***Okay, here
it is…. A new chapter. Woo-Hoo….I’m excited. Well the way things
are looking; I might
actually finish
this fic in about three chapters. I know I can’t believe it either. I
just want to say thanks to
Vegeta (my
beta-reader) who I very impatiently called on his cell phone to demand
that he go home and
read this
new chapter right away because he isn’t allowed to have a life. And also
to Kenzie, alleycat739,
and terentia
whom have all shown quite an interest in my fic. (
Their Room
by
aleximoon
Chapter
24
Mounting
Coincidences
Reading it
again didn’t help. The spell was right here, even the research that he
did which led up to it was here for
all the world
to see. The methodical mind of a genius spell crafter was displayed in
all it’s glory across the antique
pages of the
dirty little book that Hermione had uncovered. Not that Draco was very
concerned with who had or
had not created
the killing curse. Someone had to eventually, and if hadn’t been O’Leary,
then it would have been
someone else.
No, what Draco found disturbing was the way that the young brown haired
girl who looked so
much like
Hermione sat at the far end of the room. But it wasn’t his Hermione who
sat without looking at anything
at all, who
sat like someone that had been exposed to dementors for a long period of
time. Hermione wasn’t empty.
Draco had gone
to Azkaban once, back in his third year. It had somehow leaked back to
Lucius how frightened
Draco had
been of the dementors that guarded the school. Lucius had always believed
that the best way to surmount
a fear, if
one allowed himself to have a fear, was to confront it. So over the Christmas
holiday, Draco and Lucius had
traveled to
the wizarding prison to ground out his fear. There had been no pity in
him for the prisoners there, and why
should there
have been? If they were so incompetent that they allowed themselves to
be caught then they deserved
whatever the
Dementors had in store for them. In fact, it was the last time Draco could
remember feeling a rush of
pride for
Lucius. The man had avoided imprisonment and was now a respected member
of the community; Draco
could appreciate
the man’s ability for avoiding trouble.
“Hermione?” Draco asked.
The girl didn’t move, didn’t acknowledge that he had even spoken. Draco scowled; he hated being ignored.
“Oh come
on Granger,” he drawled, “it’s not the end of the world. So the old
coot created the killing curse. Big
deal! But
you look like someone just told you your cat died.”
Hermione flinched
and Draco took that as a promising sign and continued. “It isn’t as
if our old hermit is a super
villain. Bloody
hell, in the book I’ve been translating all he does is go on and on about
repentance this and salvation
that. I’ve
read pages upon pages of this self-loathing diatribe. If I had created
such a powerful spell, I wouldn’t be
ashamed of
it. I would be proud.”
“I’ll bet you would too.”
It was the
first time she had spoken in almost an hour and Draco had to fight against
the superior smirked that wanted
to break across
his face. Hermione had turned in her seat now and was glaring at him.
“I’m sure
that you’d love to lay claim to a curse that has killed countless thousands.”
Her voice was sharp, cutting.
And Draco
found the pleasure of his success quickly dwindling.
“It’s not the curse itself you know, it’s the wizards who use it.” Draco responded with equal bite.
“Oh of course,
the curse itself isn’t to blame. In fact, we shouldn’t even call it
the killing curse should we? No, how
about we call
it the harmless fluffy bunny curse; use it at parties, amaze all your friends!”
Hermione stood up and
jerked her
bag onto her shoulder with a furious flourish. She headed to the door and
then stopped to shoot back
over her shoulder
at him, “I’m sure that Harry would find it very comforting to know
that his parents weren’t really
murdered by
that spell!”
Draco was up
and across the room with amazing speed. He slammed the door shut before
Hermione could get past
him and turned
to her, his hand pressed firmly against the door, his face only inches
from her own. “First off,” he
hissed angrily,
“I don’t give a damn about perfect, wonderful, glorious Potter!”
Hermione recoiled
and Draco’s tone softened as he continued, “and he would have just
found another way. If
Voldemort
didn’t have Avada Kedavra, he would have just used some other spell.
You know that, don’t you? It
isn’t as
if Tom Riddle would have grown up to be your average, all around nice guy
if O’Leary hadn’t created
that spell.”
“I know that,”
she whispered softly, “but that doesn’t make it any better.” Hermione
then placed a pale hand on his
shoulder,
gently pushed him aside, and left the room.
Draco wandered
the halls aimlessly, his mind elsewhere. He chuckled gutturally to himself.
“Who would have thought
it?” He
muttered in the noiseless walkway. He was still reveling over the knowledge
that the person whose work he
had spent
most of the school year interpreting, translating, and transcribing, was
the author of such a well-known
curse. Draco
never would have given old Gregorius so much credit.
Draco wasn’t
thrilled over how upset Hermione had gotten when she discovered it, but
then, she was a bit on the
self-righteous
side. And Draco didn’t doubt that she would be able to get past it.
He grinned
at nothing in particular, now that he was away from Hermione and not being
biased by her obvious
distaste for
anything having to do with the dark arts, Draco was finding the whole thing
rather amusing. And O’Leary
had suddenly
become much more interesting.
Footsteps could
now be heard coming up the corridor from behind and Draco turned to look
back, thinking for a
minute that
maybe Hermione had calmed down a bit. But it turned out to only be Goyle.
Draco stopped and waited
for the other
boy, telling himself firmly that he wasn’t disappointed that it was Goyle
and not Hermione. But the lie
became more
flimsy every time he used it, which seemed to be an awful lot now a days.
“Draco,”
Goyle said after taking a moment to catch his breath, “Draco, a letter’s
come, from your father. Pansy said
that you’d
want to know.”
Draco nodded
mutely and headed back the way Goyle had appeared, not waiting for the
other Slytherin who was
clutching
a pain in his side, exhausted from the obvious exertion of climbing a nearby
flight of stairs.
So Lucius had
responded to Draco’s letter. Not that Draco had really doubted that the
older man wouldn’t, but it
surely wouldn’t
have been out of character for Lucius to bait him with news of his mother
and then deny him any
further knowledge.
The common
room was, as usual, dark. Even though a fire burned heartily in the great,
the light did little to brighten
the corners
where most people were sitting talking quietly amongst themselves. It wasn’t
that all Slytherins were up
to dark deeds.
But they were picked for this house due to their zeal for ambition and
their ability to succeed under
almost any
circumstances. To the other houses Slytherins put up quite a united front,
but in their own common room,
most of them
fell to in fighting. Draco had always enjoyed it. The furtive glances and
whispered secrets. A good ear
for listening
and the ability to hold one’s tongue until the proper opportunity arrived
were great skills to have. And
Draco had
been trained well for it.
The letter
lay, unopened, on the table next to his bed. He knew that it hadn’t been
tampered with. Draco didn’t
even need
to look closely to know this. No one would ever attempt to pry into a letter
from Lucius. Some one else,
an old friend,
another relative, even his mother’s letters wouldn’t have been entirely
safe from the untrustworthy
curiousness
of his fellow housemates; but never, ever Lucius’ letters.
Draco,
I’m glad
that you have finally come to your senses. Your mother did not even want
to tell you
of her poor
health knowing that you would probably leave school to come see her. And
she
was always
so determined that you would attend Hogwarts just like we did. I have been
unable
to tell her
of your disgrace of us though. I do not think she could handle such painful
news as
that of her
son and only child abandoning his family to follow the idiotic ideals of
some
unimportant
Headmaster.
But the point
of this letter is not to berate you for your shortcomings as tempting as
it may be.
I have recently
spoken to the doctors at St. Mungo’s. They believe that your mother has
a rare
case of Tiberian
influenza that she must have picked up while she was abroad over the summer.
There isn’t
any known magical treatment because in almost all cases, this disease is
only a minor
ailment and
the wizard in question is able to recover easily on their own. Your mother,
however,
has contracted
a very virulent case and her frail constitution does not bode well for
her recovery.
I do not want
you coming to see her. In her condition, a visit from you might deplete
her
remaining
bastion of strength, and I will not allow that. If I feel that she is soon
to be leaving us,
I will send
for you.
Father
Draco read
the letter again, his brow furrowing in an expression that seemed torn
between anger and anguish.
Lucius had
to be toying with him, didn’t he? Draco didn’t think that Lucius would
lie about his mother, but then
Draco wasn’t
entirely sure. Slipping the letter into his pocket, Draco left his room.
He decided to prowl the
school in
hopes that something would click together in his mind, that something would
suddenly leap out of the
letter as
he read it again and again in the dark halls that would tell him once and
for all whether Lucius was lying
or not. But
as with the last letter, there was nothing out of place.
He had just
passed over the great hall for the second time in his rounds about the
school when a voice called out
his name.
Turning, he saw Hermione walking quickly to him, slipping through a group
of first and second year
Hufflepuffs
who were looking between Hermione and him with undisguised interest.
Draco swiftly
stowed his letter away again and feeling like she had caught him doing
something nasty and went on
the defensive.
“What do you want Granger?”
Hermione looked
taken aback by his drawl but still proceeded up to him. “Well you’re
in a sour mood,” she said
lightly as
if forgetting how moody she had been only a few hours earlier.
Draco ignored
this and turned to the small collective of Hufflepuffs who were still waiting,
obviously fishing for an
interesting
piece of gossip to spread around. “Can I help you with something?”
He asked them in a low, dangerous
voice.
Hermione rolled
her eyes and crossed her arms disapprovingly but the younger students all
seemed to take Draco’s
underlying
threat for face value and immediately dispersed in different directions,
leaving Hermione and Draco alone
in the hall.
“Like I asked before,” Draco said icily to Hermione once again, “what do you want?”
“Oh really
Draco, stop being a prat.” Hermione replied primly. “I’ve been looking
all over for you, to tell you the
truth.”
“Oh?” Draco asked smartly, “are my charms really that hard to resist? Honestly, I had no idea.”
Draco had begun
walking once the other students had left and Hermione hurried to keep up
with him. She was
obviously
not to be put off.
“There was something that you said in the library, something that has got me thinking.”
“You? Thinking? Never.” Draco smirked as Hermione glared at him.
“It was what
you said, about the book you’re working on now in your dorm.” Hermione
pressed doggedly on despite
Draco’s
apparent ill mood. “You said something about salvation, didn’t you?”
“Yeah.” Draco quickened his gait, as a few more students appeared around the corner of one corridor.
“Well what if he was serious about it?”
“Serious
about what?” Draco was becoming incredibly annoyed with Hermione, she
was persistently tailing him and
there were
people watching.
In exasperation
Hermione grabbed the sleeve of his robe and pulled him backward. Draco
stumbled and then turned
to glare at
her.
“He felt
guilty about creating that curse,” Hermione spoke quickly now that she
had his full, if somewhat furious
attention.
“What if he did something about?”
“What are you suggesting?”
“I’m not sure, maybe a counter curse?” Hermione’s voice had dropped remarkably and Draco could barely hear her.
“There isn’t
a counter curse. Everyone knows that.” Draco crossed his arms in a manner
that mirrored her favorite
look of disapproval.
“But what
if there is?” Hermione whispered breathlessly, “what if he was so guilt-ridden
over what he had done that
he created
some sort of defense, something to stop…”
“There isn’t
a counter-curse Granger. It’s impossible, the curse itself it too strong.
And O’Leary is too much an
enfeebled
old man to make one even if it was possible.” Draco interrupted.
“You didn’t
seem to think he was that he was so enfeebled a few hours ago when you
virtually praising him for
creating Avada
Kedavra!” Her voice had risen sharply.
Several passing
students gasped and defensively cringed backwards when she said the infamous
curse. Draco
grabbed her
arm furiously and pulled her along with him down a flight of stairs, through
a deserted corridor, before
roughly pushing
her into a dark alcove.
“Are you trying to get into trouble?” His angry hiss was low.
“It can’t hurt to look, can it? We know that he had the capability to do it.”
“We wouldn’t even know where to begin.” He muttered trying to dissuade Hermione.
“Well we
would have an idea as to where to look.” She said quickly, making Draco
regret that he had given her a
window.
He slouched against the wall of the alcove and surveyed the empty hallway. “And where would we looking?”
“He kept
everything organized and dated. And the journal with the spell in it is
one of the last ones, there are only
a few more
after that. So we know that if he had made a counter curse, then it would
be in one of the few remaining
books.”
Hermione had begun pacing back and forth from the nook to the opposite
wall and back again. “I think
that starting
with the volume you have would be the best one to start with.”
“This is ridiculous.” Draco grumbled darkly.
Hermione turned
and looked back at him. He wanted nothing more right now than to turn and
walk away, to leave
her and her
insane hopes there in that hallway. He didn’t want to spend any more
time trapped in that room with her,
thinking those
thoughts that he always thought when she was near him. But Draco met her
eyes, those soft cinnamon
eyes had caught
him again and Draco knew he would do what she asked.
“Please,” Hermione stepped to him and lightly touched his shoulder, “please help me Draco.”
Draco sighed,
unable to look away from her desperately pleading eyes. “I’ll go get
the book.”
“This is pointless, you realize this, right?” Draco snapped the book closed and turned to glower at Hermione.
“It is not pointless if we find something useful.” She responded primly.
“Right, like
after five hundred years or so, a couple of rival Hogwarts’ students
are going to stumble across the key
to saving
the world from the great evil threat. I’ve never been one for fairy tales.”
Draco stretched languidly and
smirked as
he suddenly thought of how he’d really like to be spending his time with
Hermione at the moment.
“Have you always been this optimistic or is it just the weather?” Hermione glowered at him.
Draco opened
his book again and picked up where he had left off. Hermione continued
to glare at him a moment
longer as
if to make sure that he really was going to help before returning to her
own text.
He had been
reading for a while now, the sun had set long ago and the library was going
to be closed soon.
Hermione was
still sitting across from him; the pile of books that surrounded her had
grown. He had fallen to
watching her
read. It was amusing to him how she always bite her lip when she came upon
something interesting.
Or absentmindedly
pull on a strand of dark brown hair that framed her face. She was resting
her chin in the palm
of one hand
and then, as he watched, she sighed and switched to her other hand. Draco
observed as she flinched
slightly as
her chin settled into the palm of her other hand. She began to flex the
fingers of the now unused hand.
He felt a
strange gentleness overcome as he remembered the accident earlier that
day.
Hermione glanced
up and smiled slightly. But having her look at him so trustingly reminded
him of how close he had
allowed himself
to get to her. He remembered in Potions, how he had been so quick to defend
her. How he had
joined, of
all people, the blasted Gryffindors in trying to get her out of trouble.
As if the rumor mill wasn’t bad enough
already. He
had to go and add more fuel. And for what purpose? For some brown haired
girl that made him lose his
breath? Draco
couldn’t believe that he had allowed lust to control him so much. But
even as he thought about it, lust
didn’t seem
like the culprit.
“Something wrong?” She asked, breaking his train of thought.
Draco refocused on Hermione and was almost surprised to realize that he was scowling at her.
“I’m just sick to death of sitting in here.” He snapped.
“Well if that’s the way you feel, why don’t you just leave already?” She was as quick to temper as he was.
Draco didn’t
say another word to her. He gathered his things and left the library, not
in a storming rage, which
seemed to
be her favorite exit, but with a calm stroll. As if he had nothing better
to do with his time than make sure
that everyone
he passed had proper time in which to admire him.
He made his
way back to the Slytherin dungeons slowly. He didn’t know why he had
been so disagreeable with her.
They hadn’t
even been fighting. Draco supposed it was just nerves. There was his mother
and Lucius, the school and
it’s gossip,
his Malfoy image, and of course there was her. Hermione who was still in
the library trying to find a spell
that wasn’t
there, trying to find some ancient miracle that had somehow gone unnoticed
for centuries.
The dorm room
was vacant. Draco threw himself into a deep armchair that sat next to the
fire. He had borrowed it
from the common
room one evening.
She was so
naïve, Draco could barely stand it sometimes. Hermione would look for
the best in everything. She was
out of touch
with reality. The poor girl actually thought that good would always vanquish
evil, that Potter would
always win,
and that Voldemort would get what he deserved. But Draco knew better. Draco
knew that the world
didn’t revolve
around the hopes of some innocent young girl. Voldemort was too powerful
to be stopped, and good
rarely won.
Draco pulled
a book from his bag and carelessly jerked it open. She would sit up there
long into the night studying
till her eyes
hurt just because some idealistic fool created one of the most powerful
spells ever known. He started to
flip through
the creaking pages as he thought. And what was she expecting anyway? To
just open any old book and
find it? Even
if there was a spell, which Draco highly doubted there was, the likely
hood of them stumbling upon was
highly unlikely.
And then Draco
looked down. He looked at the book in his hands, at the page he had stopped
at. And then he really
looked at
it. His mouth fell open and he mouthed wordlessly for a moment or two.
“Oh bloody
hell,” he muttered finally, “how coincidental is that?”
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