***New chapter!
Yeah! I know I’m excited too. Thank you to everyone who has reviewed
me! I really
really really
appreciate it. Now I’m still planning on there only being two more chapters
after this and then
a tiny little
epilogue (just cause I like to sum things up). But I have A LOT to do in
the next chapter, so
this is a
very optimistic presumption of mine. Anyhoo….enjoy…..
Their Room
by
aleximoon
Chapter
27
The
Mistake
“So, when
Katie was reaching for the pitcher of juice, she turned to look at Angelina
who had just said something
really clever.”
Ron paused to watch as Harry finally decided to move his pawn.
“And that gave George the opportunity that he had been waiting for,” Harry continued for Ron.
“George charmed
the pitcher to look like a giant beetle. Katie didn’t notice until she
was about to pour her self a
glass.”
Ron grinned at Hermione. “And what does one do when they discover that
their pitcher of juice now looks
remarkably
like a huge fat beetle with wiggling antennas and everything?” Ron asked
Harry.
“She threw it.” Harry said quickly. “Right at Fred, although that could have been an accident.”
“You might
think that a beetle couldn’t really knock someone unconscious.” Ron
paused to scrutinize the chessboard.
“But the
charm George used only made the pitcher look like a beetle.”
Harry frowned as Ron took a knight before he said, “It was still, in fact, a heavy pitcher of juice.”
“And that is why my dear older brother is now spending the afternoon in the hospital wing.”
“And Katie isn’t speaking to George,” Harry added.
Hermione pulled
the scarlet quilt tighter around her shoulders, she was still dripping
wet, Harry and Ron had both
insisted that
she sit and listen to them retell their very exciting morning that she
had missed. “Will he be all right?” She
asked with
a slight twinge of worry.
“Oh he’ll be fine, Fred has a hard head.” Ron took Harry’s king.
Harry look nonplussed over his defeat and grinned and Ron, “it must be a Weasley trait.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Ron sniffed with disapproval sounding incredibly like Hermione.
Hermione unfolded
herself from the sofa she had been perched upon and pushed her wet sleeves
up. “Well if you
don’t mind,
I’m going to go find something dry to wear.”
“Where were you anyway?” Harry asked.
Ron stopped
setting up the pieces for the next game and looked Hermione up and down
again, “you look like you
had a fight
with the giant squid and I’d wager all of my chocolate frogs I’ve got
leftover from Christmas that you won.”
“I was…I
was just working on my Arithmancy project.” Hermione became very interested
in the intricate gold
brocade lion
on the front of the red blanket she had been using.
“Oh,” both boys said together.
Hermione glanced up at them to see Ron mouth “Malfoy” and Harry nod in agreement.
“Look, what
we’re doing is really important.” Hermione felt herself begin to flush
though since the last hour of their
time together
had had nothing to do with class work.
As if reading
her thoughts Ron made a gagging sound in the back of his throat, “ehh,
Hermione, we don’t want to
know.”
Hermione scowled
at them both and walked across the common room to the girls’ stairwell,
she looked back at
them expecting
to see Ron glaring darkly at her, but her friends were once again deep
into a chess match. She smiled
then as she
watched them, they had known who she had been with, and neither of them
seemed upset. They had
become almost
accepting. It was probably because they thought she had just gone a little
crazy being a young,
teenage girl.
But if that made things easier for them to handle, Hermione didn’t mind.
Hermione crawled
onto her bed and pulled the thick, warm quilt up to her chin. Her clean
wet hair was pulled up
on top of
her head in a knot that would never have stayed in place had she been a
muggle girl. She had to admit;
Lavender and
Parvarti did know a few good tricks. It wasn’t even lunchtime yet but
Hermione was thinking about
just how good
it would be to take a nap. Thunder rumbled distantly from outside the tower
and Hermione snuggled
deeper, even
more of a reason to stay in bed.
The spell had
worked. Hermione grinned widely. They had done it. They had found something
to stop the killing
curse, well
Cruciatus, at the very least. They wouldn’t know for sure if it would
stop Avada Kedavra until someone
actually used
it against that fearsome curse. And from what Draco said, the O’Leary
spell took so much energy to
maintain,
it would only work for a few minutes. But it was better than nothing, amazingly
better. Why, with this spell,
new spells
could be formed on its foundation. Maybe one day there would actually be
a counter-curse.
Yes, it had
been a good morning. Well, casting Cruciatus on Draco had been very trying.
She had never, in even
the most far-reaching
edges of her imagination, ever thought that she would cast such a spell.
But it had worked out
for the best;
she hadn’t hurt him, not really. And now they knew for certain.
Then there
had been after the spell. Under the trees, cowering from the rain together.
Hermione sighed softly. It was
safe to say
that she was beginning to accept the fact that when it came to Draco, she
was experiencing feelings that
she never
had before. But was this a good thing? What if their flirtation went to
far? What if she fell in love with him?
What if he
didn’t want her?
There was the
tiniest of knocks at her door. Hermione sat up as Ginny Weasley leaned
cautiously around the edge
of the door
and peered nervously in.
“It’s just
me Ginny,” Hermione called out from her bed. Ginny had been avoiding
Lavender and Parvarti ever since
she had saved
Hermione from their clutches a week ago.
Ginny stepped
into the room and closed the door behind her. Her face was pale and she
looked worried. Her red
plaited hair
had begun to fall out and a fine sheen of sweat shone on her face as if
she had just run here.
“Ginny?” Hermione climbed off her bed, “is there something wrong?”
“Hermione, I…” but Ginny’s voice faded off as she nervously studied her friend.
“What is it? What’s happened? Is everyone all right?” Hermione’s voice rose in panic at Ginny’s silence.
“No, no one’s
hurt. It’s just, well I went to the owlery to send a letter off to mum.”
Ginny chewed on her bottom
lip as she
decided to continue, “oh Hermione, I saw Malfoy there kissing that Slytherin
girl.”
“Pansy?” Hermione asked numbly.
Ginny nodded miserably.
“Are you
sure?” Hermione asked numbly, her imagination suddenly supplying her
mind with images of Draco kissing
Pansy. Kissing
her in the library, in their common room, outside on the grounds. Hermione
saw him kissing Pansy in
everyplace
that he had ever kissed her.
Ginny nodded again. “Are you okay?” She asked stepping forward.
Hermione shook her head, trying to clear her mind. “I…I’m fine Ginny,” she said finally.
The concerned expression that the youngest Weasley wore obviously belied this.
“I’m fine
Ginny, really, why should I care if Malfoy wants to kiss that pug faced
little twit?” Hermione felt like her
throat was
closing up.
“Hermione,” Ginny went to touch Hermione’s shoulder but the other girl stepped back.
“You know Ginny, I’m really tired, I think I’m going to lay down for a little while.”
“Hermione,” Ginny pleaded, her eyes large with worry.
“Ginny,” Hermione clasped her friend’s hands in her own, “I’m all right, really. It’s just Malfoy after all.”
Ginny frowned but eventually nodded, “all right, I guess I’ll leave you alone then.”
Hermione waited
until Ginny had pulled the door closed behind her before walking back to
her bed. She lay down
and curled
up, tucking her knees under chin. She sniffed softly, trying very hard
not cry. But honestly, what had she
expected anyway?
She paced nervously
outside of the Arithmancy classroom. Hermione had avoided Draco for several
days. She
hadn’t left
the tower for fear of Draco tracking her down and she didn’t think she
could handle seeing him at the
moment. Hermione
hadn’t even gone to the Great Hall for meals, she told Ron and Harry
that she was feeling a
little under
the weather and they had left it at that. Ginny knew better of course,
she never spoke of it, but she
brought back
toast for Hermione from every meal. Hermione had stayed tucked away in
her own common room,
safe from
the likes of Draco Malfoy, but now she had no choice but to face him.
She took a
deep breath and pushed the door open. Hermione paused to apologize to Professor
Vector being late.
Several of
her fellow students looked up and followed her progress as she climbed
the steps and sat down in her
seat next
to Malfoy.
“Now that we’re all here, let’s begin,” Professor Vector began to write something on the board.
As soon as Hermione was settled in her chair, Draco turned to her.
“Where have you been?” He hissed angrily.
Hermione pulled
out a roll of parchment and a dark green quill. She looked forward and
ignored Draco. He wasn’t
to be put
off, however. He grabbed her arm and jerked her around so that she was
looking at him.
“I thought
there was something wrong with you, I thought you were hurt or sick!”
He hissed angrily, his originally low
voice rising
high enough so that the students nearest them turned to look.
Hermione jerked her arm away from him and snapped, “The only thing wrong with me is you!”
Draco looked
shocked and angry, “what are you talking about?” Hermione had turned
away from him again.
“Hermione,
what is it?” He growled at her, virtually every student in the classroom
had abandoned their parchments
and were watching
them.
“Why don’t you ask Pansy?” Hermione replied nastily.
“Is there a problem?” An annoyed voice cut through their argument, “Ms. Granger? Mr. Malfoy?”
Even with every
student watching them, even with the admonition of their professor, Hermione
and Draco held each
other’s
eyes in a heated exchange for a moment longer before pulling back and simultaneously
shaking their heads.
Hermione felt
her chin begin to shake but she refused to give him the satisfaction of
seeing her cry, of letting him know
that he had
hurt her, that he had won. The class proceeded silently and as soon as
Professor Vector announced that
they were
dismissed, Hermione shot out of her seat.
She pushed
past students and darted through the door, breaking into a sprint as soon
as she hit the corridor.
Hermione knew
that he was following and she sped on. She glanced back over her shoulder
trying to see if she had
managed to
escape him and ran right into a seventh year Ravenclaw. Hermione fell backwards
hard as the girl, one
of Cho’s
friends, swept past her in annoyance.
“Thanks,” Hermione murmured as someone helped her to her feet.
“Wouldn’t be very gentlemanly of me to leave you sprawled on the floor.” Said a lazy drawl.
Hermione spun to come face to face with Draco. He smirked at her, his most typical Malfoy expression.
“Stay away from me,” Hermione hissed.
Draco didn’t
reply, just grabbed her arm and started to pull her along after him. Hermione
struggled against his grip
but he was
much stronger than her.
“Granger,”
he said calmly over his shoulder, “you’re making a scene.” For indeed,
the crowded walkway was
stopping to
watch.
“I’m not going anywhere with you. You conceited prat!” Hermione pulled against him desperately.
Draco turned
to face her, “either you walk like the sixth year witch that you are
or I will carry you over my shoulder
like the petulant
toddler you’re acting, but either way, you are going to talk to me.”
He let go of
her arm and stood watching her expectantly. There was a crowd of whispering
students surrounding
them and Hermione
began to blush. Draco looked completely calm and at ease considering how
he felt about all the
rumors in
school.
“Fine,” she snapped and started walking again, heading to someplace deserted.
They retraced
their steps back to their now empty Arithmancy classroom. They were given
a wide berth as fellow
students watched
and whispered as they passed. She turned to him once the door was closed
and waited for
whatever it
was he wanted to say, determined that she wouldn’t break down, wouldn’t
show her pain.
Draco stood watching her, his gray eyes dark and unreadable.
“Did you see it?” He asked her finally.
“No,” Hermione swallowed as a lump formed in her throat, “Ginny did.”
“I should have known it was a Weasley,” he muttered.
“Oh that’s rich of you, blame it on Ginny?” Hermione glowered.
“I didn’t kiss Pansy,” he muttered, “she kissed me.”
“And that makes all the difference, really it does.”
Draco sighed and ran a hand through his hair, slicking it back. He seemed at a loss as to what to say.
“Look,” Hermione broke the silence, “it doesn’t matter anyway. You can kiss whomever you want.”
“I can?” Draco sounded surprised.
“Of course,
it’s not like you owed me anything. It isn’t as if what we’ve been
doing means anything.” Hermione felt
the tears
begin to cloud her vision as she said this and she knew that she had to
get out of this room and away from
him, but she
couldn’t help but ask. “Does it mean anything?”
Draco eyes
flashed wildly and there was a glint of desperation but he said nothing.
A stray tear slid down
Hermione’s
cheek and she rubbed at her eyes. It was over whatever it was; she was
done. Hermione walked to
Draco and
leaned up and tenderly kissed his cheek. She gave him the frailest of smiles
and another tear escaped
but she didn’t
bother to brush it away, it didn’t seem to matter now. Hermione walked
past him and out into the
crowds, leaving
him behind.
Hermione angrily
paced her dorm room. Across the stone floor, past the beds, and then back
again. Lavender and
Parvarti were
sitting together on Parvarti’s bed painting their toenails and watching
with bemused interest.
“Hermione,” Lavender said, “is there something wrong?”
“I left my
Potions book in the library,” Hermione snapped, “I can’t believe
I left my Potions book in the library.” She
stopped and
glared at the pile of books that she had strewn over her bed during the
desperate search for her Potions
text.
“So why don’t
you just go to the library and get it?” Parvarti suggested while stretching
her toes trying to catch the
firelight.
Hermione glared at the two girls.
“Since when
don’t you like to go to the library?” Lavender was watching her closely,
“you know, you’ve been acting
funny all
day today.”
Hermione began
pacing again; trying to ignore the overly interested looks she was getting
from her dorm mates. Yes,
she had been
acting funny all day. But then what should one expect? She felt funny,
all empty and cold. And it was all
his fault.
Hermione hated Draco.
She gave an
exasperated groan; there wasn’t anything to be done. Hermione pulled
her cloak off of a chair and
threw it over
her shoulders. Lavender and Parvarti watched in amusement as she stormed
from the dorm room,
determined
to get her Potions book back, Malfoy be damned.
It only took
her a few minutes to reach the library; most students were on their way
to the great hall for dinner.
Hopefully,
if she as lucky, Malfoy would be among them. Hermione had kept her mind
busy all that day, working
on her homework,
and studying for the upcoming finals, only a few weeks away now.
Hermione had
done everything she could to keep her mind off of Draco. He had hurt her.
What she had promised
herself wouldn’t
happen had happened. She had never had any intentions of letting that Slytherin
prat get so close to
her, and yet
he had managed to worm his way into her anyway. Hermione had been shocked
to realize that she
wasn’t even
that mad at him. What she had said in their Arithmancy classroom was true
he; didn’t owe her anything.
Just because
she had let herself get close to him, to trust him, care for him, that
wasn’t his responsibility. But, even
so, Hermione
had never felt more miserable in her life.
There were
more people in the library than Hermione would have anticipated. Several
Ravenclaws that she knew,
and a few
Hufflepuffs as well. All eyes watched her as she crossed the large room,
she could make out some of the
whispers as
she passed.
“Did you hear what happened earlier? See her? That’s Hermione Granger,” one voice whispered to her left.
“…In love
with some Slytherin, can you believe that? Imagine, a Gryffindor and a
Slytherin.” Another voiced
echoed from
the right.
Hermione stopped
in her tracks and turned to glower at the nearest group of gossiping students.
There was an
embarrassed
silence as everyone immediately looked back down at their tables. She stood
a moment longer,
daring anyone
to say something, but the students all wore equal looks of contrition.
She headed
up the small spiral stairs in the back and headed to their room. Her stomach
did a nervous flip-flop
and Hermione
had to bite down hard on her lip as it began to quiver, a sure sign that
she was going to cry.
The door to
the room was unlocked, and Hermione miserably turned the handle and walked
in fully expecting to
see him. But
the room was empty. Hermione frowned, he knew better than to leave the
door open.
“Draco?” She called, but there was no answer.
Her frown deepened
as she walked further into the room. A surge of annoyance sprung up over
his sloppiness,
really, these
books were priceless.
Hermione’s
eyes fell upon her Potions book sitting out of place on the table. It’s
fairly new bindings standing out
against the
ancient tomes surrounding it. With a sigh of relief, Hermione picked it
up and tucked it into her bag.
She was turning
to go when something else caught her eyes. Sitting at the edge of the table
was a letter.
She lifted
it up and unfolded it with shaking fingers believing that it was from Draco,
but it wasn’t.
Draco,
I’m glad
to see that you have finally come to your senses. I shall be expecting
you in
Hogsmeade
promptly at eight this evening. I have informed your mother that you will
be coming
home and I believe that this has helped to bolster her health. But I warn
you Draco,
do not fail me again.
Father
Hermione reread the letter, her hands trembling and her face pale.
“Oh no Draco, no,” she moaned.
That idiot!
What was he thinking? Hermione glanced at her watch, it was already seven
thirty, he would have left
already. He
fell for it; Hermione didn’t know how he could have fallen for it. It
was a trap; it was obviously a trap.
“What am I going to do?” Hermione whispered to herself, her face lined with worry.
Her hand tightened
on the letter, crinkling the page. And then Hermione decided. She had to
go, now, as fast as she
could. She
had to find him and stop him. There wasn’t time to get Harry and Ron,
there wasn’t time for the invisibility
cloak, she
had to hurry.
She ran from
the room, leaving the door standing open and forgotten behind her. In her
haste, she almost slipped
down the last
few steps but she managed to catch herself on the wrought iron banister.
The same students who had
avoided her
gaze a few minutes before now watched in wonderment as she rushed past
them.
It was staying
light outside deeper into the evening and there were still a few lingering
students on the grounds as
Hermione erupted
through the front doors. No one paid her any mind though as she headed
down across the lawn,
and no one
seemed to notice when she passed through the gates and continued down the
road.
Once she reached
town Hermione paused to catch her breath, her head was pounding and there
was a painful
twinge in
her side. Hermione scanned the streets hoping for some glimpse of Draco,
but he wasn’t to be seen. She
moaned lowly.
Where would they meet? Hermione couldn’t picture the father and son having
a round of butterbeer.
“Think Hermione,” she rubbed her temples in desperation.
And then she
knew. The day of the Halloween feast, when she had found Draco in the alley.
It had to be near there.
The chase
began again.
She had almost
reached the alleyway where she had discovered Draco so long ago when muffled
voices could be
heard. She
stepped back into a shadow-masked doorway and held her breath. Two hooded
figures past by her,
they were
talking softly to each other. Once they had gone far enough ahead, Hermione
slipped out of the doorway
and followed
them, cautiously keeping a large distance between them.
They headed
down one darkened cul-de-sac and Hermione slipped into another alleyway.
This all seemed very
familiar.
Hermione remember a dream, the dream that had led to discovering the killing
curse. This was the same
house where
she had seen Draco sprawled on the ground at Lucius’ mercy.
“Very little aura indeed,” she muttered quietly.
With her back
pressed tightly into the brick wall of the alley, Hermione glanced around
the corner at the derelict
house that
was the chosen meeting place of Draco’s father. She strained her eyes
in the dim light trying to find Draco
hidden in
the shadows. A breeze ruffled her cloak and for a moment she thought that
someone might have noticed
her but the
dark figures continued to talk amongst themselves oblivious to her. Where
was Draco? He was late, had
he changed
his mind? Hermione prayed that he had. It was an obvious trap. But then
he hadn’t listened to her so far
had he? She
leaned further out and tried to make out the faces of the pair that were
waiting outside the house. It was
impossible,
however, with the darkness that had curled into the neighborhood with the
setting of the sun.
Hermione glanced
at her watch and felt her pocket again for her wand, reassuring herself
that it was indeed there.
The slender
stem of wood was comforting.
Hermione swallowed
and nervously slipped a little more out of the alley, hoping that she would
see Draco before
anyone else
did. He had to be coming, any moment now.
She had to
stop him, had to save him. But Draco had yet to appear and Hermione was
beginning to lose her daring.
And more unnerving
than anything else were the figures standing in front of the house. They
were talking in voices so
hushed that
Hermione couldn’t make them out, but she had spent enough time with Harry
and Ron to know when
someone was
talking about Quidditch. And being presented with a couple of death eaters
that seemed more
concerned
with the results of the most recent Falcons’ game didn’t really seem
to portend any real danger. Had she
been mistaken?
Was Draco’s mother’s really sick?
Hermione had
only a moment to consider that perhaps she had been wrong to try and persuade
Draco that this
was a trap
and that Narcissa Malfoy was really in the best of health when a sudden
presence behind her erased
any doubt.
“Ms. Granger,
it is so satisfying to see you again. Ahh, but I’m afraid that we’ve
never been properly introduced.
But we’ll
have enough time to make up for that won’t we?” Lucius Malfoy’s deceptively
silky voice resonated right
behind her,
so close that she shivered.
Hermione didn’t
even have time to turn around let alone try to escape. Her only thought
before the crushing blow
brought her
into a place of deepest darkness was that she had been right. This was
indeed a trap, only it hadn’t been
meant for
Draco.
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