls of the Slytherin dorms were damp and a faint
trace of mildew always seemed
present on
the air no matter what the house elves did to get rid of it.
None of this
was helping Draco's dire mood. He sat in a high-backed chair brooding at
the fireplace. He had spent
the early
part of the morning amusing himself by summoning the homework out of passing
first years' bags, but after
an hour, that
had lost its appeal. Crabbe and Goyle had wanted to go flying. Only they
would be dense enough to try
and fly in
weather like this. Part of Draco was hoping that a strong gust of wind
from the south would blow them
away, but
he doubted that he would ever be so lucky.
What he really
would like to be doing at the moment would be to sit somewhere warm and
dry with Hermione
Granger. He
would be happy to just sit somewhere quite with her and read, or discuss
Potions homework, or hell,
she could
glare at him if that's what she wanted to do. Draco glowered darkly at
the fireplace; he always hated it
when she avoided
him. And he hadn't the slightest idea how she managed to be so good at
it either. They had
classes together,
they were doing a project together, and he went out of his way to try and
corner her somewhere
alone. But
the blasted Gryffindor seemed to know every twist and turn of the school
and she used it to her advantage
every time,
slipping quietly down some hall and then doubling back in the crowd. Or,
as if that wasn't bad enough,
she would
constantly surround herself with other Gryffindors. Some of them she didn't
even like. Draco knew for
a fact that
Hermione could barely stand that Lavender Brown girl and yet just the other
day, when he had finally
caught up
to her in the library, she had sat down at a table with Brown to discuss
Divination. Draco laughed
derisively;
he knew that she loathed that class.
"Something wrong Draco?" A syrupy sweet voice whispered near his ear.
Draco didn't
start; he sat completely still, pretending that he had known of someone
sneaking up on him. "What do
you want Pansy?"
The blonde
Slytherin slide into the chair next to Draco's. She crossed her legs slowly
and brushed a crease out of her
robe. Her
blue eyes glinted mischievously when they met his.
"I just wanted to offer my condolences, I just heard." She leaned forward and placed a cool hand atop his.
Draco made no comment; he knew that if he waited Pansy would simply tell him what she was going on about.
Pansy's smile did not waver and she tightened her grip on his hand, "if you need anyone to talk to..."
For one wild
moment Draco thought that perhaps she was alluding to Hermione, but he
knew that was impossible.
"What are
you talking about?" He asked sourly.
"What? Don't
you know?" Pansy's smile left her face but her eyes were twinkling merrily,
she was enjoying this
conversation.
"No of course you wouldn't know. How silly of me to forget, you burn all
the letters that your father
sends you."
Draco stiffened
and glared at her sharply. He always made sure that he was alone when he
destroyed his letters.
Pansy must
be spying on him.
"Oh Draco,
I don't know if I'm the one who should be telling you this, but your mother
is sick." Pansy struggled not
to smile as
she said this.
"You're lying,"
he said simply, struggling to not strangle Pansy with his bare hands until
she told him everything that
she knew.
"Oh Draco,"
she whispered softly, feigning hurt. "I would never lie to you. Remember,
our mothers go to Rue De
Champs every
year in Paris, but not this year. Your father told my mother that Narcissa
is very sick and is seeing
a specialist
in St. Mungos."
Draco didn't
say anything; he knew perfectly well that his mother and Mrs. Parkinson
went Paris every spring for
a week of
shopping. They had been doing it for years and his mother would rather
die than miss it. Pansy was still
sitting with
him, her hand delicately draped over his, a small smile pulling at the
corners of her mouth. She was
enjoying this,
she liked seeing him upset. Draco had always considered Pansy to be shallow
and brainless, a little
on the malicious
side but she was a Slytherin after all. But for the first time, Draco could
see something else in her,
a shrewd cruelness
that had somehow escaped his notice.
"Is there anything
that I can do?" She asked softly. Her voice was kind and gentle; it was
the type of voice that had
never come
from Pansy before.
"No," Draco
said standing up abruptly; he knew who he needed to talk too, even if he
was going to have to use a
stunning spell
on her first.
"But Draco..."
Pansy's voice trailed off as he left the common room. She waited until
he was gone before sinking
back into
her chair a triumphant giggle escaping her lips.
It wasn't that
he was close to his mother. But Draco did care for her. She was his mother
after all, and you only get
one of those.
She did spend most of her time away from the Manor with friends or shopping.
There was the club
that they
belonged to where she greatly enjoyed playing, ponticulus with Pansy's
mother. But she'd had a lot to put
up with, being
married to Lucius, and looking back on it, Draco doubted that he was the
easiest son to raise. He
didn't want
her to be sick.
The school
was buzzing with students about to start their mid-afternoon lessons. Draco
had been planning on
feigning sickness
and spending his afternoon sulking in the common room. Now he was starting
to feel strangely ill
and he couldn't
find Hermione.
"Where the bloody hell is she?" He muttered under his breath.
She should
be coming up the hall any minute now to go to Transfiguration, but so far
he hadn't seen her. Gryffindors
were pushing
past him, watching him warily, but he paid them no mind, she had appeared
at the end of the hall. She
was walking
with Potter and Weasley.
Draco walked forward to meet them, "I need to talk to you." He said quickly.
Hermione stared at him in surprise and Potter and Weasley both glared.
"I don't think
that's such a good idea Malfoy," she said quietly, glancing around at the
other Gryffindors who had
stopped milling
about and were now watching with a keen interest.
"I need to talk to you now." Draco said firmly, an edge of some distant panic seeping into his voice.
"Go away Malfoy, she doesn't have anything to say to you." Potter said coldly.
Draco didn't
have to look around to know that he was in hostile territory, he was surrounded
by Gryffindors, but he
needed her.
"I wasn't talking to you Potter," he hissed coldly.
"Go away Draco," Hermione tried to push past him but Draco grabbed her arm and jerked her back.
There were shouts from Potter and Weasley and the other Gryffindors were sputtering with rage.
"Please," Draco whispered, "please, I need to talk to you."
Hermione's
eyes widened and for a moment Draco thought that she was going to simply
walk away. In what seemed
like forever
but was only a breath she finally nodded.
"All right," she whispered, seemingly surprised by his ferocity and by her own surrender.
There was rush
of whispered voices amongst the people watching and Draco tightened his
grip on her arm afraid
that she might
change her mind and bolt into the classroom after all. Potter and Weasley
were glaring at him but they
made no move
to stop him as Draco pulled Hermione past them and away from the Transfiguration
hall. People
were staring,
of course, as he pushed the gawkers out of his way. By the time he had
found an empty classroom,
Hermione's
face was red from a deep blush.
"I hope that
you have a good reason for all of this." She snapped angrily as the door
shut behind them and they were
alone.
Now that he
had her, Draco didn't quite know what to say. As he looked into her fierce
russet eyes he was suddenly
unsure of
why it had been so important to talk to her.
"Well? I do
have a class to be at you know. We're studying Devoveo spells today and
I just know that they're going
to be on the
exam." Hermione sat on a desk and crossed her arms, glaring at him.
Draco turned
away and looked at the large window that took up most of the back wall.
It was still raining softly, the
humidity making
the window steam up slightly at the edges even though it was still very
cold outside. It was a
dissatisfying
rain.
"Well?" Hermione's already thin bit of patience was about out.
"My mother might be sick." Draco said softly.
Hermione uncrossed his arms and stared at him, "What? How do you know?"
Draco turned
and faced her, "Pansy told me, she let it slip," he said derisively. "Probably
thought it was some grand
game."
Hermione stood
up and walked over to him, "well just because Pansy told you doesn't mean
that it's true. She's
probably lying.
And besides, if your mother was sick Professor Dumbledore would tell you."
"Of course he would." Draco told her sarcastically. "He's known for being open and straight-forward about things."
"He would tell you. I know that he would." She said softly, and reached out to touch his arm.
Draco stepped
back from her, just out of reach. "Tell me Granger, has the amazing Headmaster
ever told you what
was wrong
with precious Potter when the wonder boy ended up in the hospital wing?"
"That's not fair," she snapped and pulled her hand back. "This has nothing to do with Harry."
"Everything
has to do with Harry and your silly ideals." Draco didn't even know why
he was saying these things. He
couldn't stop
the emotion that was dying to pour out of him any way that could.
"Was there something that you wanted Malfoy?" Hermione's voice was low and professional.
"No, I didn't want anything from you." He hissed.
"Fine," she turned and opened the door.
Draco turned
back and stared out the window, the afternoon landscape was lost in a dark,
gray mist that looked like
he felt. He
was suddenly very tired and wished that he had just stayed in his common
room by his fire.
He didn't hear
her turn back or approach, but quite suddenly, a pair of delicate arms
had wrapped around him from
behind. He
stiffened automatically but breathed out in relief when he felt Hermione
press her cheek against his
shoulder blade.
"It will be
all right you know," she murmured.
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