Pairing: Narcissa/Molly.
Rating: R.
Disclaimer: No copyright infringement intended. Characters owned by J.K. Rowling.
Summary: It's hard to be a good Hufflepuff when you know in your heart of hearts that you were born to be a Slytherin. A young Narcissa hovers on the brink; a seemingly hopeless love may pull her into the light, or push her further into the bitter darkness. Precanon Molly Weasley/Narcissa Malfoy femmeslash.
Note: This particular chapter
is set in Hogwarts, during Narcissa's schooling days.
:part one - first steps:
Narcissa, who tried to be as perfect in her studies as in everything else,
was trying to study. But her Arithmancy book might as well have been written in
Muggle computer code for all the sense it made to her this night. Her thoughts
were trapped familiar tracks.
"C'mon, Cissy, it's bed time. And I have something to show you girls."
Molly Weasley's round, pretty face was suffused with laughter, eyes almost as
bright as her hair.
Of course it was Molly. After all, no other female in the Hufflepuff common room
spoke much to Narcissa, and certainly never called her Cissy. She was too cold,
too unfriendly, locked in her shell, too un-Hufflepuff… And too obviously
burning with resentment that she had been put in the wrong house.
Looking up into Molly's sweet, unquestionably Hufflepuff face, Narcissa's cheeks
burned at the memory of the last half hour. She had the humiliating suspicion
that Molly was making an effort to cheer her up after her humiliation at the
hands of Professor Profuse.
Narcissa had attempted one last appeal to be reassigned to Slytherin or even
Ravenclaw. Anything but Hufflepuff, the house for nobodies, people who all that
could be said of them was that they were not brave, not smart, not ambitious,
just… nice. And she had been there for five bloody awful years, despite her
repeated attempts to be moved. She wasn't going to graduate as a Hufflepuff, she
couldn't.
Niceness was for weaklings. Narcissa knew she wasn't weak, and she certainly
wasn't nice. She was lava iced over, dangerous, she told herself. She had only
been a child when she was assigned to Hufflepuff, it wasn't fair… She had told
the senile old twit who ran her House exactly what she thought, and he had
laughed.
"The Sorting Hat sees who you are, not who you tell yourself you are,
Narcissa. I don't think you are as glamorously evil as you like to think
yourself." He paused. "Neither as evil nor as glamorous." Profuse
chuckled derisively. "You are lava iced over? Oh, to be an angsty teenager
again, and not to find that kind of statement ridiculous."
Bastard. She hated him.
Molly's voice broke into the unpleasant thoughts. "Please, Cissy. You'd be
happier if you at least tried to be friends." She touched the taller girl's
arm, with something like affection.
It wasn't surprising Narcissa was unpopular, even in Hufflepuff, where
absolutely everyone was usually enfolded in warm squishy liking. The other
Hufflepuff girls had endured enough teasing from other Houses, and they weren't
exactly happy about some of the things said by someone who was (supposed to be,
only supposed to be, Narcissa amended furiously) one of their own, despite her
own undisguised struggles to leave them.
And after all, why bother with a prickly loner? They had plenty of friends
without her. In the end, they were Hufflepuffs, and if Hufflepuffs weren't
always taken seriously, at least they were usually well-liked.
Of course the boys bothered with Narcissa, but that was different. Anyone with
her golden slenderness would be bothered with, and by, boys. She hated them for
their attentions, almost impersonally.
Only Molly insisted on, despite all the evidence, treating Narcissa as if they
were friends. Even though she knew she was being pitied, Narcissa had eventually
stopped even discouraging her. And Molly had wound herself around Narcissa's
prickly soul, ignoring the spikes of resentment and bitterness as if they didn't
even exist, until they were indeed something like friends. Until Narcissa found
it was too hard to give up the little redhead's endless kindness and cheerful
conversation… like refusing oxygen…
She had always known she was going to follow Molly. She closed her books and
silently accompanied the other girl back to their dormitory. Isis and Karen were
already perched on the end of Molly's four-poster bed, giggling, their faces
rosy with amusement. "Did you tell her?" Isis demanded.
"Not yet." Molly pulled her robes and jumper over her head. Her bra,
barely containing her ample breasts, dug into lightly freckled skin, a velvety
layer of flesh over her ribcage.
Molly never cared what she ate, never worried about her figure or wore makeup.
She claimed to enjoy life too much to fuss over irrelevant details like vanity.
Narcissa, who ate sparingly, exercised daily, and never looked at her reflection
without seeing every scrap of excess weight on her willowy frame, every flaw in
her perfectly made-up face, often wondered how Molly, dumpy, carrot-haired and
freckled, could look at her own reflection and smile. Narcissa scorned her for
it, envied her, and dreamed about sinking her fingers and teeth into that
luscious flesh…
She jerked herself back to attention. She was spacing out more and more lately,
and it was beginning to worry her. But this could be important – she didn't
like the way Isis was sniggering. Blue-eyed Isis had been the first to offer
Narcissa friendship at Hogwarts, and had hated her ever since the rejection.
Narcissa had a Hufflepuff enemy. It was almost funny. Except that it wasn't at
all funny to live with hatred in your own dorm.
"Karen bought a game," Molly explained, still undressing. She pulled
her jeans down over wide hips, and turned to grin at Narcissa. Unfortunately, at
just that moment Narcissa had been staring at the tiny red curls escaping
elastic above softly dimpled thighs. She was forced to harden her face and look
away, fighting embarrassment and lust.
"It's – a – dyke game…" Karen buried her head in Molly's pillows
and choked helplessly. It was Isis who added, face smug with dislike, "So
we thought you would enjoy it, Narcissa."
Molly frowned at her, in a flash of the temper that went with her warm
temperament and hair. "Shut up, Isis. Cissy, it's only a fun game, to help
girl friends become closer."
"Become girlfriends," Karen amended through her giggles.
Narcissa felt dull heat flood over her face, but of course they had realized. It
would have been obvious. As long as they didn't also realize who the focus of
her obsessions was… Fortunately, Molly had pulled on her nightgown by then.
Narcissa flung back pale blonde hair and curled her lip in a well-practiced
gesture.
"What is this game about, anyway?" she asked, as detachedly as
possible.
Molly, seeing her bed was taken, plumped down on Narcissa's mattress. Hesitating
slightly, Narcissa sat beside her. She was aware that she took altogether too
much time to decide the correct innocent distance to sit from her friend.
Molly smiled happily at her, apparently unaware of how ridiculous Narcissa was
making herself, and just glad Narcissa was, as she would put it, trying to fit
in and get along with everybody. "It's called Garden of Gaia. It says it's
a celebration of witches' femininity. It sounds like just what we want, doesn't
it?"
Narcissa had to admit to herself that it sounded just like something that would
appeal to Molly. With her small body already rich with curves – *fat,* the
nasty part of Narcissa's mind inserted, while something connected directly to
her centre corrected, *lush* – Molly oozed femininity. The lines of her body
were as uninhibitedly female as Narcissa's were toned, pared down and contained
by dieting and exercise.
"And it's to explore deeper levels of relationships with your
girlfriends," Isis added, tones laden with meaning. "I bet that's just
what Narcissa here wants, right, Cissy?" She and Karen exploded into
giggles, and Narcissa felt her pale skin flood with blood.
"I don't understand what you think is so funny. It's just to become closer
friends, right?" Molly asked in confusion, and Karen and Isis shouted with
laughter.
"Goddess, Mary Weasley, you are just too cute to be true," Karen
gasped, as Molly looked at her with wide-eyed confusion. Narcissa tried to be
scornful of Molly's naivety, but her treacherously infatuated heart was too
distracted by melting at her innocence. No one would know Molly was seventeen in
a depraved world, to listen to her. Narcissa was entranced, and sad and angry at
the same time. How could Molly be so *dense* – and so utterly adorable?
"What do we do?" Narcissa asked at last, and the two girls on the
other bed collapsed entirely into hysterics.
Molly gave them a bemused look, and picked up the game. "It looks like
Truth or Dare, only with counters and cards. You have to perform dares, or
answer questions about," she looked closer, "your deepest feelings,
desires and dreams."
Narcissa smiled calmly. She could survive that. She was an excellent liar. It
might even be a useful exercise, especially if dear Isis told the truth.
Blackmail was always useful. "Let's play, then," she suggested.
"And the game is enchanted, so everyone can tell if you're lying!"
Molly added happily.
Narcissa flopped suddenly back on the bed. She was in big trouble.