#he probably wrote it off as muggle problems and beneath him
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moderndayamymarch · 1 month ago
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WWII timeline & harry potter
saw some ppl arguing about if tom riddle was in the blitz/how affected he was by WWII
dec. 31, 1926: tom riddle is born
1926- 1937: riddle is raised in london orphanage (during this time he: kills and hangs a girl’s rabbit from the rafters, traumatizes two kids in a cave, and steals things)
c. 1938 (after dec. 31, 1937): dumbledore visits an 11 year old riddle to tell him about hogwarts
sept. 1938- june 1939: riddle’s 1st yr
sept. 1939- june 1940: riddle’s 2nd yr
sep. 1939: hitler invades poland and the uk declares war
jan. 1940- food rationing begins (clothing in june of 1941)
june 20, 1940: first nazi air operations begin flying over britain
1940-1945: towns on the south coast of england are targeted in “tip and run raids”
sep. 7, 1940- may 11, 1941- london blitz
sept. 1940- june 1941: riddle’s 3rd yr
sep. 1941- june 1942: riddle’s 4th yr
sep. 1942- june 1943: riddle’s 5th yr where he opens the chamber of secrets, kill myrtle (around june 13), and get hagrid expelled
1942: historic london cities (ex. york, canterbury, exeter) are bombed
aug. 1943: riddle kills his father, paternal grandparents, and frames his maternal uncle
sep. 1943- june 1944: riddle’s 6th yr where he at some point creates his first horcrux
jan. 22, 1944: second mini blitz
sep. 1944- june 1945: riddle’s 7th yr
mar. 17, 1945: final bomb dropped over hull
so riddle is at hogwarts when england declares war. he doesn’t directly experience the blitz as it ends a little over a month before hogwart’s term is done. he definitely sees the aftermath of the blitz and maybe spends the summer or part of the summer of 1941 in the countryside (if the orphanage evacuated for the blitz). he would have experienced the build up to the blitz as fears/rumors of bombings or poisonous gas attacks began in london as early as 1939. he was also at hogwarts for the second mini blitz in 1944 and the war ends before he graduates from hogwarts. idk where little hangleton is but he could experienced “tip and run aids” if hangleton’s on the coast and happened to be bombed while he was there. he did experience and deal with war rationing. but it doesn’t look like he would have directly lived through the london blitz or likely any of the smaller air campaigns.
you can however side eye dippet for telling tom in 1943 that he can’t stay at hogwarts over the summer and would be safer in london (a city that experienced horrific bombing less than two years ago, would experience a second bombing in less than a year, and continued to be a potential target for the rest of the war)
and everyone likes to talk about his trauma from the war as almost a mitigating circumstance for his behavior but so many ppl lived through the blitz and didn’t become neo nazis or blood purists.
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panda-noosh · 4 years ago
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fire and ice {Draco Malfoy x Reader}{pjo x hp crossover}
Words: 21k {:))))}
Summary: Wizards and demigods don’t get along. So what happens when the Malfoys are forced to stay at Camp Half-Blood?
Genre: angst - pjo crossover!!!
Notes: ask me about commissions! - masterlist - AM I SORRY? ABSOLUTELY NOT. this has been brewing in my brain for literal ages and i’ve finally snapped and just done it. might do more. who knows? certainly not me. 
----
Lucius Malfoy hates demigods.
   Everyone knows it. He doesn't make it a secret. He doesn't listen to the people who tell him – time and time again – that demigods and wizards aren't even meant to mingle, that him bringing their name into every press conference, every public appearance, every meeting, is doing nothing but spurring a fire that should never have been lit in the first place.
   He's at it again, though, because of course he is. That man never knows when to leave well enough alone, especially concerning business that has nothing to do with him.
    Today, his words are just as harsh as they were yesterday. The newspaper quotes him saying demigods are nothing but scum, mistakes upon the world. He has claimed plenty of times that not a single demigod was a planned child, that no god in their right mind would ever conceive with a Muggle.
   “What the fuck is a Muggle?” Percy asks.
  You shake your head, eyes narrowed at the black and white words. They jumble together, as they always have done, but you're still capable of making out the bare bones.
  Lucius Malfoy really, really hates demigods.
  “This guy is on drugs,” Percy continues. “Who's gonna be the one to tell him we're all literally just vibing over here in camp?”
  “I think it all comes down to jealousy,” says Annabeth.
   “Jealous about what? He's a fully grown wizard – he could wipe us out with one flick of his wrist if he wanted to.”
  “You underestimate us.”
  Percy scoffs. “I saw Will nearly fall into the fire the other day; there's absolutely nothing here Lucius Malfoy needs to be afraid of.”
  And you see his point. Of course you do. Being a demigod yourself, you have the utmost confidence in the fact that Lucius Malfoy could, indeed, probably wipe you out with nothing more than a brief thought. Gods only know he's wanted to for as long as you've heard his name.
  Nonetheless, this acceptance doesn't stop you from thinking about what it would be like to really stumble across the man who seems to be all talk and no action. Never once have you heard a story of wizards attacking demigods, nor vise versa. The two clans stay far apart from one another for reasons that have been made abundantly clear in the newspapers; they will just never get along. Two clashes of power like that will leave the world rumbled, and many people hurt, and it's better off to avoid that when you can.
  “We should track this Malfoy bloke down.”
   The words have fallen from your mouth before you've even fully registered they are what you wanted to say. Both Percy and Annabeth pause mid-argument, Annabeth nearly snapping her spine with how fast she twists in her seat to look at you. You flick your eyes up from your plate of roast beef and give a tiny, timid smile, as if shy that you even made such a suggestion.
  “You're joking,” says Percy, before turning to Annabeth. “They're joking, right?”
  “They're definitely joking.”
   “I'm not.”
   “Well, you need to start joking before I bring Will over here to make sure you're not running a fever or something-”
   “I'm serious!” You gesture towards the fire, where the newspaper can still be seen curling amongst the flames. “Have you guys not been reading the amount of threats he sends us every time he gets a chance? What if he's serious?”   “I doubt he's being serious,” Annabeth says, though there's a wobble in her voice that tells you she perhaps doesn't fully believe her own assurances. “Isn't it a crime in the wizard world to – like – murder innocent things?”
  “I'm pretty sure there was an entire space of time over there where people were just murdering each other,” Percy responds.
  Annabeth pales.
  “See what I mean?” you continue. “Besides, it's getting boring here.”
   Percy blinks. “Boring?”
   “I'm bored. I just want something to do, for Gods sake. Chiron's keeping such a tight leash on us-”
   Percy throws his hands up. “Oh! I wonder why!”
   “You two even said a few days ago that you miss being out and about, doing stuff, saving lives-”
   “I never said that,” Percy argues. “In my opinion, I've had enough saving lives to last me a lifetime.”
  “Weak.”
   “Coming from-”
  “Okay!” Annabeth snaps. “Enough. This conversation is officially over.”
  You pout, folding your arms over your chest like a child having a tantrum. Percy laughs at your expression, giving your nose a playful tap that does nothing but infuriate you further. It's been like this for weeks now – short tempers, boredom, an unease that can only be put to rest when you're out and about, doing what you do best.
   Maybe it's the ADHD. Maybe it's the godly blood running through your veins. Maybe you're just too curious for your own good, but you want to find Lucius Malfoy and just talk to him. You want to see if he's as tough in person as he makes himself out to be on paper. You know you're not much to look at, nothing more than a teenager with interesting parentage, but maybe that will be enough to get your questions answered – why do wizards hate demigods so much?
  Annabeth cuts the conversation short any time you try bringing it to life again. She's a master at changing the subject, sometimes deciding to just talk over you about a completely different topic. Eventually, Percy's laughter and Annabeth's avoidance is enough to make you shut up, and soon you're just sitting there, listening to Annabeth talk about the recent Athena cabin shenanigans she bore witness to a few nights previous.
  Dinner finishes, and the tables split back into their cabins. Annabeth gets lost amongst her sea of siblings, giving you and Percy a wave before she disappears for the night. You and Percy walk in silence for a little while, before you split off to your own respected cabins.
  Alone.
  Sleeping on your own has never bothered you before. It's all you've ever known. You were born an only child, your mother having lost her mind shortly after giving birth to you, your father never being around due to the complicated fact he was a god.
  Is a god.
  Sometimes it shakes you to think your own father will undoubtedly outlive you. Hades is sat on his throne somewhere, watching you do all these things in his honour, knowing full well he will one day have to watch you die. He might be by your bedside as your heart beat gradually comes to a halt in your sleep.
  More likely, he will be sat amongst his godly brothers and sisters, watching you fight on the battle field, catching the very moment a sword pierces your chest and you bleed out with no one to help you, no one by your side, no one caring.
  You shake the thought from your head as you reach your cabin, a large, black painted building with a skull and crossbones over the door. It's a lonely place, but demigods are lonely kids, so it kind of fits, and you've never seen any problem with facing the truth.
  As soon as the door closes behind you, you grab your notebook and pen from beneath your pillow. It's been a long time since you wrote anything, considering you've been too tired to even properly function these days, but tonight, your thoughts are heavy, and you need to find some way to let them loose. You sit cross-legged on the uncomfortable camp bed Chiron provided you with all those years ago, and start scribbling.
  Just random sentences, things that probably won't even make sense when you wake up tomorrow morning, words that don't even go together, but are just popping in your mind every few seconds. You've always called it poetry, but it's on thin ice. You let nobody read it, considering you know how bad it is, how weird it is. You can honestly imagine someone reading it and immediately expressing concerns for your mental stability.
  But it distinguishes that weight in your brain. It makes you see sense for a bit, pouring these words onto paper before closing the notebook and stuffing it beneath your pillow. You won't have to read them again if you don't want to, and that's the best part; it offers a moment of bliss, but there are no strings attached. All is well. All can be ignored if you want it to be.
  ----
  It takes weeks for the subject of Lucius Malfoy to arise at the dinner table again.
   Annabeth has been fighting it off. The demigod has known you for far too long; at this point, all she needs to do is take a glimpse of your face, and immediately she knows exactly what is going through your brain. It's like a sixth sense to her, and it gives her the perfect opportunity to change the subject before you can so much as utter the word Wizard.
   Percy notices the tension, and finally snaps.
  “Are you still thinking about what Lucius Malfoy said?”
   Annabeth groans, slapping Percy on the arm. “I told you not to bring it up!”    But your attention has already been grabbed. You straighten up in your seat, grinning from ear to ear as you say, “So can we go?”
   “Give me a break,” Annabeth grumbles, dropping her head into her hand. “We're not going to visit Lucius Malfoy. We don't know the guy.”
  “He doesn't know us.”
   “Good.”
  You lean across the table to flick Annabeth's forehead. “But he still insists on talking about us to whatever freaky wizard press he has special ties to; I just want to see him, Annabeth! I just want to – like – mess with him a little bit!”
  Percy laughs, nudging Annabeth's elbow. When he speaks, it's through a mouthful of noodles. “I actually think our Y/N is on to something.”
   “Thank you, Percy.”
  Annabeth's head shoots up, a pale spot in the centre of her forehead where you flicked her. “No! No, this isn't even up for debate. Chiron will kill us if he knows we're even talking about it.”
   “No he won't,” you reply. “Chiron trusts us. He's seen us do all sorts, and it's not like I'm asking you guys to go and risk your lives for me. We'll go and talk to him, get his side of the story, and then we'll-”
  “It's honestly like you think I'm stupid.”
  You freeze, fork hovering halfway to your mouth. “Come again?”
   Percy laughs, failing to stifle it behind his hand. “You've only gone and woken the beast, Y/N.”
  “Shut up.”
  Annabeth sighs, running a hand over her ponytail. “I've known you since we were seven years old, Y/N – I know what you're up to. You'll never just talk to Lucius Malfoy. You'll get there, and you'll have to taunt him, and jeer at him, and put a stink bomb in his bathroom-”
   “That's the oldest trick in the book – I'm better than that.”
  “But you know what I mean!” Annabeth shakes her head. “You'll get carried away, and we know what happens when you get carried away.”
  Your stomach dips. Even Percy's bright smile falls, replaced with a grimace the two of you share. It's a low blow, and Annabeth knows that, but she also knows better than to make it out like you and Percy aren't two of the most unpredictable demigods to walk on Camp Half-Blood soil.
  When Annabeth next speaks, her voice is softer. “It's just too risky.”
  “Since when did you start being scared of a little confrontation?”
  Percy's voice startles you from your momentary reverie. Both you and Annabeth snap to attention, turning to look at your friend with raised brows; suddenly, he doesn't look like the happy-go-lucky, always bantering kid he usually is. His expression has darkened, jaw set and eyebrows lowered so his blue eyes look darker than normal. He can't even bring himself to look you both in the eye, instead choosing to keep a firm glare on the noodles and rice in front of him.
  “What do you mean?” Annabeth asks. “I'm not afraid of confrontation. My scars can vouch for that.”
   “Right, so why is Y/N's suggestion so scary to you?”
   You blink; this was certainly not the direction you were expecting the conversation to go. Annabeth and Percy bicker like cat and dog, but there's never been any malice in it. Now, listening to Percy, you can hear the genuine hurt in his voice, and you know her previous comments about getting carried away have actually struck a chord in him.
  Annabeth stares with her mouth agape, clearly unsure how to respond. She must sense the tension, too, must realise she has said the wrong thing.
   Still without looking up, Percy says, “I agree with Y/N; we need out of this camp for a little while. We need to do something. So why not have a little road trip to visit the man himself, huh? Why not get our questions answered?”
  “Percy....” Annabeth flicks a desperate glance in your direction, but you're not inclined to intervene when Percy is like this. As someone who has experienced the difficulty of controlling powers that you have been forced to ignore for a grand number of years, the last thing you want to do is provoke Percy any further than Annabeth has already managed to do.
   “I'm bored, too,” he continues. “And, to be honest, I'm getting pretty tired of them wizards thinking they can say whatever they want about us. It's about time we let them know they're not better than anyone just 'cause they wear them stupid robes and have a council.”
  “So what are you saying?” you pipe up, excitedly. “You'll go with me?”
   Percy shrugs. “I don't see why not. It'll be a bit of fun, won't it?”
   You cheer, throwing your hands in the air before catching a glimpse of Annabeth's angered expression. Your cheer immediately drifts away, and you let your hands fall to your sides before mumbling, “You sure? 'Cause, I mean, we don't have to.”
  “No, we're going,” says Percy, staring right at Annabeth. He has a death wish. That is the only explanation you can come up with right now. “It'll be fun, as you said.”
  Annabeth's nostrils flare. She says nothing else, simply sends one final glare to Percy – as if you're not even present – and stands up, marching away before dinner has finished.
   Percy huffs, slumping back in his chair. “Where does she get off telling us we get carried away?”
  “I mean, she isn't wrong, Percy.”
  Percy scowls. “I don't think that's very fair.”
  “You're in denial.” You plunge your fork into his noodles, using his distraction to steal some food for yourself. “But we're going to visit Lucius Malfoy! That'll be fun!”
   “I only said that to make Annabeth angry.”
  “I know, but a promise is a promise. We're going, and we're gonna have a fantastic time.”
  “I highly doubt that.”
  Not even two seconds later, Percy squeals and jumps from his seat. “Hey! Don't do that!”
  You grin, willing the skeletons hand to let go of Percy's ankle and sink back into the dirt.
  -----
  You and Percy remember this so well.
  It's muscle memory at this point, standing in the Hades cabin in the dark of night, Percy having tip-toed over to your domain to indulge in some illegal shenanigans. When you were younger, this used to be a nightly occurrence, which is one of the main reasons you both share such dramatic memories; neither of you are capable of staying out of trouble for very long, and maybe this is the very reason why.
  It's so easy for you to go wherever you want. You could shadow travel out of Camp Half Blood without a second thought, exhaustion be damned, but you never do. You respect Chiron too much to go out of your way to disobey him, but tonight is an exception. Percy stands by your side, hands tucked into an oversized hoodie. He's pulled the hood on over his dark hair, shoving the tangled strands into his eyes, though he does little to fix this. Instead, he keeps his blue gaze on you and says, “How long do you think we'll be?”
   “Not long,” you reply. “A few hours. Maybe a little longer if you fancy a stroll around London before we head back.”
  Percy scowls, glancing over his shoulder at the window. Nobody is awake. Camp Half Blood has never been so quiet.
  “Stop worrying.” You grab the sleeve of his hoodie, ushering his attention back to you. “I know what I'm doing, Perce – you've been with me a thousand times before. You know I can do it.”
  “Last time you shadow travelled this far, you nearly died.”
  “I was younger then. I've had more practise.”
  “Enough to travel to London?”
  You grab his hand, the motion so familiar now it's almost second nature. “Let's find out, shall we?”
   You don't give life the chance to throw another distraction your way; you inhale in that way you always do before a lengthy jump, and then you let your mind empty of all rational thought. Your mind does not go blank, nor does it settle; for a brief spell, you feel insane. You feel utterly and completely unhinged as the dead cackle in your head, thrashing through your brain like dogs trying to leap a wire fence. Your thoughts are no longer your own, replaced instead by the thoughts of people who are angry at death, angry at their own fate, people who blame your father and all of his offspring for the way their lives turned out.
  It hurts. You're forced to watch their faces as they twist into expressions of pure agony, begging for a help you cannot give them, because they are hundreds of years too late.
  It stops once your feet hit the ground.
  You try to steady yourself just to give off the illusion that you're perfectly fine, but your legs give out and you fall to your knees. Percy grabs your arm, but your body is limp as it slowly restores from the hectic ride that is shadow travel.
  “Never gets any better,” Percy grumbles; even he is a little uneasy on his feet, swaying to and fro. “Are you okay?”
  “Fine,” you belch. “Are we in London?”
  Percy looks up. You follow his gaze, warmth immediately flooding your stomach at the sight of a job well done, because the two of you are amongst the unmistakeable sights of London.
  It's a bit disappointing, you won't lie. Pictures in newspapers always perceive England to be this sophisticated, well-lit place, bustling with people dressed in suits and expensive clothes. Instead, you're greeted by a dark city street, broken street lights flickering overhead, people bustling by with their heads down, wearing track suits.
  In the distance, someone yells, “Come on, mate!” and it echoes off the cobbled stone walls.
  You and Percy share a glance.
  “Maybe we just expected too much,” he says.
  “Probably.”
  He hauls you to your feet, keeping a hand on your arm just in case you end up toppling over again. Through the darkness, you are just able to make out the peak of a large house in the distance. It's straight from a horror movie in your opinion, made up of dark cobbles, a golden fence adorned with spikes to keep the Muggles from entering; the word itself is nearly enough to make you laugh, though the sight of the house keeps you quiet.
  You and Percy approach the gates timidly, his hand still on your arm. “Is this the Malfoy house?”
  “I think so,” you whisper. “It looks like the pictures we always see. It's what I was aiming for, anyway.”
   “Good job, soldier.”
  “Thanks, boss.” You pause, craning your neck to get a better look at the house. “How do we actually get through the gate?”
  There are lights on in at least four of the rooms, a shadow passing by a curtain that looks tall and slim, gliding more than walking. You grab Percy's arm and point, whispering urgently, “That must be him! Lucius!”
   Percy ducks his head down and laughs. “Okay, okay. Let's just climb the fucking gate and get everything set up.” He glances at you. “You're sure you're up for this?”
  “I've never been more prepared for anything in my life.”
  Together, the two of you scale the metal gate, using the upper body strength you have gathered from years of training at Camp Half Blood. You're over and in this strangers garden in a number of seconds, sprinting through the grand garden before suspicions can be roused. Around you, white peacocks look up from their grazing, though none of them make a sound to give away the presence of two strangers.
  You reach the fountain and duck beneath it; this is where Percy needs to be if he wants to succeed in his part of the plan. He crouches beside you and hovers his hands over the water, not even giving you a warning before he uses his powers to pull the water from the concrete fountain. It sprays across the garden, and that's when the peacocks start to scream.
  Water splashes against their feathers, startling them. You can barely hide your laughter at the sight of them springing up from whatever peaceful graze they were involved in beforehand, now darting around the garden like someone has plucked a feather from their flesh.
  Percy shoves your arm. “Stop laughing and get on with it before they come out!”
   You push past the distractions and focus your energy on your own powers. Your exhaustion makes it all a little bit more difficult, but the image of the final product is enough to have you pushing the exhaustion aside just to reap the benefits of this. Inside yourself, something pulls, and it's familiar, uncomfortable, but it has the effect you want. Almost immediately, a skeletal hand darts from the ground. Just one for now, but you wait patiently before making the next one erupt.
  The front door of the Malfoy house bursts open, and standing there is no other than-
  “That's not Lucius,” Percy says.
  “It definitely is not.”
   The person standing in the doorway cannot be much older than you, with snow white hair and a sharp face. His eyes, blue and cold, are wide as they take in the sight before him, his wand clutched in a trembling hand.
  “You said you saw Lucius in the window!” Percy hisses, struggling to reel the spray of water back into himself.
  “I thought it was!”
  “For Gods sake.” Percy grabs your arm and drags you up, no longer caring about being seen. However, you stumble as he runs, dragging you along behind him, because the sight of the boy is distracting; he looks terrified, like he was expecting something completely different, like he thought someone was finally coming to take him away.
  You recognise the expression only because you've worn it yourself so many times; growing up as the child of Hades leaves a lot of scars and a lot of fear on a person, considering your father certainly isn't the most liked individual upon the Olympians.
  As Percy attempts to drag you back to the gate, you glance over your shoulder. The boys blue eyes glare into your own. He has seen you.
  And nothing can really prepare you for what happens next. You don't know enough about the wizarding world to expect this, but the feeling is unlike anything you have ever felt before. Someone yells in your direction, and then something is crashing into your spine, slithering along your neck, giving you not a single chance to react before the world goes still and you drop to the floor, no longer processing a single thing happening around you.
  ----
  “Would you just wake up?”
  The voice is posh and annoying. It makes you want to laugh.
  The pain in your spine stops you from doing such a thing, however. Instead, you slowly rouse from sleep, met by the blinding lights of a room unfamiliar. You lay on a bed fit for a king, soft pillows engulfing your sore head, thick mattress swaddling your body like a newborn baby.
  And standing above you is a boy you remember seeing only vaguely; pale skin, snow white hair, a grimace that shows he perhaps isn't too happy about having you in his home.
  You stare at him a moment, willing him to make the first move. Maybe if he starts the conversation, you won't have to go into too much detail about why you're actually here, because despite the glitches in your memory, that is something you remember very, very well.
  Running across his lawn, thinking you were clever because you and Percy were finally going to give Lucius Malfoy a piece of his own medicine.
  And now Percy is gone, and you're trapped in a strangers house.
  The boy stood above you, however, says nothing. He looks almost nervous, eyes flashing between you and the door, like he's planning the easiest way to flee if things reach that point.
  Finally, you snap. “Hello.”
  He jerks away, nearly stumbling over a stool by the bedside as he does. “Oh,Christ. Hello.”
  “I didn't mean to scare you.”
  “You didn't – I'm not scared. I just thought you were still Stunned.”
  You blink. “Stunned?”
  “I Stunned you.” He pauses, biting his lower lip. “It was the only way I could think to get you to stop running.”
  “Is that some kind of spell?”
   The boy waves a dismissive hand. “The point is, you were in my garden earlier. If my father had been the one to see you, he wouldn't have hesitated to curse you and call it self defence.”
  His father.
  Something rushes through your stomach, an excitement that doesn't really make sense. All has failed. You're going to go back to Camp Half Blood and be chastised, probably brutally punished, for the choices you made tonight, and yet here you are, overjoyed at the mere mention of Lucius Malfoy, because that's the only person this boy must be talking about.
  “You look a lot like him,” you say.
  The boy narrows his eyes. “My father?”
  “Lucius,” you clarify. “He lives here, doesn't he? He's the one Percy and I came to see.”
  The boy slowly leans back in his chair; it's quite cute, actually, that he dragged a chair into this room just so he could sit over your Stunned body. Maybe he was making sure you didn't die. Maybe he just didn't trust leaving you on your own.
  “What business could you possibly want with my father?” he asks. “You must be my age. What year are you in at Hogwarts? What House?”
 You smile. “I don't go to Hogwarts.”
  He reels back. “Really? Are you from a foreign school? Beuxbatons?”
  “I don't go to your fancy magic schools. I'm not a wizard.”
  The boy blinks. It never ceases to baffle you the pure ignorance of these people – how they can grow up in a world completely detached from everything and everyone, and yet are still unable to fathom the idea of anybody being different.
  “If you're not a wizard, how did you make the water fountain do that?”
   “I didn't. Percy did that.”
  “Who is this Percy bloke you keep going on about?”
   “He's my friend, the one you apparently let get away.”
  The boy raises a brow, glancing over at the window as if expecting to see Percy just standing there; honestly, you wouldn't even be surprised.
  He turns back and says, “So your friend is a wizard? Are you a Muggle?”
   He's taking an awfully long time to catch on.
  “No,” you reply, exasperated. “Neither of us are wizards. We're from New York – a little place called Camp Half Blood.”
   And for a second, the revelation doesn't land. The boy continues staring at you like you have three heads, mouth slightly agape, eyebrows furrowed. But then the ball drops, and he jerks back, the chair dragging in the carpet with the speed at which he jumps to his feet. He looks almost horrified.
  “Alright,” you mumble. “I'm not going to bring Zeus down here personally. He's a bit busy-”
  “How did you even get here?” he hisses. “Are you an assassin? Is that why you were looking for my father – so you could kill him?”
  “Oh, don't be so dramatic. I'm a demigod, not a murderer.”
  The boy looks at you like he doesn't think there's much difference between the two.
  This angers you. Something in your stomach burns, and suddenly, the only thing you want to do is to get away from him. You want to go back home. You want to find Annabeth and hug her, tell her she was right, just as she always is. You don't like being in the company of wizards. You don't like being away from the people who understand you best.
  “Look, this was fun,” you say, pushing yourself up from the bed. “But I need to get going. I'm sorry about your fountain-”
  “Where are you going?” he demands.
  You pause, raising a brow.  “Why do you care?”
  “Because – Because what if you come back to finish my father off? I can't just let you go!”
  He must be completely oblivious. You have fought monsters taken directly out of storybooks, have argued and debated with Gods about things such as ice cream flavours and which way is the right direction to go on a road trip – the last person you have any interest in fighting with is some posh, uptight wizard.
  “Look,” you say, “all I wanted to do was mess with the guy. He's been saying some pretty harsh things about demigods lately, and Percy and I just wanted to give him a taste of his own medicine. I don't want to murder your father.”
  The boy stares at you. He's powerful, too. You know he is. You can see his wand sticking out of a deep pocket in his emerald green robes. One flick of that and you're a goner, and yet he chooses to just stand over you, eyes burning holes into your head.
  “What's your name, anyway?” you ask.
  He tenses. “Malfoy. Draco Malfoy.”
   “Sounds evil.”
  “It's a strong name.”
  “Right.” You flick your eyes to the clock hung upon the wall. “Can I go now?”
  He sighs and backs away from the bed. “My father would kill me if he found out I was letting you go.”
  You stand up, knees trembling from the aftershocks of having a wizards spell slam directly into your spine, but you manage to catch yourself before crumbling completely; Draco does nothing to help stabilise you, instead watching you with a thoughtful gaze, like he's preparing to attack at any moment.
  And it's weird. You know it's weird. You should not just be able to walk out of his house without a single consequence to your name. He should be holding you hostage, keeping you pinned to this bed until his grand old father gets home, and he can tell you off for trespassing, scaring the life out of his precious white peacocks.
  But Draco doesn't say another word as you slip out the door and barrel downstairs, suddenly desperate to be away from a world like this. It's weird. It's unnatural. They care about blood status, and they learn spells, and it's all just a little bit too weird for your taste.
  Even weirder is the fact that Draco is letting you go so easily.
  ---
  You arrive back at Camp Half Blood when it's light outside, and you know you've been caught.
  Wherever Percy may be, you do not envy the treatment he must be getting. You clamber up to the pine tree and look down at the camp you call home, not surprised to see people bustling back and forth already, Chiron included. He looks miffed, digging his front hoof into the dirt like a rabid animal ready to charge.
  That's kind of what he is.
  You hollow out your cheeks and stroll directly into camp, ignoring the startled gasps of the Half-Bloods. You'll deal with Chiron before you deal with them – that seems like the best way forward.
  Chiron spots you seconds before you reach him. He turns, dust billowing up around him before he says, “And where do you think you've been?”
  Chiron has always been a father-figure to you, Hades be damned. He saw you as a junior demigod, just growing into who you are, unable to fully process the fact that the man you always hated, the man you once believed to be a no good excuse of a father, was actually a Greek God who has spent his time watching you grow – just from the sky instead of on the ground.
  He treats you and Percy differently than everybody else. You're both feared for no reason. People shy away from you like you've been on some blood-lust streak your entire life, even though that's far from the case. When you can, you avoid using your powers, purely because you know how much people dislike them. They see them as unnatural. They think it's weird, despite them having abilities, too.
  “Hello, Chiron,” you mumble. “I'm very tired, so if you could just-”
  “We've had word from the Ministry of Magic.”
   You freeze, stomach dropping, certain you heard him wrong. The only wizard you actually made contact with was Draco, and surely he didn't go to the Ministry after letting you run free just like that?
  Chiron shakes his head. His disappointed look is more than you can bare. “What were you two thinking, Y/N? What did you think would happen?”
  “I – I – I don't know.” You look around desperately. “Is Percy here? Did he make it back safely?”
   “Percy's resting. He wanted to go after you, but Grover wouldn't let him, and thankfully so-”
  “I was fine. The boy I met – Draco -”
  “Draco Malfoy?”
  You falter. “Well, yeah. He spotted us and ended up Stunning me-”
 “Oh my gods.” Chiron runs a hand through his hair, looking up at the sky, saying whatever prayers he thinks will help right now, like the Gods have ever listened to any of you before. “You do realise that's Lucius Malfoy's son, don't you? The son of the man who wants our kind terminated.”
  “Draco wasn't like that,” you reply, even though you don't know why. “He let me go. He didn't even hurt me-”
  “You've just said he Stunned you!”
  “For, like, an hour! I was fine when I woke up! And look me in the eyes and tell me you wouldn't do the exact same thing if you could.”
    Chiron groans, turning back to the Big House. He starts walking without another word, forcing you to sprint after him.
  “Don't be mad,” you say. “It was stupid. I'm sorry. Chiron, I'm sorry. We just got bored-”
  “If children put their family's in danger every time they were bored, Y/N, the human race wouldn't exist.”
  He really is angry, angrier than you've ever seen him. It takes you back to your childhood when he used to tell you off for staying up too late, or getting out of bed in the middle of the night.
  You stumble after him, thankful that he isn't telling you to go away and leave him alone; that's one thing Chiron has always promised he will never do to you or Percy – he'll never just leave you alone.
  You walk into the Big House, side-by-side, and it's a mildly unpleasant surprise for you to see Annabeth already sat by Chiron's desk, her head in her hands, blonde curls framing her face. As soon as the door shuts behind you, she jerks up, whirls around and throws a pen in your direction.
  You catch it. “I am safe, thank you for asking.”
  “You're so stupid!” She groans, picks up another pen and throws it. Chiron is the one to interject this time, snatching the pen from thin air and tucking it into the little pouch hooked to his side.
  “Enough, Annabeth. We haven't got time to chastise them.”
  “I beg to differ,” Annabeth growls, not once taking her eyes off you.
  The guilt claws to the surface; she only wanted to protect you, only wanted to give you some decent advice, and neither you nor Percy had listened, both too absorbed in your own boredom to use the common sense Annabeth seems so prone to.
  Chiron, however, does not give you a chance to ponder over this gruesome feeling. Instead, he pulls a seat out and gestures for you to sit down, which you do without question; at this point, you know you'd be stupid to disobey him, would only be digging yourself into a deeper hole, one you're not too sure you'll be able to crawl out of.
  He takes a seat in front of you as Annabeth hovers by your shoulder, arms folded over her chest, eyes trained dead ahead. You awkwardly shift in your seat, waiting for the scolding to begin.
  But instead, Chiron grabs a golden button from a drawer in his desk and presses it without saying anything at all. The room immediately brightens up in all different colours – red, green, blue, strobe lights dancing across the room, taking shape in the centre of the carpet. You have to squint to fully understand the form taking shape, but when it does, your stomach drops.
  Made entirely of lights, standing in the middle of the room, is Cornelius Fudge, the jittery little minister of the wizard world.
  You've only seen him a few times, and never in person; a few times, he came to meet with Chiron in regards to escaped prisoners, wizards who wanted to harm demigods who were on the run. You never thought too much of him, but he looks angry now, his grubbly little face twisted into an expression of anger and loathing. When he speaks, his voice is loud and harsh, making you flinch with each syllable.
  “Chiron!” he exclaims. “I hope this message finds you well; I'm still trying to figure out the communication device you gave to me in our last meeting. It's all very confusing, and every time I press something wrong, thunder and lightening nearly wipe me out.” He coughs into a handkerchief before continuing. “Anyway, I'm here to inform you of a mishap which took place in the Malfoy Manor only a few short hours ago. I've been given word that one of your people tried breaking into Lucius's home to do God only knows what. It's only pure luck that Malfoy's son, Draco, was awake and was able to stop the wicked thing from getting through the door.”
   “Wicked thing?” you burst. Chiron raises a silencing hand, still refusing to look at you.
  “We as a nation are becoming very paranoid by the loose grip with which you have upon your own people; they are starting to become wild, careless, and I can truly see a murder from one of you in our future, which, as the Minister, I must put a stop to as soon as possible. Therefore, I demand the culprit be punished for his or her crimes, and I will be popping in soon with my witness to go over the details of the night to help you further understand where our fear is coming from.” Again, he coughs into a handkerchief. “Thank you. I hope the camp is well – the strawberries you sent were wonderful, as always! Good day to you, sir!”
  The lights blink out. The room is doused in silence. Inside your head, a scream echoes.
  You don't even know what to say. Would an apology even suffice? Would an explanation even be worth it? Years it has taken for the wizarding world and the demigod world to live in peace, and by the sounds of it, you've just annihilated all of that for the sake of a prank. You let Lucius Malfoy's hateful words burrow themselves into your head, which is probably exactly what he planned.
  Chiron puts the golden button back in his desk. The soft click it makes as it hits the wood echoes off the walls, so loud and gentle, so mocking. Slowly, he lifts his eyes to meet your own and says, “Now you can understand why we're all a little bit angry.”
  “A little bit?” You close your eyes, letting Annabeth's outburst ring throughout the room. “Chiron, I warned them! I warned them both! I said – what did I say Y/N? - I said-”
  “You said it was stupid, and that we shouldn't do it,” you mumble. “And we didn't listen.”
  “No, you didn't, and now you've given the wizard council a reason to think we're out to get them, which gives them a reason to announce open fucking warfare on us-”
  “Okay, Annabeth, calm down,” Chiron says. “We're taking this one step at a time. There's no point jumping ahead to things like that.”
  “Chiron, this is bad. This is so, so bad. The wizards are going to think we did this on purpose-”
  “Why are you saying we?” you ask. “Percy and I did this on our own. We'll take the consequences. We've done it before.” You turn to Chiron, who stands solemnly in the corner, head bowed as if deep in thought. “What are the consequences, may I ask?”
  He sighs, nostrils flaring. “We've decided that keeping you in camp for the rest of the summer will suffice for now. The Minister and his witness will be arriving in a few days and I want you to be on your best behaviour.”
  You scowl; the punishment is weak. You got off lucky, and you're aware of that, but it doesn't make it any more bearable. You hate being trapped, hate sitting in the Hades cabin with nothing but your own thoughts keeping you company. That's the hardest part about being a child of one of the Big Three – you're alone. It doesn't matter how many campers surround you, you are alone.
  But you take the punishment on the chin, giving Chiron a respectful nod before walking from the Big House to continue with the rest of your day. You'll find Percy and talk to him about everything, maybe apologise for dragging him into something so stupid, something so avoidable. If either of you had any flicker of common sense, none of this would have happened.
  It's only when you're halfway down the hill do you question anything Chiron has just told you.
  You falter, one word lingering in your mind. Witness.
  The only witness you can possibly think of is Draco Malfoy.
  ---
  He arrives in the afternoon, already looking so madly out of place.
  You spot his white hair, blowing so majestically in the wind Chiron has picked out for the day. His robes billow out around him, his sharp face stuck in an expression of anxiety. His eyebrows are furrowed, eyes darting to and fro as he strolls through the centre of Camp Half-Blood with his father at his side and the stout Minister, Cornelius Fudge, strolling behind them.
  He looks so out of place. It would almost be humorous if you weren't burning with misplaced anger at the mere sight of him; he told on you. He ran to his father and touted on you, even after making it seem like he was going to let you go with no consequences, and now you're stuck in camp for the rest of the summer with absolutely nothing to do and barely anyone to talk to.
  “Dickhead.”
  “Is that him?”
  You jump at the sound of Annabeth's voice, very nearly dropping the spear you were working with before your distraction walked through the barriers.
  “That's him,” you reply. “Draco Malfoy.”
   “I meant the other guy. The one you went after.”
  “Oh, Lucius. Yeah. He's there, too.”
  Annabeth narrows her grey eyes, following the movements of the Malfoy boys. “You know, I can kind of understand why you wanted to put them in their place.”
  You open your mouth to respond, but the words collapse when Draco's head snaps in your direction, like he somehow sensed your presence. His eyes find yours, his face draining of what little colour it has; something inside you stirs, fingers curling impossibly tighter around the spear.
  You remember those eyes so well, shockingly well, strangely well. Waking up to them burning holes into your skull was an experience you don't think you'll forget, considering the shock that coursed through you at the mere sight of him. He was so calm, so curious, not even yelling the slurs his father seems so keen on.
  And you might have made it up. You might have just been imagining it, but you're almost certain he flicks his head in the direction of the bandstand set up on the far side of camp, nearly hidden beneath the canopy of trees. You continue to stare at him, too bewildered by the miniscule movement to respond before he disappears over the hill.
  “Come on,” Annabeth urges, nudging your arm. “Let's get back to training.”
  But you're too distracted now. Knowing that Lucius Malfoy and his son – Draco – are walking around Camp Half-Blood makes your moves sloppy. And then there's the matter of Draco's little signal, like he wants you to meet him somewhere, like he wants to talk to you.
  You have nothing to say to him, but that doesn't stop you being curious about what he wants to tell you.
  Annabeth swings her sword, very nearly clipping the side of your ear. You yelp, stumbling back. Your foot catches on a rock sticking up from the ground, and before you can react, you're sprawled across the grass with your spear laying in a heap at your side.
  Annabeth sighs, kicking the weapon away from your outstretched fingers. “What the hell was that, L/N?”
  You prop yourself up on an elbow. “You could have given me some warning.”
  “Oh yes, because the monsters will be so generous as to give you some warning.”
   You scowl, shoving up from the ground. “Look, I'm just gonna get some water before the next round, okay?”
  Annabeth falters, narrowing her eyes. “Just some water?”
  “Just some water.” You give her a dazzling smile, hoping to the gods that this is enough to convince her you are telling the truth. You know it's a long shot – Annabeth knows you better than anybody else, but she's learned from her mistakes. Trying to boss you around and tell you what to do will only ever end in disaster, and so she says nothing else as you set your gear back on the rack and head up the hill towards the bandstand, out of sight of Annabeth's suspicious glare.
  Draco isn't there when you arrive. The bandstand is deserted, the only sign of life being the tree nymphs poking their heads out of the canopy to see who has arrived on their territory. You shoo them away before slumping down on the bench set in the middle of the stand, gazing around with your heart beating wildly in your chest, and for no reason at all.
  He probably won't even show up. He probably hates you. He's probably too scared to face you after what he did, and honestly, you wouldn't even blame him.
  After ten minutes, you start losing hope. Chiron will be looking for you shortly, most likely tipped off by Annabeth that you disappeared for no reason instead of finishing your training session. It won't be long for them to add two and two together and realise exactly what you have gone to do-
  “I didn't think you'd actually show up. Thought you might have been banned from seeing me.”
  Your head snaps up. “Jesus, Draco. You scared the shit out of me!”
   There he is, all tall and lanky, white hair blowing away from his forehead, his weird robes billowing out around him. It's weird how a person can make such odd attire look nice, almost like an outfit you'd wear yourself.
  “Sorry,” he says, though he doesn't sound apologetic in the slightest; he sounds tired. “I thought you demigods were meant to have superhuman senses or something.”
  You raise a brow. “Our parents are gods, not superheroes.”
  “Same difference.”
  “I'm flattered.”
  He sits down beside you, shoulder bumping yours. “Don't be. It wasn't a compliment.”
   You fall into silence then, unsure of what to say, how to start the conversation you both know needs to be had. You had so much anger built up inside you only moments before, but the second you looked up and saw his face, it dispelled. You were reminded of them blue eyes gazing down at you when you awoke from your Stunning spell, how soft and worried they were for a complete stranger.
  Finally, he inhales deeply and says, “I didn't mean for this to get as big as it did.”
  “Everyone's mad at Percy and I. Me especially.”
  He tilts his head back, glaring up at the sky. “How badly did they punish you?”
   “I can't leave this place for the rest of the summer.”
  “Not too bad, then.”
  You glare at him. He cracks open an eye, catches your expression and raises a brow.
  “It is bad?” Lifting his head, he gestures towards the open stretch of grass in front of you. “This place looks amazing, Y/N. You've got everything you could possibly need, plus you're safe from all those crazy monsters we always get word about.”
  “The monsters don't bother me. I'm meant to go out and fight them; that's my purpose.”
   Draco glances at you. You feel his blue eyes burning holes into the side of your head, can feel the judgement radiating off him as he takes in what you've just said. You never realise just how strange other people must find statements like that, how backwards it truly is to crave the feel of battle.
  “You know, I'd kill to have a place like this.”
  You look at him. “Really? Is your mansion not enough?”
  He scowls, barrelling on like you haven't said anything. “A place where you feel like you belong.” He glances over. “You may hate being here sometimes, but look me in the eyes and tell me you don't feel like this place is home.”
   You can't do that. Despite your desire to be free sometimes, your desire to head out on the streets where you don't belong, you know Camp Half Blood will always be home. It will always be the place you turn to when you need comfort, because it is the only place in the world that has ever accepted you and your weird abilities with open arms.
  Draco hums. “Exactly. I don't have that. I don't fit in anywhere; I'm not evil enough for my family, not good enough for everyone else. I'm on my own.”
    The silence that follows is a heavy one; you're not used to this kind of talk. You relate so strongly to his feelings, but you very rarely express them in quite the same way. At Camp Half-Blood, everyone is in the same boat. It's rude to think you have it worse than somebody else. Every single person here was abandoned by a parent, maybe even both.
  But Draco isn't a demigod, so maybe he won't mind.
  “I get that.”
  He narrows his eyes. “Really?”
  “Yeah.” You tug at your sleeve, pulling the material over your curled fingers. “I don't exactly come from the most well-loved bloodline in this place. Even other Half-Bloods take one look at me and cower.”
  “That blonde girl I saw you with-”
  You wave a dismissive hand. “That's Annabeth; she's more like a sister to me, but even she's wary of my powers.”
  Draco pauses. “What powers?”
  You open your mouth to respond, to go through the long list of the terrifying things you are capable of, but your words are cut short by the sound of a bark in the distance. Your head snaps up immediately, senses sparking to life before you've even fully processed where the noise is coming from. Around you, the tension in the camp is amplified as the other Half-Bloods spring to the same level of alertness.
  Draco straightens up, reaching into his back pocket for a wand that you can almost guarantee will be completely useless within the boundaries of Camp Half-Blood. You place a hand on his shoulder as you stand, pushing him back down onto the bench.
  “Stay here.”
  “Where are you going?” he asks, head darting left and right. “What was that?”
  “I don't know, but it didn't sound good.”
   “So call someone!”
  You raise a brow, shooting him a glance over your shoulder. He looks like a scared little boy, hands balled against his chest, eyes darting to and fro. They join with yours eventually, softening almost immediately.
  “Why are you looking at me like that?”
  “We don't just call someone at Camp Half-Blood. We deal with this stuff on our own.”
  Draco falters. His eyes narrow, though the expression doesn't last long; suddenly, he cries out and lurches forward, pointing madly to a space just over your shoulder. You spin just in time, yanking your sword from your belt and swinging blindly. Your shoulder smashes against the dirt, giving you a view of the beast that has just tried ripping you to shreds.
  A chimera.
  You recognise it. Of course you do. The lion head and snake tail are kind of difficult to forget.
  “What the hell is that?”
  “Draco, go!” you yell, rolling onto your knees and swinging your sword yet again. The chimera dives, talons outstretched, mouth open in a roar.
It's massive paws slam into your shoulders, shoving you back yet again. You cry out, struggling to lift your sword with the weight pressing against your chest, the blood now seeping from two wounds in your shoulders. Over the chimera's massive shoulders, you can see Draco jumping from foot to foot, clearly unsure what to do.
  “Why are you still stood there?” you scream.
  Your yelling triggers something within the chimera. You watch the gears turn in its head, its red eyes gleaming before it spins, it's tail snapping out and wrapping around your wrist. You cry out, sword clattering to the floor before you're yanked to your feet and thrown carelessly against the bench you were previously sat on.
  Draco spins. “Y/N!”
  You groan, looking up through bleary eyes; your sword isn't like Percy's. It won't just reappear in your pocket any time you lose connection with it. Where it lies in the grass, feet away from you, it will stay.
  That means you only have one way to get this beast away from you and Draco.
  It takes all of your strength, and it's never easy, but you push through the pain and the exhaustion and pull on that little trigger within your body. Something surges inside you, a feeling so familiar it almost feels like second nature. The floor rumbles. Draco yelps, clinging desperately to the back of the bench, but you keep your eyes on the chimera. It digs its foot into the dirt, growls low in its throat, and then it dives.
  The skeleton's hand bursts from the ground, wraps around the chimera's ankle and pulls it back.
  As soon as the chimera's chin hits the dirt, you bounce to your feet and sprint towards your sword. You snatch it from the ground, spin and slash through the air, no longer caring what part of the beast you hit, just as long as you injure it somehow.
  It strikes through the goats head that protrudes from the chimera's back.
  Black blood oozes from the monsters back end. It splatters up your arms, tiny dots sprinkling your face, but you don't have the time to ponder on that. You swing again, this time going for the neck. The chimera screams, but as soon as your sword makes contact with it's bushy mane, the scream disappears. The chimera bursts into golden powder in front of you, blowing away in the wind.
  A pair of hands wraps around your waist, tugging you up before you can fall to your knees.
  “Holy shit,” you whisper against Draco's collar. “Are you okay?”
Draco can't speak. Looking up, you see his lower jaw rattling, words fighting to the surface but being unable to push past his wall of fear. He looks everywhere but your face, as if trying to figure out where on earth the chimera disappeared to.
  “It's gone for now,” you say, throat dry. “You're safe, Magic Boy.”
  “How did that get in here?”
  Annabeth's voice echoes up the hill. Glancing over your shoulder, you see her marching in your direction, Chiron and Percy walking by her side. At the bottom of the hill, the other Half-Bloods look up, shocked at the sight in front of them. Your disgruntled form being held up by a wizard is certainly not a normal sight at Camp Half-Blood.
  “Y/N,” Percy exclaims. “Are you alright?”
  “Just peachy,” you croak out. “I think I might be bleeding out, though.”
  “Someone get some ambrosia,” Chiron demands, and it's with gentle hands that he extracts you from Draco's grip and lowers you to the floor. He looks up at Draco and says, “Are you alright, boy?”
  “T-the skeletons,” Draco stammers. “They just – they just came out of the floor!”
  Chiron smiles gently. “So I see you've been witness to our Y/N's miraculous abilities, hm?”
  Draco's eyes widen. “Y/N did that?”
  “Yes, you idiot,” Annabeth hisses, shouldering Draco out of the way so she can kneel beside you. She dabs a wet cloth against your shoulder, and you hiss at the contact.
  Percy arrives shortly after with an air tight bag of ambrosia, which you eat in about two seconds flat.
  “How did that get in here?” Percy asks.
  “The barriers were open already,” Chiron replies. “We needed to let the Minister and his men inside the camp, so we had to weaken them a little bit. We must have weakened them too much, and the chimera found a way in.”
   “Or this is the gods playing some sick trick on us,” says Annabeth. “Remember when Percy first arrived and they thought it would be funny to let the Minotaur roam free?”
  “This isn't the gods,” you mumble. “I haven't done anything to make them mad.”
  “So it's the wizards, then.” Annabeth whirls on Draco, folding her arms over her chest. You close your eyes, listening to Percy chuckle lightheartedly at your side. Both of you have given up trying to calm her down at this point. “You and your people just have to come in and ruin everything, don't you?”
  Draco blinks. He's barely spoken the entire time, clearly still trying to figure out what the hell he has just witnessed.
  Annabeth laughs coldly. “When will you and your people get the hint that we don't want you here. We don't want anything to do with you! It's you lot who have so much to say about us, and the minute we retaliate, you take a little hissy fit and have to get the bloody council involved! Well, goodbye to you. Get out of our camp and stay out or else the next monster to attack you won't be killed by us – you can deal with it on your own with your fancy magic spells.”
  She turns back, flicking her curls in Draco's face.
  You shyly glance up and mumble, “Sorry about her.”
   “And although that speech held a lot of passion,” Chiron cuts in, placing a hand on Annabeth's shoulder, “I'm afraid Mr Malfoy and his people cannot leave the camp until the barriers have been sorted.”
    Silence.
  Even you're too stunned to speak, staring up at Chiron as if waiting for the punchline of some joke. He simply looks around, examining the invisible barriers surrounding you, most likely seeing every single gap and crack held within them.
  Percy is the first to break the silence. “Uh. . . Why not?”
  “Well,” Chiron says, “the barriers have been split. If we were to open them any further to let these men out, I fear they might be unsalvageable. We can't risk it.”
  “So we're just gonna let them stay here?” Annabeth hisses.
  “I can't do that!” Draco exclaims, stumbling forward with wide eyes. “I have school, and my mother-”
  “This isn't up for debate,” Chiron says. “I must keep the safety of my people in mind at all times, and this is the only solution that will keep them safe.”
  Annabeth scoffs. “I wouldn't say letting the Malfoy's in our space is keeping us safe.”
  “That is because you're blinded by your ignorance.”
   You and Percy take sharp breaths through your teeth, watching Annabeth's face drop. It would almost be sad if you weren't in agreement with the centaur.
  And it's weird because you used to have the exact same thought process as Annabeth; all you read about wizards was how much they despised your kind, how they saw you as unnatural, a mistake, because gods aren't meant to have children with mortals. Mortals – or Muggles – aren't meant to carry such powerful beings.
  And yet here you are, looking at Draco and feeling even the tiniest glimmer of excitement at the idea of having him stay with you for a little while.
  Chiron turns back to Draco and says, “You can stay in cabin eleven with the Hermes kids. That's where all the newcomers go.”
  Draco pales. “I really don't think this is a good idea...”
  “It's the only idea we have,” Chiron says. “Now, get ready for the feast. You must be starving.”
  ---
  Draco doesn't go to the feast. Apparently, he isn't as starved as Chiron made him out to be.
  Instead, he follows you to the infirmary, despite having no injuries himself. Will Solace feeds you chunks of ambrosia, keeping a narrowed gaze on Draco as he sits by your bedside, saying nothing. He looks thoughtful, head ducked down, hands perched between his legs; he hasn't spoken a single word since the two of you arrived, and his skin is yet to find colour again.
  You glance at Will and whisper, “Is he looking okay to you?”
  “Absolutely not,” Will replies, pressing a damp cloth to your shoulder blade. “But I'm not one hundred percent sure how wizards are supposed to look in the first place, so I can't really say.”
  “Have you got any juice or anything like that you can give him?”
  Will hollows out his cheeks, clearly not appreciating the idea of using up resources on a wizard. Nonetheless, the son of Apollo is too kind for his own good and heads into the back room to grab a juice box. He hands it to Draco with a soft smile, one Draco does not return, before Will says he's going to go check on the other campers. He leaves you alone after that, the room empty besides you and Draco.
  Draco doesn't look up. He doesn't really need to; even without seeing his face, you know what expression he will be wearing, as it is the same expression so many people have worn after watching you bring the dead up from the ground.
  You bite your lip and say, “The food is good here. Are you sure you don't want to go and get some dinner?”
  Draco slowly looks up. His eyes are bloodshot, strained, glinting light blue beneath the yellow lights. “Who is your godly parent?”
  You pause. “Why do you care?”
  “Because what I just saw you do-”
    “Hades,” you blurt out, unable to bear hearing him go into detail again, unable to bear the disgust that will surely ring through his voice. “Hades is my father. I'm the kid he was never supposed to have.”
  Draco stares at you, waiting for you to continue, but what else is there to say? There's no relationship to describe, no happy memories with your dad you can share. All there is to it, is that you are not meant to be here, and you are.
  “And you . . . you have no brothers or sisters? You're all alone?”
  Your eyes snap up. “I'm not alone. I have Percy, and Annabeth, and. . . and everyone else. Plus, I have a little brother – Nico.”
  Draco perks up, like the idea of you having a little brother is something to be excited about. “Really? Where is he?”
  “He's floating around somewhere,” you reply. “He doesn't really like staying in one place for too long; I only really see him when he comes to visit me or his boyfriend.”
   Draco withers. “Oh.”
  “Why do you care anyway?”
  He scowls. “I don't care. I'm just curious. If I'm to stay here for the next few days, I might as well get to know you a little better.”
  “It works both ways, Magic Man. Tell me, why is your father such a little bitch?”
  “I could ask the same thing about yours.”
  “My dad is the god of death. What's your dad's excuse?”
  Draco glares. You grin, slowly leaning back on the hospital bed as you wait for his response, because you genuinely want to know. You've spent years reading articles orchestrated by Lucius Malfoy that go into great detail about why he hates demigods so much, why he thinks they're the scum of the earth; now, you have his son at your disposal, and you're determined to find out where these violent opinions have stemmed from.
  Draco sighs, folding his arms over his chest. “My father just doesn't like people who are different.”
  You pause. “Different?”
   “People who aren't pure-blood wizards are basically bottom tier to him. That includes Muggle borns, Squibs, Muggles, demigods.”
  “But he doesn't even know anything about demigods.”
  Draco shrugs heavily. “He knows you're different. That's all he cares about.”
  It makes sense, you suppose. Lucius has never kept his ignorance a secret. It's not just demigods he speaks badly about. You've read it all – his hatred for Muggles, for people who disagree with him, for good people.
  People who aren't like him.
  “And what about you?” you ask.
  Draco flicks his eyes up, still messing with his fingers. “What about me?”
  “How do you feel about demigods?” You gesture around the room. “Now that you've seen us in action; what are your thoughts?”
  Draco shrugs, looking back down at his intertwined hands. He has nice hands. Muscled, long fingers, expensive rings. “I think it's all quite odd, but I'll get used to it. I'm gonna be stuck here with you for a while, so I don't really have a choice, do I?”
  You smile. “No, I don't think so.”
  ---
  The dreams are worse that night.
  They always are after you have been injured. Already restless, you aren't strong enough to fight off the nightmares that swarm your mind, and tonight they come for you in full force.
  You always call them nightmares, even though they really aren't. More like visions, people visiting you when you least expect it. You've had Poseidon visit your dreams, Athena, even Ares, but tonight, someone new is making an appearance.
  You recognise him immediately. He has the same eyes as you.
  “Dad.”
  He stands waist deep in black mist. Curly black hair frames a chiselled face, dark eyes gazing at you with a look close enough to love that you get a little emotional. By his side is a three-headed dog, and in his hand is a skull, held so casually. Neither of you mention it. Neither of you need to.
  The room is dark. Looking down, you see black mist crawling towards you, hiding your legs from view. You should probably be panicking, but something is holding you back.
  “Dad,” you repeat. “Where's Nico?”
  “Safe,” he responds, voice too calm for a man whose son has been missing for weeks. Voice too calm for a man who is standing in front of the child he abandoned so many years ago. “And how are you, child?”
  “Good. Better than ever, actually.”
  “Even with the company you have been keeping recently?”
  You pause, certain you misheard. Hades raises a brow, tilting his head as if to say Are you going to try and tell me otherwise?
  Swallowing, you say, “So this is about Draco.”
   “This is about the wizards in general,” Hades corrects. “Don't think I didn't notice you getting comfortable with that boy.”
  “I wouldn't exactly say comfortable-”
  “He held you up when you fell.”
   “And that was very nice of him.”
  “That was inappropriate.”
  You fall silent, cheeks heating up. You truly cannot believe your dad – your real life father – is stood in front of you giving dating advice. He needs to take one look at his own history with women and sort himself out before he comes running to you.
  “Wizards aren't safe around our people, Y/N,” Hades continues. “You aren't meant to mingle with people like him.”
  “I think that's a little harsh.”
  “His father wants you dead.”
  “My father wants everyone dead! You're the god of the underworld, for crying out loud!”
  Hades's eyes widen for a moment, clearly shocked at your outburst, but you don't even have the strength to reel it back in. You have felt frustration towards many of the Olympians, all of whom seem to believe they have some sort of control over you, but the one Olympian who makes you angriest the quickest, is the one stood right in front of you, the one who shares your blood, the one who hooked up with your mum one day before abandoning her, along with the kid he always claimed he was never going to have.
  You don't even care that he's a god. You don't care that he could kill you in two seconds flat if he so desired.
  “Chiron did not raise you to have such a sour attitude,” Hades says after a moment.
  You deflate, eyes slipping closed. “There's really no point in trying to get through to you, is there?”
  “It is my job as a father-”
  You scoff.
  “-to keep my kids safe. That's what I'm doing.”
   Your eyes pop open. “Keep us safe? Bianca's dead, Dad. Nico's gone rogue. The only reason I haven't been slaughtered is because I never expected you to keep an eye on me – I do everything on my own.”
  “That's not true,” Hades growls. “You know that's not true.”
  “No? So where's my little brother then, huh? Where's Bianca? Where were you yesterday when a fucking chimera nearly ripped me to shreds, huh? Where were you then?”
  “I'm a busy man, Y/N, but I'm serious when I say that wizards are not the kinds of-”
  “This isn't about the wizards!” you yell, throwing your hands up. The ground rumbles, but neither you nor Hades acknowledge it. “This is about you coming into my dreams, thinking you can just lay down some fatherly rules after nearly eighteen years of not giving a shit about me!”
  His eyes flash. Within the dark irises, you catch a glimpse of a screaming face, and you know exactly what he must be hearing in the back of his mind right now. You hear it sometimes, too, only he must be much more used to it than you are.
  “I have always cared for you,” he says. “Even when my brothers and sisters were punishing me for having another demigod child, I cared for you. I kept them from harming you. I made sure you reached Camp Half-Blood safely so that you could be under the protection of people who knew where you came from.”
  “And they've been more like family to me than you have ever been.”
  Hades closes his eyes. A god dejected. A god not getting what he wants. It's a rare but pleasant sight.
  “I'd like to wake up now,” you mumble. “I appreciate you stopping in, but please never do it again.”
  Hade's looks at you, and you hate the resemblance. You hate that pull, so mortal and familial. You can't even help it. It's like the genes you got from this man are desperate for you to just make up with him, to just see him as the dad he is.
  But you can't.
  He argues no further, clicking his fingers to send you out of your sleep. You awake, startled, eyes snapping open to the sight of your dark room, the smell of ash heavy in the air. You flick your eyes over to see your bedside table gone – yet again, you incinerated it in your sleep.
  “Fuck sake,” you whisper.
  “I put it out.”
  You yelp, very nearly falling out of bed in your shock. Your head snaps up, hands grappling for your sword, only to pause when you look over and see Draco standing in the doorway wearing a white dress shirt and black trousers.
  He looks exceptionally smart.
  Exceptionally smart.
  Your heart jumps as you push yourself up, running a self conscious hand through your bed head. “What the hell are you doing in here?”
  “Chiron asked me to wake you. He said you have training today.”
  You groan, flopping back into your pillows. Draco chuckles, and before you can tell him to stop, he strolls right over to your window and pulls the black out curtains open.
  “Noooo,” you moan, rolling onto your stomach and stuffing your head in the pillows.
  Draco chuckles. “Come on. It's already nine am. The climbing wall is gonna be packed if you don't wake up now.”
  You peek an eye out of your pillow and glare at him. “How do you even know about the climbing wall?”
  “Poseidon's son gave me a little tour after I left the infirmary yesterday; quite a nice little place you've got here, I must say. I'm quite fond of it all.”
  “Oh, happy days. As long as you're happy.”
  He grins, sharp as knives. “I feel like I'm on holiday.”
  You swing your legs out of bed. “You're digging yourself into a deeper hole, Malfoy.”
   “I can just sit back, kick my feet up, watch you lot fight a bunch of mythical creatures-”
  You lob a sock at him. “Get out while I get changed.”
   Draco grins before bowing out of the room, slamming the door closed behind him.
  And so you get ready for the day, getting dressed in your usual Camp Half-Blood shirt and a pair of comfortable jogging bottoms. The sun is bright this morning, a clear indicator that Chiron and the gods are in a bit of a better mood than they were yesterday, when rain was breaking through the already damaged seals of the camps barriers.
  As promised, the climbing wall is set up and booming with Half-Bloods. People from all the different cabins take turns going up against one another, clambering up one side of the wall, racing each other to the top as lava pours down from nowhere, lightening strikes zap through the centre of the wooden beam, as random hands appear out of nowhere and make swipes for legs and arms and faces.
  You spot Draco sat by himself in the stands, wand twirling in his fingers. It could very well be an intimidation tactic, but you stroll up beside him anyway, taking a seat to watch the scene before you unfold; someone from the Ares cabin has gone up against someone from the Athena cabin, a deadly pairing when put together.
  Draco doesn't budge when you sit down. Instead, he points and says, “I think the one with the spear is going to win.”
  “Clarisse?” you say. “Yeah, probably. She's a stubborn bitch.”
  “Daughter of...”
  “Ares.”
 “God of...”
  You roll your eyes. “Have you ever actually looked into the Greek myths?”
   Draco shrugs, leaning back in his seat. He stretches his long limbs out in front and says, “I was educated more in the ways of Dark Magic than Greek myths.”
  “Boring.”
  “Necessary, I think.”
   “Tell me how that all works.”
  Draco glances over. “Magic?”
  “The world of magic. It sounds. . . confusing.”
  Draco pauses for a moment, as if choosing his words carefully. As he ponders, the two of you watch Clarisse make her way to the top of the climbing wall, where she pulls the ring loose of it's confines and holds it up to the sound of applause and cheers from the people on the ground. She hops off, landing in a crouch on the ground; her brothers and sisters swarm her, all but lifting her off her feet in celebration.
  Finally, Draco speaks. “It really is just a whole different world. Different to. . . any other world, I guess. We dress differently-”
  “Yes.”
  “The structure of the whole thing is different. You get used to it after a while, but I guess being here is making me realise just how weird the way things are run back home really are.”
  “But it's what you're used to, isn't it?” you say. “You must have thought the way we did things was weird when you first arrived.”
  Draco scoffs. “Skeletons coming up from the floor? Definitely weird.”
  Your cheeks heat up, despite the lack of malice in his voice. Your powers are still – and forever will be – a sensitive topic for you; you've had far too many bad experiences with them to ever be comfortable flaunting them around like the other Half-Bloods are capable of doing. Even now, you watch the Hephaestus kids make fire sprout from their fingertips without so much as a flicker of hesitation – you've never been able to do that, because people take one look at what you're capable of and immediately think you're some kind of devil spawn, there just to drag them into the pits of hell or something.
  Draco nudges you, pulling you from your trance. When you look over, he gestures towards the climbing wall. You follow his gaze to see Percy standing in the centre, waving up at you, arms wild above his head, that goofy grin on his stupid face.
  “I think he wants you to join him,” Draco mumbles.
  You glance over. “You don't mind?”
  “I'll stay here and cheer you on. How about that?”
   You stare at him a second longer, the wand twirling between his nimble fingers; oh, it would be so easy to hate him. That cocky smirk, the subtle hostility to everything he says. You weren't made to like wizards, but Draco Malfoy is starting to grow on you.
  You give him a smile before hopping from your seat and jogging down into the grounds. People cheer at your arrival, because this is the match they have all been waiting for; scared as they may be to face your powers on their own, they would never give up the opportunity to watch two kids of the Big Three go head to head against one another. This is truly the only time you feel comfortable using your powers.
  Percy shakes your hand when you reach him, dragging you close so he can whisper in your ear. “You and Dynamo getting a little close up there?”
   You shove him away, not even giving him an answer before you hop up onto the first ring of the climbing wall. “You coming, Seaweed Brain?”
  Percy rolls his eyes, taking position on the other side of the climbing wall. In the stands, a whistle blows, and immediately the two of you start.
  Percy's quick. Percy has always been quick. From the day he strolled into camp, dragging Grover along with him, he has proven how powerful he is.
  But you're also pretty quick, pretty lithe, just as capable as him.
  You don't even fully process where he is, much too focused on avoiding the downfall of lava dribbling down the side of the climbing wall. The heat singes your hand as you pull yourself up, and you have to grit your teeth to stop the cry of panic that always wants to make it's way to the surface when this happens.
  Percy has the advantage, of course; he just summons some water from thin air, and the lava is immediately overpowered. He laughs at your scowl, pulling himself further along the climbing wall.
  “Okay, Mr Jackson,” you mutter. “If that's really how you want to play it.”
  You pull on something within your stomach, a trick your sister Hazel was able to teach you when you visited her in the Roman camp all those months ago. You reach a hand out, grabbing the iron ore before it soars above your head after being ripped from the ground by your powers. It's not much – you're much better with a sword – but you throw it, using your powers to push it away from your body, straight towards Percy's face. It smacks him in the nose, making him cry and stumble. He slips from the ring he is hanging onto, dropping a few feet before finally latching onto another; blood oozes from his nose, and he glares up at you as you quicken your pace, hoping to put as much distance between you both as humanly possible.
  “That wasn't very fair, you know!” Percy yells up.
  “Gotta do what you gotta do!” you yell back, which of course prompts Percy to shoot a blast of water straight at your legs. You yelp, grip loosening on the ring you have grip on.
  But then you're falling, because the thing about water is that it makes surfaces extremely slippery, and not even a child of Hades can overpower that. You desperately try latching onto something – anything – that can soften your fall, but your moving too quick, and the rings are zooming past, out of reach, and you know this is it. You're going to fall to the floor and break some bones and be out of commission for weeks, because that's what always happens when Percy gets competitive. You're starting to get real-
  “Wingardium Leviosa!”
  Another yelp is ripped from your throat, this one more a yelp of surprise as you suddenly become light as a feather. The wind stops whistling in your ears, replaced now by the gasps coming from the ground, and the sound of Percy yelling, “I'm sorry, I'm so sorry,” over and over again.
  Ever so gently, you are lowered onto the floor. As soon as your feet hit solid ground, you are engulfed by a crowd of Half-Bloods, all coming to make sure you're okay, have not been harmed despite that being the way of things in this place.
  Percy clambers off the climbing wall and dashes to your side, wrapping you in a brotherly hug as soon as he reaches you. “Fuck, I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to hit you that hard-”
  “'Course you didn't.”
  “You had it coming!” He points to his nose, still dripping blood. “Look what you did to me!”
  You roll your eyes before craning your neck to get a better view over the heads of your fellow campers. You catch sight of him immediately, leaning against the stands with his wand still twirling in his fingers, the tiniest of smirks present on his pale face.
  Your stomach turns; he had used his magic, cast some sort of spell to stop you from hitting the floor.
  You probably need to thank him for that.
  However, as soon as he meets your eyes, he does nothing but wink and turn on his heel, strolling oh-so-casually towards cabin eleven.
  ----
  “So are you going to tell me what that was?”
  You scream. Your hands fly above your head, knocking the low hung lamp shade dangling from the roof of the Hades cabin.
  Spinning, you catch sight of your father stood in the corner of your room, shrunken down to the size of a normal human being. He likes playing pretend, apparently, but you see right through it. His dark eyes are narrowed, and leaning against the wall beside him is the scythe he so often carries around with him.
  “That's an intimidation tactic,” you pant, motioning to the scythe. “It's not gonna work me on, Big Guy.”
  “Don't ignore my question,” he snaps. “What did that boy do to you when you were falling?”
  You slowly straighten up. “You saw that?”
  “Answer the question.”
   “Why do you think I have an answer?” you exclaim. “I know just as much about the wizarding world as you do! I don't know what he did, but I'm not dead, so I'm not gonna bother questioning it.” You grab a pomegranate seed from the bowl beside your bed, popping it into your mouth before you point a stern finger at the god standing in your room. “And you shouldn't either; he saved your child's life.”
  “My children are capable of protecting themselves. That's how you were raised.”
  You roll your eyes, flopping down on your bed. “This again? Where do you get off talking about raising kids?”
  For a brief second, Hades pauses. You savour it, the moment his face twists into one of uncertainty, as if only just then realising where he has messed up; he can talk all he wants about his children and how you're all just like him, but he can never claim to have made you into the people you are today.
  You hum, smirking. “That's what I thought.”
   Hades snatches the bowl of seeds out of your hand and slams them back onto the bedside table. The room rattles much more than necessary, but you spare the trembling walls only a single glance before turning your attention back on your father. He glares down at you, no longer justifying your attitude with words. He's waiting patiently for you to just open up and tell him exactly what happened, waiting for you to just admit that what happened out there was messed up, and unnatural, and you will never see Draco ever again if you can help it-
  “He saved my life.”
  You believe it, even though it takes every fibre of your willpower to admit such a thing. Demigods don't just get saved. They do the saving. They live their lives getting trained to protect themselves, because they know nobody else will. Today, all those years of training disappeared, and you should have died. You should have fallen to the ground as punishment for your lack of concentration, but Draco had stepped in and given you a second chance.
  And maybe that's dramatic. Maybe looking at it as a second chance was taking it a step too far, but he had done something, and you can't just sit back and pretend otherwise.
  Hades straightens up. In mortal form, his full height is only around five foot nine, but he still manages to look intimidating. It's the eyes. You wonder if people think the same thing about you when you look at them.
  “My brothers and sisters have been voicing their concerns about you getting too close to the Malfoys,” he says, voice softer now. “I told them not to worry, that no child of mine would ever fraternise with people like them. And yet here we are.”
  You pause. “Here we are, yeah.”
   “Lucius won't be happy to hear his son has helped save the life of a Half-Blood.”
  “Lucius Malfoy won't be happy, period. Plus, I haven't even spoken to him the entire time he's been here.”You push yourself up into a sitting position. “Draco isn't like Lucius, Dad. They are two separate people, just like me and you.”
  Hades clenches his jaw. You've hit a nerve. You always do when you bring up just how desperately you want to be separated from your father, just how much you despise being told you look like him, or you do something like him.
  He looks at you with those dark eyes and says, “You're stubborn, you know. That's a trait you get from me, not your mother.”
  “You're grasping at straws now.”
  “You're more like me than you'll ever be willing to admit, but everyone sees it. Nico and Bianca. . . they had little traits of me within them, but not as much as you. You really are my child.”
   Your stomach clenches, and it's confusing. It's so, so confusing, and so painful, because there's a part of you that basks in these comments. He's your dad. No matter how much you try denying it, there has always been a part of you that wants to know you're a little bit like your dad, and yet there's that hostility that begs and clambers for any excuse you can use to go against such a thing.
  You look away, fighting the urge to cry that always seems to rise to the surface when Hades is in your vicinity. “Can you just leave, please? I'm not going to stop talking to Draco just because you lot upstairs have a grudge against his family.”
   Hades sighs. “I know you won't. But you can't say I didn't warn you.”
  “Get out, Dad!”
  When you next look up, the room is empty. Nico and Bianca's beds are desolate, pushed against the wall, suffering from years of neglect. Once again, you are alone. Outside, Draco's shadow passes the window, accompanied by Lucius.
  ----
  Draco seems to be getting comfortable in camp.
  Your father doesn't like this.
  You see, Hades has a very annoying way of making his anger obvious, especially when the anger is pointed towards his children. You will be sat talking to Draco, having a seemingly normal conversation about whatever the days endeavours are holding, when suddenly a scream will plunge right through the centre of your brain, impossible to ignore.
  It's painful sometimes. The headaches that often follow are the kind that leaves you sweating, unable to look into any form of light lest you make it worse. Hades doesn't take this into consideration, however, as he continues giving you these flashes throughout the next week and a half.
  It's another one of his stupid fear tactics. You know it is. He wants to make you suffer so you'll be on his side through intimidation, and you're not willing to give in to him like that. Gods don't always get what they want. That's something they need to learn.
  And so, you continue talking to Draco, and honestly, he's starting to become a friend. He's still a little drawn back, and you can only imagine the reasoning behind that is because Lucius is breathing down his neck every two seconds. Whilst Draco is taking the moral high ground and getting used to life at Camp Half-Blood, Lucius refuses to do such a thing. He spends his days brooding away in the Big House, getting angry when Chiron or any of the other Half-Bloods step foot in what he has now claimed as his domain. The Big House has basically become Out of Bounds whilst the Malfoys are in your presence, because Lucius throws a tantrum any time anyone besides him and his fellow wizards step foot inside of it.
  It's on day twelve that you and Draco sit together in the grass upon the hill. In your lap is a colouring book that Percy stole for you a few years back, one you haven't touched because you very rarely have the time to just sit down and colour something in. He said it got rid of stress or something like that. You wonder if it works.
  Draco lays down beside you, gazing up at the baby blue sky. He has one hand cupped across his forehead, the other resting on his stomach. His ice blue eyes are a little lighter when the sun hits them, and you can see some golden streaks in his silver hair.
  You colour in a picture of Poseidon, already excited to show Percy the final product.
  “Look at this picture a second,” you say after too many minutes of silence. “Tell me if that guy looks like Percy.”
   Draco flicks his gaze over, lifting his head just slightly to get a better view. “Percy?”
  “The son of Poseidon,” you confirm. “The annoying one who blew up your fountain.”
  “Oh, him.” Draco scowls, dropping his head back to the grass. “I suppose it looks a little bit like him, yes. Why?”
  You tilt the colouring book back and forth, humming as you inspect the drawing; it's badly done, of course, with the image probably taken from Google Images, drawn by some human who didn't know any better. For example, they drew him wearing some fancy toga-looking thing instead of his usual khaki shorts and Hawaiian button-up. You've also known Poseidon to enjoy getting his hair permed, but his hair is dead straight in the colouring book.
  “I just think Percy looks a lot like his dad,” you reply. “Not in this picture, obviously – Poseidon wouldn't be caught dead with his eyebrows looking like that. But in real life, I swear, they're the picture of each other.”
   Draco grunts. Not exactly the response you were looking for.
  You glance down at him, raising a brow. “Not gonna add anything helpful to the conversation?”
   “What could I possibly add? I don't know the Greek gods personally.”
  “Really?”
  Draco glares at you. “Forgive me for not fraternising with mythological gods, Y/N. I don't have quite the same relationship with them as you do.”
  You hold up your hands in faux surrender, recognising his angry tone. “Alright, fair enough. No need to get grumpy.”
  “You and Percy are really close.”
   It isn't a question, and you suppose it doesn't have to be. Anyone who has known you for more than two seconds will be able to see that you and Percy are close, having been through so much together. “Yeah, we are. What's wrong with that?”
   Draco slips his hand from his forehead over his eyes and mumbles, “Nothing. Absolutely nothing.” But his heart isn't in it, and you're not exactly convinced he's telling the truth. You haven't known Draco all that long, but you're pretty confident now in your abilities to pick up when he's angry, or frustrated, as you have seen it more often than any other emotion.
  You glance at him, raising a brow. “You sure about that?”
  “Yes. Why would I think there was something wrong with you having a friend?” He pauses a moment before adding, “He is just a friend, isn't he?”
   It clicks.
  Your cheeks heat up with the realisation. You're thankful that Draco is covering his eyes, because otherwise he would have surely been able to see your shocked expression, and that isn't the look you want to give off right now; you need to remain calm and collected, make sure you're reading this right before you go and lose your cool.
  Awkwardly, you push the colouring book onto the grass and turn your attention fully on Draco. He stiffens when he feels you move, though he doesn't look at you. He doesn't even move his hand away from his face. You wonder if perhaps he doesn't want to show you his true expression, either.
  “Yes,” you say. “Percy is just a friend. He's never been anything more than that.”
  “Oh right. Nice.”
  “Would...” You inhale, glancing down into camp. You're not used to this. Actual emotions, they're scary things. You've never been able to properly handle them. “Would that be an issue if he was?”
  This time, Draco is unable to hide his embarrassment. Beneath his hands, his pale cheeks flush red, his Adams apple bobbing as he swallows and says, “No. It's none of my business.”
  “Well, it's just 'cause, like, you asked, and I just thought-”
  “Thought what?” Finally he looks at you, eyes narrowed. “Thought I cared about what you got up to when I'm not around?”
  You reel back at his tone. “What? No! Well – yeah, I guess, because clearly some part of you cares-”
  “You and Percy can do whatever you want.” He stands, wiping the grass from the elbows of his fancy black blazer. “I honestly couldn't care less. It's not like I'm sticking around much longer, anyway.”
  You raise a brow. “Are you mad? How the hell did that happen? I didn't even say anything!”
   “I'm not bloody mad.” He groans, spinning on his heel as he runs his hands through his hair. You don't even go after him, too stunned to even move. Instead, you just watch his retreating form, only for him to stop a few feet away, turn back and say, “Do you just forget the fact that he was about to let you fall to your death?”
  You freeze. This was not the turn you were expecting the conversation to make. “Come again?”
  “On that climbing wall,” Draco exclaims. “He watched you fall, Y/N! He didn't do anything to stop it from happening, and I refuse to believe he wasn't able to, because from what I've heard, he's one of the most powerful things in this bloody camp!”
   “Things?”
  “Oh, you know what I meant!”
  You shoot up then, anger flooding your system. This is happening too often. You're losing your grip on the control you have trained so hard to gather, and it's all Draco's fault. “No, Draco, I don't actually know what you mean. In case you've forgotten, you're in our home, so don't you dare come in here claiming to know what we see is right and wrong. Percy might be one of the stronger demigods, but so am I. I can handle myself, and Percy knows that! That's the only reason he didn't do anything-”
   “That's his excuse, is it?” Draco laughs, a bitter noise that makes your blood boil. “I wonder how long it took for him to brainwash you into believing that.”
  That's what does it.
  You remember all those times Percy has saved your life. You remember spending weeks by his side, on the run from the worlds most terrifying monsters. You remember crying with your belief that he was dead, imagining a life without your best friend, your companion.
  And here Draco is, acting like he knows Percy better than you, deeming him a bad person just because of a single mishap he happened to witness, a mishap he doesn't even fully understand.
  Behind you, the black cloud arises from the ground. Without even looking, you know it's there, consuming you in tendrils of darkness. Draco's eyes widen, a cry of surprise escaping him before he stumbles back.
  The cloud follows him.
  In your head, you listen to the screams of the souls that make up that cloud, the souls you can control with nothing more than a brief thought nowadays. Draco cries out, nearly falling over his feet. Soon, you can no longer see him as he disappears behind the black curtain.
  You stay exactly where you are, watching him run down the hill, being chased by this power you have total control over. It's fuelled by anger, and you know you're going to get in trouble for doing it, but in this moment, you don't even care. You'll deal with the repercussions later, so long as Draco learns his lesson now.
  It's once the young wizard has disappeared round the corner that you let the souls drop. They sink back into the floor, a rush of energy slamming back into your body now that the strenuous work is over. The hill you are standing on goes silent bar the sound of the snickering tree nymphs.
  And then, just by your left ear, your fathers voice whispers, “Good job, Y/N. Definitely my child.”
  ----
   Percy always knows when something is wrong with you.
  There's something in the air, he says, a buzzing that he recognises as something he too possesses when he's angry. It's like the children of the Big Three communicate their anger through this weird little hum that only the other mistakes can hear.
  He must notice it now.
  He sits across from you at the lake, his toes dipping in the water as you keep your knees drawn to your chest, fingers sunk in the dirt. You keep your eyes on the tide as it sways in and out, but Percy keeps his eyes on you, waiting for the moment you will turn and look at him.
  But you don't.
  You don't want to answer his questions right now. You don't want to go into detail about what Draco said, about what you did to him, about how guilty you feel even though you know you shouldn't. You have used that scare tactic on so many people in the past, and it's always been for good reason – not once have you ever felt guilty about it.
  Not until now.
  Finally, Percy sighs and says, “So you're just gonna sit there and not tell me what's up?”
  Leave it to him to be blunt.
  You glance over and shrug, unsure where to even begin. You want to tell him the truth, of course; he's like a brother to you. The world always feels a little off when you're not telling him every little detail of your life. But gods, how do you explain this without sounding crazy?
  “Do you want me to guess?” Percy continues, shuffling a little closer to you. “'Cause I'm good at that. Especially with you.”
  “Try it.”
  He hums, leaning back. “It definitely has something to do with the wizard boy.”
  Your eyes snap up. “How did you know?”
   “It's always about the wizard boy; you two have been joined at the hip since Chiron declared his residency here.” Again, he hums, continuing his analysis. His sea green eyes are narrowed, his lower lip protruding in a pout. “Did you two get into an argument?”
  “Kind of.”
  “Was he taking his fathers side?”
  “No.”
  “Was he insulting one of us?”
  “...Kind of.”
  Percy raises a brow. “So I'm getting warmer.”
  You sigh, closing your eyes in exasperation. “He thought you and I were a couple.”
 Percy pauses. It's now an awkward pause, especially considering he bursts into laughter not three seconds after. His shoulders jolt, eyes widening as he claps a hand to leg as if to stabalise himself. “You're kidding.”
  “Alright, Seaweed Brain, hands off.” You push him away and fold your arms over your chest. “But yes, he thought you and I were a couple.”
  “And that bothered you so much that you got into an argument with him and now you're huffing?”
   You glare. “You're really enjoying this, huh?”
  Percy nudges your shoulder light-heartedly. “I'm just messing. Tell me what happened.”
  And so, as Percy gets comfortable, you begin your retelling, going into the details about Draco's little tantrum, and your retaliation to said tantrum. Percy interjects with a little “Aww” when you talk about defending him, to which you push his arm to get him to pipe down.
  You feel even worse once the story has been spilled and you are able to see everything in hindsight; should you still be mad? Did Draco deserve that kind of torment?
  Percy is silent for a moment once the story has been told. He looks off into the sea, as if calling to the waves for an answer, a piece of advice he can give you.
  Finally, his wise mind comes up with, “That sounds shitty.”
  “Yeah,” you grumble. “It was.”
  “Sounds like he fancies you.”
  Your cheeks heat up. “I don't think so. Not any more, anyway.”
  “And you're disappointed about that?”
  You shrug, because you really don't know. It would be much less hassle if you weren't disappointed about it, but you can't deny that you don't enjoy the feeling of Draco being mad at you. It feels off. It feels like you've done something wrong, even though you don't think you have.
  “You know,” Percy continues, “I feel a little guilty being the reason you two have fallen out. I wasn't even there and I'm still causing trouble.”
   You scoff. “Yeah. You have a habit of doing that, don't you?”
  “I can't help it.” He leans forward, nudging your arm. “What if I have a little chat with Draco?”
  You perk up, stomach turning at the mere suggestion. “Oh Percy, no. . .”
  “What do you think I'm gonna do?”
  “Bully him. Make him hate me even more.”
  “The fact that that thought bothers you so much just proves to me how much I need to step in and offer my expertise. Annabeth didn't fall in love with me for no reason, and you know that.”
   You open your mouth to object, but the words fall short, because he has a point; out of everyone you've ever known, Percy is the one who has been able to keep up a healthy relationship the longest. He and Annabeth argue like cat and dog, yet they still give off the aura of two young people who are truly in love with another.
  That's rare.
  You slump back against a tree. “Just don't say anything stupid to him. Please.”
  He's already standing up, brushing dirt off the seat of his trousers. “Of course not. Give me ten minutes. I'll have him seeing sense in no time.”    ----
  Draco tries his best to stop the panic.
  It's an old habit, one he hasn't been able to kick. He sees a demigod, and immediately his heart starts beating really fast, and his stomach drops, and his fingers twitch in the direction of his wand. It's a self defence reflex, one that has been built into him from day one, but he's amongst them now, and he needs to stop it.
  But seeing Percy Jackson walking towards him is never going to be a sight he's going to get used to.
  Draco remembers that picture you were colouring in the grass the day previous. You said Percy looked just like his father, and Draco can see the resemblance now. From what little he knows about the true Greek god of the sea, he can tell just where that analysis came from; Percy's black hair, his sea green eyes, even the way he carries himself like he owns the place.
  It screams My dad is a god.
  Draco pulls his shoulders back and gives Percy his best game face, trying desperately to look like he knows what he's doing, like he hasn't been lost in his own thoughts from the moment you looked at him with that anger on your face. He hates that it affected him so much, that he can't get the image out of his head, that he wants nothing more than to storm over to the Hades cabin and apologise for ever upsetting you.
  “Draco, my man!” Percy exclaims, though his heart clearly isn't in it. “How are you? Good?”
  “Fine.”
  Percy clicks his fingers, giving awkward finger guns. “That's good. So good.” He stuffs his hands in his pockets and looks around. Then, out of nowhere, he snaps his gaze down to Draco's and says, “So, I've been told there's a bit of trouble in paradise.”
  Draco pauses. “Paradise? I'd hardly call this place paradise, Jackson.”
  Percy raises a brow; it infuriates Draco, who is so used to his comments making people angry. Percy just seems amused. “Your accent really doesn't do my last name justice when you say it like that.”
  Draco scowls. “What do you want from me, Percy? I've got nothing to say to you.”
  “Well, no. You don't. Technically, I have nothing to say to you, either, but I'm a nosy little shit head, so here we are.”
  “What makes you think I'll tell you anything?”
  Percy grins and takes an abrupt seat next to Draco, shoving his shoulder like they've been best friends for years. “If you tell me what I want to know, I'll tell you what you-” He prods a finger into Draco's chest. “-want to know.”
   Draco's heart hammers. He stares at the grinning demigod, debating whether or not to just jinx him here and now rather than let this absurd conversation go any further.
  But then the options come into his head.
  He has questions about you. Of course he does. You're just. . . a force to be reckoned with. You're such an individual, unlike any Draco has ever encountered in his life, and he wants to know more. Percy could be the key to having those questions answered.
  He coughs into his hand before saying, “I suppose I can talk a little bit.”
  Percy perks up. “Oh, really? Great! So what makes you think Y/N and I are a couple?”
  Draco's cheeks heat up. “Y/N told you about that?”
  “Y/N tells me everything. It's part of the whole being best friends thing.”
  Draco shrugs, awkwardly glancing down at his hands knotted upon his knees. “It was a stupid assumption to make. I know that now. Just. . . at the time, with how close you both are, it seemed the most plausible thing to think.”
  “Well, it was stupid.”
  “Yes-”
 “And did this assumption-” He says this with a snooty British accent that makes Draco glare even harder. “-piss you off?”
  Draco pauses; here is where he could very easily trip up. He needs to choose his words carefully.
  “Yes.”
  Percy tilts his head. “Because you. . . love Y/N?”
  “Love?”
  Percy raises his hands in faux surrender, though there is a grin flashing across his face. “Sorry, sorry. Do you fancy Y/N?”
  Draco swallows the golf ball sized lump in his throat; he wants to die. He literally wants to throw himself into the lake and never resurface. How has Percy managed to butter him up in less than fifteen minutes?
  “I suppose,” Draco mutters. “They are very – um – attractive.”
  “Big brain,” Percy says, nodding. “I get it, man. Smart people are hot.”
  “Uh, yes. Yes, they are also very smart-”
  “And scary.” Percy hollows out his cheeks, shaking his head at nothing. Draco is starting to get annoyed. “Y/N is terrifying, and let me tell you, when a person can intimidate me? Wow. Marry me on the spot, is what I say.”
   “Why don't you just ask Y/N out then?”
  The words come out harsher than Draco planned, but he can't help it. Percy is sat there, basically drooling over you, and it's driving him mad. It's been driving him mad from the instant he got that stupid thought stuck in his brain that maybe – just maybe – you and Percy were something a little more than just the best of friends.
  Percy is grinning, though.
  Draco scowls. “What's so funny?”
  “You really like them, don't you?”
  “I never said-”
  “Personally, I wouldn't touch Y/N with a six foot pole,” Percy continues, which just makes Draco even angrier, and he no longer knows just what he wants. “I'm talking about my girlfriend, Annabeth. The blonde girl. Daughter of Athena.”
  It takes a moment for Draco to remember who Annabeth is. But then it dawns on him, and suddenly everything is making sense.
  His cheeks warm again. “Oh. Right.”
  “Yep. So that's that.”
  “I'm sorry.”
  “Nah, don't be. It's not me you need to apologise to.”
  Draco bites his lower lip, understanding that Percy is right; he said some awful things, and he put you on the spot when you really didn't deserve it. You were doing nothing more than talking about your best friend, and Draco let his own jealousy push to the forefront.
  He looks over at Percy to see the demigod grinning again, an expression he often seems to have. Draco wonders why you don't like him, why you decided to spend all those hours with him instead of Percy.
  And as if Percy can read his mind, he says, “Y/N likes you too, you know. Like, properly likes you.”
  Draco pushes up from the grass, gives Percy a grateful smile before heading out on his mission – to apologise.
  ----
  You run into Lucius Malfoy shortly after Percy storms off.
  It's quite a chance meeting, though part of you can't help but feel that maybe Lucius had it all planned out from the beginning. He holds himself like a man who knows exactly what he wants, like a man who doesn't understand what a chance meeting is.
  You pause in the grass, watching him wade towards you. In your hand, you hold your sword, but that clearly isn't enough of an intimidation tactic against the tall, pale wizard. He stops only when he's feet in front of you, and with his posh accent, he says, “Y/N.”
  “Mr Malfoy.”
  “Where is Draco?”
  “Beats me. He isn't my son.”
  Lucius's nostrils flare. “Can you put that sword down whilst talking to me, please? It's disrespectful.”
  You look at the celestial bronze blade and tilt it back and forth. The sun hits off the hilt, illuminating the Greek words inscribed upon it. “No. I quite like it in my hand.” You look back at Lucius and smile pleasantly. “Is there something I can help you with, Mr Malfoy? Are you lost?”
  Lucius grits his teeth. Something throbs in his jaw, and honestly, you wouldn't be surprised if he were to draw back now and punch you square in the face.
  Or he could just cast a spell, or whatever it is wizards do.
  “You know, Y/N, Draco has told me an awful lot about you,” he growls.
  “Oh?”
  “Yes. And quite frankly, the details he has given me only further prove my theory that your kind are just unnatural.”
  He's only trying to wind you up. You keep that in mind as you stand before him, listening to him spew such hatred; you could so easily just chop him to pieces right now. You could end this for everybody, but you think of Draco and how he would react and that thought alone is enough to silence the violent thoughts before you lose grip on your powers.
  “I'm sorry you think that,” you mumble. “Hopefully you'll be out of camp soon enough and won't have to bother with my kind for much longer.”
   Lucius laughs. There's no humour in it. It makes you ill just listening to it. “He told me about your little parlour trick – raising the dead, is it?”
  “Controlling the dead.”
  “That's Dark Magic, dear. That's the devils work if I've ever heard of it.”
  You open your mouth to respond, but the chance is ripped away by the sound of someone else's voice ringing in your ear.
  “I don't really enjoy being called the devil. He and I are two very different legends.”
   You close your eyes. “Dad, go home.”
  He doesn't listen to you. Of course he doesn't. Instead, he steps up to your side and places a warm hand on your shoulder. When you look up, he's smiling at Lucius with the same pleasant smile you gave him only seconds before – the pleasant smile that hides the fact you're on the verge of murdering someone.
  “Is there a problem here?” Hades asks.
  “Who are you?” Lucius demands, and you very nearly laugh at his stupidity.
  Hades actually does laugh at his stupidity as he motions between you. “Surely you notice the family resemblance?”
  Lucius stares, and then it all clicks into place. His eyes widen, mouth dropping open in a look you can only label horror. He stumbles back and says, “Hades?”
  “A god,” you pipe up. “So watch what you say. I can't hold this one back.” You turn to Hades with an exasperated look. “Who let you crawl out of Tartarus again?”
  “Nobody lets me do anything, dear,” Hades replies, keeping his eyes on the horrified Lucius Malfoy. “I just heard what our little friend here was saying to you, and I thought I'd come and put him in his place. Can't have someone insulting my dear child, can I?”
  “You've never intervened before.”
  Hades pushes you backwards, ignoring what you've just said. “So, Lucius; would you like a little duel beforehand, or are you just going to let me end your life, plain and simple?” He pauses, and when Lucius doesn't reply, he adds, “There's no shame in taking the easy way out.”
  “Dad-”
  “Stay out of this, Y/N. This is between me and-”
  “Dad? What's wrong?”
  Your head snaps up. Draco is stumbling down the hill, eyebrows raised as he glances between Hades and his father. Your heart jumps at the sight of him.
  “Draco, pack up your things,” Lucius demands, staring at Hades as if afraid to look away lest your dad make any sudden movements. “We're leaving.”
  “Oh, happy days!” You rush forward and grab your fathers elbow, dragging him back as much as you can. “Did you hear that, Dad? They're leaving!”
  “I'm not going anywhere.”
  You whirl on Draco. “What do you mean you're not going anywhere? Can't you see the predicament we're in right now?”
  Draco raises his brow, clearly still confused as to what the hell he has just walked in on. “Who is this?”
  “This is my dad.”
  Draco's skin pales even more, if that is even possible. Hades turns, gives the young boy a pleasant little wave before he starts rolling up his sleeves, eyeing Lucius up again.
  “Oh, right,” Draco squeaks.
  You turn your attention back to Hades, latching onto his arm yet again. “Come on, Dad. This is pointless. They're leaving camp-”
  “Y/N, I'm not going anywhere before we talk.”
  “Draco, this really isn't the time-”
  “Make up your mind, Lucius. . .” Hades sing-songs. “Quick and easy, or slow and painful? I can do both.”
  Your heart hammers in your chest; this is not how you wanted things to go, not at all. You wish to every other god listening that Draco will just agree to go with his father, that he will leave and never return.
  But you don't really want that, do you?
  “Curse you, Zeus, you mind-reading bitch,” you hiss beneath your breath.
  Draco glances at you. “What?”
  “Never mind.” You grab Draco's shoulders and shove him back. “Just go, Draco, please. My dad is going to-”
  But you never get to tell Draco what your dad is going to do, not before Lucius Malfoy cries out, “Avada Kadavra!”
  You don't understand what's happened; the words just yelled by the Malfoy man are unfamiliar to you, jibberish if you've ever heard it, but Draco cries out and dashes forward. A blinding flash of light slams makes you stumble before Draco's arms wrap around your waist, throwing you to the ground with him hovering over you. When you open your eyes, his face is inches from your own, but neither of you get to bask in each others closeness, because all hell has suddenly broken loose.
  Hades is so powerful. Sometimes you forget that. You've read the stories, and you know he's a god, but sometimes, all he is to you is your annoying dad who shows up every now and then to be annoying, and then he leaves. Sometimes you forget he can literally raise the dead in two point six seconds.
  And judging by the corpses now stumbling around you, that's exactly what he has done.
  “Oh my god,” Draco mumbles.
  You push him away and clamber to your feet. “Dad, stop!”
  The wind is billowing, however, and your words fall on deaf ears. Lucius has fallen to the floor, staring up at your father with a look of pure, unfiltered horror. Hades stands over him, now in full god form, and the sight is breathtaking. He's at his full height now, standing over everyone with his arms outstretched. Dirt billows around him, and a black light emanates from his body, blinding if you weren't his child. Draco has fallen to the floor, covering his head with his arms, and you are so, so happy he has the common sense to look away.
  You stumble forward, latching onto your fathers clothes. “Dad, stop this now! Please!”
  “How dare you?” Hades's voice shakes the trees. His eyes are pitch black. He is a god. “How dare you use your filthy wizard spells against my child?”
  “I'm fine!” you cry. “Dad, I'm fine! Draco saved me! Look!” You helplessly wave your arms over your head. Beside you, a corpse laughs a high pitched laugh. You glare at it and say, “Shut up.”
  The wind only grows stronger as Hades continues to bellow his threats and his curses. Lucius is too stunned to even move. Behind you, Draco cries out your name, tries reaching for your sleeve, but you pull away and continue yelling up at your father, trying to make him see sense.
  “Dad, I'm fine! If you kill him, I'll never forgive you!” You grapple for something else, some other excuse you can use. “I'll – I'll never come back to Camp Half-Blood! I'll stay in the mortal world forever and there's absolutely nothing you can do about it!”
   Hades falters. He glances down at you with those dark, sunken eyes and he says, “You know you're not safe there, Y/N. Don't joke about such things.”
  “Then let him go,” you beg. “Please, Dad. I never ask you for anything, but I'm asking – begging – you for this. Just let him go.”
   Hades tilts his head. “You're standing up for this piece of dirt?”
  “Draco,” you pant, as if that is enough explanation. “Draco just saved my life, Dad. The least you can do is spare his fathers life.”
  The wind dies down. Dirt topples back to the floor. The walking corpses drop to their knees before the soil reaches around them and drags them back into their graves, where hopefully they will remain for another few years. Slowly, your father shrinks back down to his usual five seven stature, his eyes gaining their normal dark colouring again. He continues staring.
  You stare back for only a second before you spin on your heel and march towards Draco. You yank him up by his collar and shove him back, hissing, “Go grab your stuff and get out of here. This is the shit you're gonna get wound up in if you stay. You don't deserve that.”
 Draco, flustered, grabs your shoulders and pushes back, keeping himself rooted to the ground. You want to cry. You need him to leave. You need him to be safe. You can't let him witness something like that ever again.
  “Please, Draco,” you croak out. “Save yourself the bother-”
  “You're crying.”
   You groan, quickly swiping beneath your eyes to rid yourself of the tears you didn't even realise were falling. “No, I'm not.”
   Draco wraps his arms around you and drags you into his shoulder. You don't really know why you melt into him in the way you do; it just kind of happens. Feeling the fabric of his shirt against your cheek, his arms around your shoulders, his body against yours – it's as if all the stresses of the evening flood out of you in a single swoop, replaced by a relief you didn't even know you were in such dire need of.
  It's like Hades and Lucius don't even exist any more. It's just you and Draco, swaying back and forth in the darkness, saying nothing and that being enough.
  “I'm not going anywhere,” he whispers. “Not until you know.”
  You pause, but don't pull away. “Until I know what?”
  “That – That you're special.”
  You look up, raising a brow. “Is that a demigod joke?”
  Draco groans, scrubbing a hand through his hair. “No. That's not what I meant. I meant – like – you're special to me.”
  “Okay...”
 He squeezes his eyes closed. “What I'm saying is, I don't want to leave you. I don't want to go back to the wizarding world and pretend I never met you. I want this – whatever this is – to last a long, long time.”
  Your heart thunders in your chest. Beneath you, the ground rumbles, like the floor is hungry. “Draco...”
  “I don't care what my father thinks of it,” he says, voice lower now. “I haven't been this happy in forever. I haven't met anyone like you before, and I'm so, so grateful you don't hate me.” He blinks. “Percy told me that, by the way – that you don't hate me. He wasn't lying, was he?”
  You laugh. “No, he wasn't lying.”
  “Oh, great.” He pulls you closer. “So, as I was saying-”
  “Oh, for the love of me!” Hades claps his hands impatiently. “Just kiss them already, you idiot! Why do mortals take so long to get to the point?”
  Draco looks over your shoulder, face going red. “Are you giving me permission to kiss Y/N?”
  Hades rolls his eyes, waving a dismissive hand. “Yes, yes. Just get on with it. I'm ageing.”
  “You're immortal, old man.”
  “Watch your mouth, little one, or you're grounded.”
  Your laugh is broken by Draco's kiss.
  In the background, Lucius yells in frustration, but he quietens as soon as he looks at Hades. You don't even care, though, because once again, it's like neither of them are really there. It's just you and Draco. There is no world separating you, there is no problems, you are the same. His hands trail along your jawline before crawling over the back of your neck, holding you in place, as if you would ever willingly pull away.
  Beneath you, the ground continues to growl. You imagine it's the dead people giving you a round of applause.
---
“Lumos.”
  You crack an eye open. Beside you, Draco shifts, lifting the covers further over his head. Through the thin material of the quilt, you can make out a dim yellow glow coming from Draco's wand.
  You roll onto your back, nudging his arm with your elbow. He pauses, taking a few seconds before he pulls the covers back down, revealing his messy bed head and bare torso. He gives you a grin and says, “What are you doing awake?”
   “You woke me,” you reply, before nodding towards the book resting on his lap. “What's that?”
  “Oh, this? Nothing. Just a little book I picked up from the library the last time I was at Hogwarts.”
  You raise a brow; you haven't seen Draco casually read in quite a while. Any time he has his head stuck in a book, it's usually to learn some new potion, or some new spell that he can show the harpies to impress them when they ask for a magic show. However, looking down at the book currently perched on his knees, you can see this isn't just some simple recipe book for wizards – the pages are filled with text, with very little pictures to accompany them.
  “Can I read it with you?” you ask.
  Draco's cheeks light up. “Maybe you should just go back to sleep. It's pretty late-”
  He goes quiet when you rest your drowsy head on his chest, tugging the quilt up to your chin. You hear him sigh, a noise of content before he looks down at the page and places his wand beneath the words. In bold at the top is the title Hades and Persephone.
  “Oh, my mum hated her,” you say.
  Draco chuckles. “I can imagine.”
   You trace your eyes over the words. You can't really make them out with your dyslexia, but Draco reads them for you, because he knows. He reads the story of your father and his true wife, pausing to ask you your opinions, or if you know anything about any of it. You tell him you don't, but you want him to keep reading, so he does, and together you learn about your father and his ways.
  Finally, when Draco reaches the end of that particular story, you look up at him and say, “Why are you reading this?”
   He shrugs. You don't buy it, though, and continue waiting for his response. He rolls his eyes at your patient silence and says, “Remember when you asked me if I'd ever read any of the Greek myths?”
  You raise a brow. “Yes...”
  “I hadn't read any of them. But I realised it's kind of part of your history, isn't it? These myths, the people and things you talk about. If I really want to understand you, I have to get familiar with a few of these terms, don't I?”
   A lump forms in your throat. “You're reading these for me?”
  “Of course.” He slams the book closed and says, “Quiz me. I can tell you who Demeter is right now.”
  You stare at him a moment longer, overwhelmed beyond words. Instead of giving Draco a pop quiz on all things Greece, you reach up and press your lips to his own, whispering the unknown words of “I love you,” against his mouth.
  Draco chuckles, the sound like music to your ears. “I love you, too.”
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aworldinsideaperson · 4 years ago
Text
It Was always You (Chapter One)
George WeasleyxRavenclaw!OC FanFiction
Word count: 2.6k
Warnings: Panic Attack! Dementors! Mentions of food, mentions of babies? That’s all I can think of but if there is anything else let me know
Story Summary: Cerridwen has known the Weasley family all of her life. Attached at the hips of Fred and George for as long as she could remember has built a strong and lasting friendship that stretches across House lines and stands the test and trials they all face. But how long until “Just Friends” turns into something more, because it always turns into something more.
Chapter Summary: The start of the school year can always be stressful, Cerridwen starts the school year with all the regular stress of starting her fourth year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry along with the added stressors of her father’s escape from Azkaban.
A/N: This is the thing I’ve been working on for months! This is chapter one of... a lot. Thank you @izzytheninja​ for listening to me rant and talk about this story and these characters nonstop for MONTHS I hope you guys like it!
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The sun shone brightly through the curtains of the Burrow’s living room. On the couch a very young dark haired woman sat with a small baby in her arms, to one side of her sat a redheaded woman in her late twenties looking down at the baby in the arms of her neighbor and friend, Elinor McNally. On the other side of Elinor was a small red haired boy with light freckles dotting his skin. The fifteen month old stood beside Elinor looking down at the bundle in her arms.
“Baby.” He said, giving Elinor a quizzical look, his small head moved a little to one side.
His mother, Molly, nodded. “Yes George, it’s a baby.”
“Would you like to hold her?” Elinor smiled, her voice soft but George nodded. “Alright well, go sit in your Mum’s lap.” Molly took George in her arms and settled him down into her lap, his arms held out wide as he looked at Elinor with his big brown eyes. She turned and placed the small bundle into George’s arms with Molly's significant support and watched as he looked down at the baby wrapped up in her blanket. “Her name is Cerridwen.”
September 1st
14 Years Later
A ripple of silence washed over the platform as Cerridwen and her family stepped onto it, whispers following them with each group they passed. She heard her last name whispered in accompaniment with her father’s first. Though she had hoped that the news wouldn’t ruin her school year as she felt all the eyes on her she was sure this was only the beginning. Hugging her mother and stepfather goodbye she moved as quickly as she could to get onto the train and away from the prying eyes of her fellow classmates and their parents that held them just a little bit tighter as they looked at her.
Cerridwen settled into a compartment and took a sleek black cat from the travel crate she’d been placed in that morning as well as a book from another small bag settling down to continue reading the muggle romance novel she’d started the morning prior. With the cat snuggled into her left side between her thigh and the wall of the compartment and her book in her right hand she began to twirl strands of her dark hair in her left as her mind wandered to her friends, hoping that even if the rest of the school would hate her she could still count on her two best friends. With her mind drifting to the two the door of her compartment slid open and two identical red haired young men peaked in.
“Cerridwen Black, you are a hard girl to find!”. George said, he and his twin walked into the compartment bags in hand.
Cerri stood to hug the two boys, “Well Georgie did you look with your eyes open or closed?” She chuckled, wrapping her arms around Fred and then George.
Fred looked to his twin then back at Cerri. “You know what, I think that might have been the problem.” They all laughed and Cerri reached up to ruffle Fred’s hair.
“You’re telling me Molly let both of you leave the house with these mops on your head?” She laughed as Fred swatted her hand away.
“We hid all the scissors.” They chuckled and the three of them settled into a comfortable conversation as the train took off from the station.
“How was the rest of your summer Cerri?” Fred asked, leaning back in his seat.
“Well you’d already know if either of you had bothered to write me this summer.”
“Hey! I wrote you once and George wrote you two very long letters.” Fred smirked, eyeing his brother as a light blush dusted his cheeks.
“Three letters from the two of you the whole time you were gone is unacceptable!” Her voice was firm but a smile spread across her face before letting out a small laugh. “Honestly though, if you couldn’t tell on the platform, the only thing worse than the last six weeks of my life is going to be every minute until they catch my dad.” The twins went silent, looking away from her. “Oh come on, I know you guys know there isn’t any sense trying to pretend it’s not happening.” George then turned his head an mumbled under his breath; “What was that George?”
He sighed and spoke again. “Mum and Dad told us we shouldn’t talk about it.”
“You know, in case it upset you or something.” Fred finished with a sympathetic look to his friend.
“I do want to talk about it though seeing as it’s all anyone else will probably talk about.” As she looked up Cerri saw a few third years looking into their compartment as they walked past but when Cerri looked at them they fled quickly.
“Alright, so talk?” Fred offered.
“I don’t want to talk about it.”
“But you just said!”
“I know what I said! I don’t know, I just,” Her voice petered off as she
sighed. “They’ve been sending dementors to the house, and ministry officials have been by every few days to ask if we’ve seen him.”
“And, have you? Seen him I mean.” George asked in a tentative voice
“That’s the worst part, I haven’t.”
“Well he probably knows that’s the first place they’d start looking. He’s just trying to play it safe!”
“But wouldn’t it be worth the risk? To see your only child? To see me? Has he not missed me these last 12 years? Does he even remember who I am? Or,” She paused, taking a deep breath and looking down into her lap with sad eyes. “Or is he the person everyone says he is, and not the person my mum has always talked about.” Cerri’s eyes welled up with tears as she fiddled with her fingers in her lap. George slid across the seat and moved closer to her as he put his arms around Cerri he held her close, rubbing his hand up and down her arm soothingly as he closed his eyes and rested his cheek to the top of her head.
Tears gently tipped out onto her cheeks as she sniffled into George’s arms, Fred watching them awkwardly until they felt the train jerk to a stop. The air felt cold and when they looked out the window they could see frost begin to build and Cerri knew what was to come as she pulled closer to George’s side.
The lights flickered and went out, Cerri buried her face into George’s shoulder as she attempted to bring her knees closer into her body while darkness enveloped them. The cat jumped down and scurried beneath the seat; the twins could see their breath as the air became colder, their eyes trained on Cerri, her breathing becoming shallow as more tears sprung to her eyes and her worst moments pushing to the forefront of her mind; the day she was ripped from her father’s arms as he was carted off to Azkaban playing on repeat like a broken record, she heard the door slide open and she could no longer breath. She gasped for air, tears draining from her eyes as she attempted to pull in a single breath but the air around her felt solid. George attempted to tighten his grip around her but Cerri pushed away, pushing herself into the corner of the seat and bringing her knees to her chest and pulling herself into a ball as she choked on air, the scene in her brain playing over and over again, her heart fluttering inside of her chest, sobbing as her whole body shook.
Then the lights were back and the air was warm and Cerri sucked in her first breath in what, her mind, was hours as she continued to shake. George reached this hand out to place it on her knee and Fred kneeled beside her to place his hand between her shoulders, rubbing them soothingly.
“Cerri?” George coxed gently, “Cerri, can you say something?”
She shook her head, still pressed into her legs.
“Do you want us to get you some help?” Fred offered and Cerri nodded once. With that Fred jumped from her place on the floor and popped out the door as the train again began to move.
A few seconds pass, George still has his hand on Cerri’s knee as he watches her shakes become less prominent and her sniffles more defined. “Do you want me to talk?” He offered, when Cerri gave a curt nod George sighed. “I wanted to write you more this summer,” He started. “But Fred gave me a bit of a hard time, and once Bill over heard him he and Charlie started in on me a bit.” He gave a soft chuckle. “I should have written to you more anyway.” George gave an exasperated sigh just as the compartment door slid open and Fred stepped back inside followed by a tall gangly looking man with dark hair and a pale, sallow, sunken and marked face.
He knelt beside the dark haired girl and placed a hand on her back. “Dear?” He questioned softly and Cerri lifted her head, her eyes wide and mouth open as she looked at the man before her and a smile came to his lips. “Hello sweetpea.” And with that he and Cerri flung their arms around each other in a tight embrace.
The twins shared an identical look of confusion as they watched the two separate and the man had their friend a small piece of Chocolate. “That should help dear.” He offered as he stood only to sit on the bench seat across from her as she nibbled on the sweet.
“Do you two..” Fred looked between Cerri and the older man.
“Know each other?” George finished and Cerri looked over at him with her big blue eyes still brimming with tears and she nodded.
Finally able to speak she gave an explanation. “This is my uncle Remmy; he’s my,” She took in a long sharky breath as she tried to continue but the man across from her took over.
“Godfather.” He finished. “But you’ll all be calling me Professor this year.” Remus reached out to shake hands with the boys inside the compartment. The three of them watched as Cerri’s breathing evened out and her shaking began to calm. “Alright, well since you’re doing better I’m going to go check on the rest of the students.” Remus smiled and stood, patting Cerri on the head as he walked toward the door.
“Thank you Uncle Remmy.”
“It’s professor now.”
“Thank you Professor Uncle Remmy.”
Remus shook his head as a smile came to his lips and he walked out the door.
“You feeling better?”
“A bit yeah,” Cerri let out another shaky breath and opened her mouth again before being interrupted by the glass door sliding open and a head of dark curly hair popped in.
“Cerri are you alright?” Miranda mason burst her way into the compartment, brown eyes wide and filled with concern she pushed Fred out of the way, causing him to stumble and fall back into the seat mumbling something to the extent of ‘no no I wasn’t standing there’ with a roll of his eyes.
Miranda sat on the floor beside Cerri, reaching up to stroke her hair. “How could they send those things onto the train that’s completely mental! I came as soon as I was able,” She sighs and rolls her eyes before beginning to ramble. “you know how emotional and clingy Cho can get, I tried to look for you on the platform but I couldn’t find you and then I got caught in with Roger, he asked about you by the way… again, and then Cho saw us and before I knew it the compartment was full and you know trying to get away from Roger can be,”
Cerri clamped a hand over Miranda’s mouth. “Breath,” Cerri laughed lightly, “I’m alright and I know us ravenclaws are terrors at times.” She took her hand away and placed them both back in her lap and Miranda reached over to place her hand on her wrist. The girls looked at each other and smiled.
“We should go change into our robes.” Miranda stood up and walked to the door before turning back. “And hello boys.” She then turned again and slid out of the compartment.
“She is so weird.” George started.
“And oh so hot.” Added Fred.
Cerri rolled her eyes and took another deep breath before standing and fishing her robes out of her bag. “I have a very particular taste in friendships.” She spoke with a smile looking at the two in the compartment. “You should get changed while I’m gone.” And with that she walked out of the compartment to change.
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The strares of the crowd on the platform had been bad; but nothing would hold a candle to the way the great hall felt with so many eyes on her. She was sure Ravenclaw table had never gotten so much attention and even trying to bury herself between Miranda and Cho, Cerri could still sense the eyes glancing and staring in her direction, their whispering and stares continued through the sorting until Dumbledore rose and silence fell over the room as he began to speak.
“Welcome to another year at Hogwarts! I have a few things to say to you all, and one of them is very serious, I think it best to get it out of the way before you become too befuddled by our excellent feast…
“As you will all be aware, after their search of the Hogwarts Express, our school is presently playing host to some of the dementors of Azkaban, Who are here on Ministry of Magic business.
“They are stationed at every entrance of the grounds, and while they are with us I must make it plain that nobody is to leave school without permission. Dementors are not to be fooled by tricks or disguises or even invisibility cloaks. It is not in the nature of a dementors to understand pleading or excuse. I therefore warn each and every one of you to give them no reason to harm you. I look to the prefects, and our new Head Boy and Girl, to make sure that no student runs afoul of the dementors.
“On a happier note, I am pleased to welcome two new teachers to our ranks this year. First, professor Lupin, who has kindly consented to fill the post of defense against the dark arts teacher.
“As for our new appointment, well, I am sorry to tell you that professor Kettleburn, our care of magical creatures teacher, retired at the end of last year in order to enjoy more time with his remaining limbs. However, I am delighted to say that his place will be filled by none other than Rubeus Hagrid, who has agreed to take on this teaching job in addition to his game keeping duties.
“Well, I think that is everything of importance, Let the feast begin!” Dumbledore gave his last exclamation and with a wave food filled the tables as they did every year and in a moment all felt right. Cerri could no longer feel eyes on her, Cho smiled at her from across the table as they filled their plates, Miranda spoke animatedly about how hot her summer fling had been. It was as every other welcome feast had been, full of smiles and happiness. Until Cerri heard a near shout.
“Why do you think they’ve sent dementors here?” Asked a small girl toward the end of the table.
An older Ravenclaw responded quickly. “They’re trying to catch-” The older girl, Penelope Clearwater, cut herself off; her eyes drifting down the table to Cerri before she whispered. Cerri couldn’t hear but she knew what Penelope was telling the young girl. They’re trying to catch a criminal. They’re trying to catch a fellow Ravenclaws father. They’re trying to catch HER father. They’re trying to catch Sirius Black.
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fruitquake · 5 years ago
Text
Strangely Familiar
here’s a thing I wrote for sirius’ birthday today! happy birthday, sirius! <3
-
Number 12 Grimmauld Place really was a grim place to be. Sirius had finally managed to make his mother, or rather the portrait of her, shut up. But if he was being honest, the silence was almost worse. 
He hadn’t noticed Remus enter the room before he sat down at the old couch next to him. 
“Hey,” Remus greeted him awkwardly. 
Sirius turned his head to look at his… friend? It felt like an eternity ago since he had been able to confidently call Remus his friend. Now he wasn’t sure what they were. 
“Hey,” he said. The words came out strange; his throat was rough like sandpaper, as though he hadn’t talked to anyone for days. Thinking of it, that may have been true. 
Remus’ lips curled up into a soft smile. “Happy birthday,” he said.
“Huh?”
Sirius had forgotten all about that. He hadn’t even known what day it was.
“Happy birthday,” Remus repeated. “What, did you forget your own birthday?”
“No,” he lied, shrugging as he looked into the fireplace. There were only embers left, but he hadn’t bothered getting up to start the fire again. “I just didn’t think anyone else would remember.”
Remus hummed thoughtfully, following his eyes to the embers in the fireplace. “Well, I remembered,” he told him. Sirius could see him, out of the corner of his eye, turn back to look at him. “And I have a present for you, actually.”
“What?” Sirius looked back at him. He was greeted by soft green eyes with a hint of a genuine smile, something he hadn’t seen in a long time. “No, Remus, you didn’t have to get me anything,” he protested, but Remus held up a finger to silence him.
He reached into the pocket of his worn-out coat and, a moment later, drew out something Sirius couldn’t see. It was clearly small enough to fit in his hand.
“You really didn’t have to,” he said, looking at Remus’ hand, closed around the small object. 
“Shh,” Remus shushed him. “You’ll love this, I promise.”
He opened his hand to reveal a pair of keys which, at first, despite being strangely familiar, seemed like a perfectly ordinary pair of keys to Sirius. But with a second look, he realized why they seemed so familiar. 
“No way,” he said, looking at Remus whose smile grew bigger. “Remus, are these…?”
Remus nodded. “The keys to your motorcycle,” he confirmed. “I borrowed it from Hagrid.”
Sirius looked from Remus to the keys in his hand, unable to speak for a moment. 
“Come on,” Remus said, dropping the keys into Sirius’ own hand and getting up from the couch. “Let’s take that old piece of junk for a ride.”
Sirius turned the keys in his hand, looking at them in awe. Oh, how he had missed these things. Well, really it was the motorcycle rides he had missed: the wind through his hair, the rumble of the engine below him, but most of all, the freedom of flying so far above everything. 
“But-” he looked up a Remus, a frown deepening the lines in his face. “I’m not allowed,” he said. 
Remus arched an eyebrow as he looked down at Sirius. “Come on,” he said. “You really think I’m going to let you stay cooped up in here on your birthday?”
-
Sirius couldn’t help but smile when he saw his motorcycle, standing like a majestic stallion on the pavement outside his door. He couldn’t remember last time he had smiled like this. A real, genuine smile that he felt in his whole body.  
Getting up on the motorcycle felt so familiar. It was almost like dejá-vu: Had he really done this before or was it a memory from a dream or another lifetime?
He turned to Remus. “So, er… Are you coming?” he asked.
Remus was hesitant as he got up behind him, and Sirius couldn’t blame him. This kind of closeness was unfamiliar to him too, with Remus’ chest literally pressed up against his back. 
A strange tingle went down his spine as Remus’ hands clasped around him to not fall off once they drove. Or flew. 
“Okay, you can start the motorcycle,” Remus muttered, and even without looking, Sirius could tell he was blushing. 
The engine roared beneath them and Sirius’ face split into a grin. Words couldn’t describe how much he had missed this feeling. 
“Where are we gonna go?” he asked, yelling so Remus could hear him over the sound of the engine.
“That’s a surprise,” Remus said, his mouth so close to Sirius’ ear he didn’t have to shout. “Just go, I’ll give you instructions.” 
Flying was just as incredible as Sirius had remembered it. Perhaps even more. He watched as the city beneath them grew smaller and smaller. It was like leaving all his problems behind, along with Grimmauld Place. 
Remus didn’t seem quite as happy about the ordeal. He gripped tightly around Sirius, all awkwardness gone, replaced by what was obviously fear. Still, he muttered directions in Sirius’ ear.
“Just a little further,” Remus told him, after a while of flying.
“Still not gonna tell me where we’re going?” Sirus asked impatiently.
“No,” Remus said. “That would ruin the surprise.”
-
Even as they landed, Sirius still had no idea where they were. Remus let got of him and they got off, after parking the motorcycle by the foot of a tall building in an abandoned part of muggle London. 
“Where are we?” he asked, turning to Remus who seemed to still be recovering from the ride.
Remus gave him a secretive look before walking to the door of the clearly abandoned building. “This way,” he said, before getting out his wand and muttering Alohomora to open it. “You may recognize it when we get there.”
“Get where?” Sirius asked, but Remus had already disappeared inside. Sirius followed him up the many flights of stairs, wondering where he was taking him.
They kept walking, for longer than Sirius had expected. Panting from the effort of following Remus up the stars, he wondered if they were going all the way to the roof.
Turns out they were. After what seemed like an eternity of walking, the stairs ended with another door, which Remus opened. 
The rooftop was flat, a large area with a view of what seemed like the whole city. Sirius walked to one end, gripping the railing as he looked over London with the awe of a child at Christmas. 
“You can see the Big Ben from here,” he noted, a smile spreading on his lips. Suddenly, he recognized the place. “Remus,” he said, turning around to face him. “We’ve been here before, haven’t we?”
Remus nodded, leaning against the railing beside him, looking out over the city as well. “It’s a long time ago,” he said. “I wasn’t sure if you remembered the night we spent here.”
“Oh, I remember,” Sirius said. “You took me here on New Year’s Eve. 1980, if I’m remembering correctly.”
Remus nodded, and Sirius continued:
“I remember how we watched the fireworks from up here, feeling like all of our worries, everything about the war, was so far away. Like it could never reach us…” He sighed, the memory of that night so fresh in his mind, like it hadn’t happened over 10 years ago. 
“Yeah.” He could tell, without even looking, that Remus was smiling. “That’s why I brought you here today as well.” Sirius turned his head, right as Remus did too, and their eyes met. “I thought you might need to get away for a bit.”
Sirius nodded. “Thank you,” he said. “Really. I can’t believe you’d do all this for me.”
“Hey, of course,” Remus said with a soft smile. “It isn’t the birthday party you deserve,” he said, looking into Sirius’ eyes. “But I hope you’re happy with it anyway.”
Sirius nodded. “Are you kidding?” he said. “It’s perfect.”
Remus chuckled. “Wait,” he said. “I have to show you something.”
He stepped a few steps back and bent down, casting Lumos to illuminate the wall.
“What?” Sirius asked. “What is it?”
Remus quietly moved his wand from side to side, as though he was looking for something on the wall. After a while, he exclaimed, “Ahá! Sirius, come over here!”
Sirius bent down next to him, looking at where the light from his wand was illuminating the wall.
Into the wall a message had been etched: 
Moony and Padfoot were here!
“Shit, yeah.” Sirius laughed. “I remember this.”
Remus smiled, running a hand over the engraving. “I was wondering if it would still be here,” he said.
They both looked up at the same time, and Sirius was surprised at how close their heads were. He could feel Remus’ breath against his lips as the two of them looked at each other. He wasn’t sure if they stayed like that for hours, or only for a second, but just as he was getting up, Remus leaned forward, pressing his lips to Sirius’. 
Like everything else today, kissing Remus felt new and scary, yet so familiar at the same time. Like coming back to a place he hadn’t visited, only to find it had barely changed. 
He brought a hand up to Remus’ head, tangling his hands in the short curls as he leaned into the kiss. 
They broke apart and as though it had never happened, Remus looked up at the sky, frowning. “It’s about to get dark,” he said. “We should probably get back.”
Sirius sighed, a sinking feeling in his stomach. “I was hoping we could stay to watch the sunset,” he mumbled. 
Remus looked back at him, his face softening as he reached for Sirius’ hand, intertwining their fingers. “Alright,” he said. “I suppose we can stay a little longer.”
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matrixaffiliate · 5 years ago
Text
Salient
Chapter Update FFN and AO3
One more warning that this is NOT Cursed Child Compliant...
Chapter 5
They ate in silence for a few minutes before Ellie asked a question that Al was very accustomed to answering.
"What was it like growing up famous?"
Al chuckled, "Thankfully, I'm not famous. Dad and Mum are. But it was still weird. My first day at Hogwarts, a reporter wrote a gossip column saying that I'd come to her from the future claiming that Voldemort had tried to come back through an illegitimate daughter, and I had stopped her."
Ellie laughed, "That's crazy."
"Yeah, but for the most part everyone is focused on Mum and Dad, less on me and my brothers and sister."
"So we'd be safe in Diagon Alley?"
Al hesitated, "Probably not. When my brother Ted was a teen that same reporter followed him and his now-wife around at the World Cup to try and stir up controversy about Dad and his friends. The rest of us have since tried to lie low."
Ellie blinked, "I thought your dad saved your country, and probably the rest of the Wizarding world subsequently. Why on Earth would reporters want to drag him through the dirt?"
Al shrugged, "Mum always says it's because they're jealous. Grandpa Weasley says it's because small minds have to occupy themselves somehow. I don't know, but I do know I like being a nobody in the Muggle world."
"So there are no benefits to being the son of famous war heroes, and a famous Quidditch star?" Ellie chuckled.
"I guess the lifetime Harpies' tickets Mum gets," Al tried to think of anything else, "And seeing Dad on Chocolate Frog cards is pretty cool. But that's about it. Mostly, we get left alone, as long as we're good and boring."
"But in the Muggle world, you don't have to be good and boring?" Ellie smirked at him and Al rather liked the way his chest warmed at her teasing.
"I tend towards good and boring anyway."
"I disagree," Ellie leant closer across the table, "I find you anything but boring."
Al suddenly found it hard to swallow.
"Why are you really living in the Muggle world, Al?"
Al took a large gulp of his water before breathing deeply. He was so thoroughly gone for this woman. It was sort of pathetic but, Merlin, he didn't care.
"I, I'm trying to solve something," Al took another drink, willing himself to stop acting like a nervous little git.
"Solve something?" Ellie frowned, "Like a mystery?"
"No, more like a puzzle," Al hesitated. "Are you sure you want to hear about this? My brothers assure me this is boring and my sister once told me it was definitely not dating conversation."
Ellie laughed, "I wouldn't have asked if I wasn't willing to risk it. Tell me about your puzzle, maybe I can help."
Al had to temper his excitement. She was willing to listen to him, not geek out with him.
"So, I don't know how much you've tried to mix the Muggle world with the Wizarding world, but when you mix technology with magic the whole thing is a nightmare."
Ellie nodded, "Ruined a phone on accident that way."
"Right," Al nodded excitedly, "so as a teenager I'd buy old used phones and computers and try to make them work while doing magic around them. But as I neared the halfway mark of my NEWT year, I realized I still didn't know enough to figure it out. So I badgered Aunt Hermione into helping me get into Muggle university. I figured if magic wasn't teaching me the solution, then I'd need to get a Muggle degree before I'd have a chance at solving this."
Ellie looked at him expectantly and Al sighed, "Only, I'm starting to think maybe I was wrong. I'm nearly two years in and nothing I've learned so far is making a difference."
She frowned, "Al, you do realize most of the classes that might help you are going to be starting next year or the year after, right?"
Al blinked. He actually didn't know much outside of what Aunt Hermione had told him, and she'd handled putting his classes together for him. He just followed the spreadsheet she made.
"Er, so I should have moved those classes from next year to last year?"
Ellie laughed, "No, it's just like magic, you can't learn NEWTS until you've learned OWLS."
"So I'm supposed to spend the first two years learning the basics and then I get the good stuff the second two years?"
"That's sort of simplified, but pretty accurate all the same."
"How do you know so much?"
Ellie grinned, "My mum is a Muggle. She's actually from around here. The waitress that helped you when I was gone is my mum's sister. She and my uncle own the place and offered me the job when Mum told them I'd be coming to university here."
Al's excitement bubbled beneath the surface as Ellie revealed more about herself. He loved puzzles and seeing another facet of Ellie was thrilling.
"What took your mum to Canada?"
"Mum visited St. John's after she finished A-Levels. She and Dad had a summer romance while she was there." Ellie smiled, "Mum decided to stay."
"So why did you leave?" Al pressed his luck, seeing how much more of herself she was willing to show him.
"I wanted to see the world. I love St. John's, and I want to end up back there, but I wanted to see what else was out there. This was as far as I could get with what I have, but I feel like it's been good for me." Ellie sighed, "But I do miss home."
"Benefits of the Wizarding world," Al smiled, "home is a portkey away."
"Not when you live with your Muggle aunt and uncle." Ellie gave him a sad smile. "They don't know I'm a witch, or that Dad is a wizard, or that Dad's whole family is magical. Mum says it's best that way."
Al frowned. He didn't like the way Ellie's demeanor had changed, but he didn't have answers to her problem either, and that left him feeling helpless.
He didn't like that feeling, especially not in regards to Ellie.
"Hey," Ellie tapped his foot with her own and Al looked up to see her smiling again. "Tonight's my last night in that gallery. Want to go look at my art with me?"
Al smiled, "Definitely."
Al decided to take an Uber from the restaurant to the gallery. He wasn't sure he knew the area well enough to Aparate without running into trouble. Ellie didn't seem to mind, at least Al hoped her holding his hand the whole ride was a good indication that she didn't mind.
Ellie smiled brightly at the lady tending the gallery that evening before pulling Al back to the small corner that held her five canvases.
"You're incredibly talented," Al stepped closer to Ellie, tentatively interlacing his fingers with hers. He tried not to sigh in relief when she squeezed his hand.
"Thank you."
"Have you ever painted with magic?" Al asked, remembering his silly attempt to talk to the painting of the old woman.
Ellie sighed, "Yes, but it's different. Painting with magic takes a lot of the process away from you. You really can end up with the painting dictating to you. Not that it doesn't feel like that happens in Muggle painting too, but…"
She frowned, and Al watched as she worked out what she wanted to say. She was really pretty when she was thinking.
"You know how technology to wizards who have never interacted with Muggles comes off as weird or a trick? Well, I can paint things the Muggle way that can feel like magic but aren't."
"Your bear," Al nodded. "It was a black bear and a polar bear depending on where my eye focused."
"Exactly!" Ellie nodded excitedly. "I love that I can make magic happen without a wand. And I want to get better at it. I want to show that there's Wizarding magic, but that there's magic in the Muggle world too. Artists and inventors and people who innovate new and amazing things are magical, just in a different way from the people who use wands."
Al grinned down as Ellie gave her impassioned little speech. She was so right. He'd learned as much having spent the last two years living in the Muggle world. Craig, for example, was a wizard of computer coding. He really could make a computer do almost anything. And Al's goal to merge Muggle technology and magic was going to show their world how right Ellie was.
"You're amazing," he suddenly realized his feet had moved closer to her. She smiled up at him with dark eyes, her lips mere inches from his.
"I think you're pretty amazing too."
Al could feel his heart beating against his ribcage as he closed the remaining space between them.
"May I…"
Ellie cut him off, pressing up on her toes and bringing her lips to his.
She started to lower down but Al followed her, maintaining the kiss as she put her feet flat on the floor. The feeling of kissing her lips was thrilling and he wanted to savor the way she made his mind quiet so completely and focus solely on her.
Al once heard his dad describe the first time kissing his mum as stepping out of time. Al didn't understand what his dad meant until this moment, in this gallery, kissing this woman, this wonderfully impassioned, beautiful woman.
After several long moments, Ellie pulled back just slightly and squeezed his hand still intertwined with hers.
"I've wanted to do that for weeks," she gave a small chuckle as her cheeks flushed with pink.
"Me too," Al ran his free hand through his hair, not sure what to do next. They stood grinning at each other like fools in the silent gallery. And if he was being honest, Al would have been content to stand there with her forever.
It was the gallery attendant that ultimately brought them back to the real world.
"Ms. Battiste," she walked up from behind them, "were about to close. Were you going to take your paintings tonight or come back and get them in the morning?"
"I can take them tonight," Ellie let go of his hand as she turned. "Just let me go grab my box."
"Excellent," the woman nodded before heading back to her post.
Ellie extended her hand out to Al, "Shall we do a bit of magic?" She asked him in a flawless imitation of his own accent.
"Merlin, you're full of surprises aren't you?" Al laughed and took her proffered hand.
"Says the man who tonight told me he's Harry Potter's son." Ellie winked at him.
She pulled him out and down a little side street where she pulled out her wand.
"Keep watch, yeah?"
Al nodded as she summoned a large box. He felt the familiar flow of magic around them as Ellie's box materialized on the pavement. When it stopped, he bent down and picked it up for her.
"I can get it," Ellie quickly held out her arms.
"I'm sure you can but I'm going to ask if you want to get it?" Al grinned as Ellie's arms fell back to her sides.
"When you put it like that," Ellie chuckled.
Al helped Ellie pack up her paintings before thanking the attendant and stepping back into the side street to send her paintings home again.
"So," Al pulled Ellie into his side as they returned to the pavement. "I honestly thought I'd be lucky if you stayed through dinner tonight and have nothing else planned for our evening. Anything you'd like to do?"
Ellie shivered against him, "I'm actually working tomorrow because I missed Tuesday. So we should plan to see each other after my shift if you're not busy and then take me home so I'm not completely useless."
Al experienced the most bizarre combination of feeling both excited and disappointed at the same time. He didn't really want the night to end yet, but his heartbeat on overdrive thinking about seeing Ellie again outside of her work.
"How about I pick you up at 4? We can decide what we'd like to do then?"
Ellie grinned as her teeth chattered, "Sounds perfect."
"Here," Al threw his coat off and draped it over her shoulders. "Don't you have a warmer coat?"
"Of course I do," Ellie snuggled back into his side. "But I was concerned about making sure I looked pretty tonight and that doesn't usually include synthetic down coats with windbreaker covers."
Al laughed, "Ellie, I thought you were the most gorgeous woman I had ever seen when you were in your work uniform. If you'd looked like this when I first met you I probably would have been so tongue-tied I would have walked right back out the door in shame for even attempting to talk to you."
Ellie laughed and pulled him down another empty side street.
"Don't be silly, it's not like you aren't good looking."
Al liked how that felt, to be called attractive. It wasn't something he really thought of himself as, but Ellie thinking he was made him want to hold his head a little higher.
He wasn't sure what to say, so he kissed her instead.
While their first kiss had been soft and tentative, this one was more confident on both their parts. He pulled her into him, wrapping his arms around her waist. She linked her arms around his neck, pressing herself into him and causing his jacket to fall off her shoulders and pool around her waist where his arms held her close. He gently ran his tongue against her and smiled when she sighed into him, parting her lips to give him entrance. When her tongue reached out to his, Al had to exercise all his self-control not to Aparate them to his flat on the spot.
"Ellie," he whispered as he continued to kiss her.
Her reply was a soft moan which almost did him in.
"We should get you home because I'm losing the will power to keep this appropriate."
She smirked against him. Apparently, she was rather pleased with what she could do to him. Which, unfortunately, or perhaps, fortunately, ended up being even more arousing.
Ellie stepped back before he could decide.
She handed him back his jacket before taking his hand and turning. Al felt the familiar sensation of being pulled through space before his feet hit the pavement of another side street.
"Just this way," Ellie tugged on his hand and led him out to the main street.
"Wait," Al took a moment to get his bearings, "isn't your work just over there?"
Ellie laughed, "Yeah, my aunt and uncle didn't want to live very far from it."
It was only a few yards more before Ellie stopped in front of a door and pulled her key from her coat pocket.
"Thanks for not giving up on me." Ellie smiled up at him.
"Thanks for giving me another chance." Al closed the distance between them and pulled her close. "Tomorrow we'll do something warmer."
"Warmer is good," she snuggled closer to him.
"Anything with you is good," he rested his forehead against hers.
"So tomorrow?" She tilted her head up just slightly.
"I can't wait," and he kissed her.
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your-stitcher-thursday · 7 years ago
Text
Until You Find Me - Stitchers Fic
Hey @onthecyberseas! This is your Stitchmas fic. I tried to keep it from going too angsty. (Definitely has a happy ending!) I loved your suggestion of a HogwartsAU so that’s what I did. It’s Camanda with the tiniest hint of Camsten. Hopefully you like it. 
Thank you to @lady-gryffindor and @stitchedatbirth for hosting this event and @xoheatherkw my beta/cheerleader. 
Ordinarily it was considered an incredible act of friendship to travel long distances to be there for someone.
At one point there were people in her life that she would barely blink twice before following on this kind of task.  Kirsten Clark was not one of them.
The blonde was Camille’s latest mission. Her dossier was long and kind of tragic. Camille had it nearly memorized right down to the smudges and ink splotches of the parchment. Kirsten’s father, Daniel Stinger, had been a teacher at Hogwarts until she was eleven. He had disappeared after his wife, Jacqueline, died in an accident. Ed Clark, a friend of her parents, took Kirsten in and raised her. She was sent halfway around the world for school, away from the place her parents loved most.
For all of that, Camille never saw traces of her backstory impact Kirsten. Camille could feel her own background leaving its grimy fingerprints on everything she did. She could never escape.
It was hard to let go parents who left her at every turn.
It was tough to be raised by a teenage brother who was constantly inches from being arrested.
It was difficult to uproot her life over and over again.
The worst part of it all was that Theo’s lack of regard for the law was what first revealed Camille’s magic. There had been a sale that went wrong. Someone stole the money Theo had earned by dealing. Coming up with the missing cash fell squarely on Camille’s shoulders since Theo had decided to run and hide.
That’s when Camille met Maggie Baptiste.
Or more accurately that’s when she tried to rob Maggie Baptiste.
Her fingers were sure and swift as she lifted the wallet. It had been a relatively easy pick on a crowded street. She made it a block and a half before her mark appeared in front of her. Camille sprinted in the opposite direction, but the woman appeared ahead of her again. Eventually the thief became the pursued and was chased into a dead end alley. The only way out was in. Camille vaulted onto a closed dumpster and tried to open the window above it. She tugged at the latch, willing it to open.
And then it vanished beneath her fingers.
Shock prevented Camille from entering the apartment. She tumbled backward, sliding on the lid of the dumpster. Once she got control of her breathing back she realized that her hands were bound. Funny. She didn’t remember feeling that happen.
Her mark started chastising her about the window. It started off normally enough. Then she began to talk about the Improper Use of Magic Office and the International Statute of Wizarding Secrecy. That’s when Camille really felt uneasy. After several moments of silence the woman studied Camille’s face. Her expression softened as she asked if Camille was a muggle. As Maggie explained about wizards and magic, Camille’s entire life started to make sense.
The time a street light burst at just the right moment to hide her.
The way she could always find missing items.
The incredible ease with which she could lift anything from a pocket.
That summer she received an acceptance letter for a local wizarding school. She never hesitated, never looked back. Her mind had been made up the second she bailed Theo out of yet another mess. She swore it would be the last one.
Her school years passed until she was able to join the workforce. There was only one job she wanted: Auror. Maggie had become something of a hero and mentor to her so it was only natural that she wanted to grow up to be her. Camille soon joined the department.
Despite her eagerness, the job started to wear on her. Much of her job involved getting close to people in an effort to protect or investigate them. There always had to be a thin barrier up between them though, one she always saw and they never felt.
That distance was what made Kirsten Clark her favorite charge. She didn’t want to be friends. Her feelings were nearly impossible to hurt. It had been restful for Camille to not have to act all the time. Unfortunately, the distance between them was what was currently making her job hard.
If she even had one in the morning.
Camille walked down the long hall of the morgue. Ordinarily the loud thumping of her boots wouldn’t phase her, but she felt less than stealthy at the moment. Her thumb worked over the seal of her badge as she wound deeper down the corridor. A lit room at the end caught her eye. It was the only part of the building that felt inhabited. As she grew closer, Camille could hear someone faintly singing.
The room was overly bright and smelled strongly of formaldehyde, but neither of those things were what Camille noticed first. Her immediate attention went to the woman in front of her. From her victory waves and cherry red lipstick all the way down to her patent red heels, she looked like she had just popped in from the forties. Her focus drifted from the notes she was taking and fell to Camille.
Something snagged in Camille’s throat. She wanted to be witty and charming, but couldn’t find it in her to be either. Living with Kirsten had made all of her social skills rusty.
“Hi.”
The word creaked out between them. Camille wrinkled her nose slightly. That was the best she could come up with?
“Amanda.”
Camille frowned. “No, I’m Camille.”
The other woman pressed her lips together before smirking. The twinkle in her eye set Camille’s heartbeat running a little faster. “I was trying to introduce myself. My name is Amanda.”
“Oh.” A flush crept up Camille’s neck. “Right. I should probably let you get back to… all of that.” Camille gestured vaguely to the body covered with a sheet.
The smirk on Amanda’s face deepened. “You could stay a bit longer. I promise I only cut up dead people.” She picked a scalpel up off the table and waved it in the air. “Trust me.”
“Says the lady brandishing a sharp object.” Camille’s response was far breathier than she intended.
Amanda shrugged and set down the scalpel. “Monday’s and Friday’s are open mic night at The Lowdown, and a murder charge would most likely keep me from performing. Tomorrow’s a different story though.”
It worried Camille slightly that she was so happy about someone joking around about murder. Their back and forth felt like flirting. It had been so long since she had enjoyed banter like this. Giddiness bubbled up through her veins. She hadn’t wanted to know someone - let someone know her - like this in ages. It felt so good.
“Well I doubt my conversational skills are what brought you here.” Amanda walked closer to Camille. “Why are you at the morgue this late at night?”
And just like that all of the fizziness Camille had been feeling went flat.
“I’m here about Ed Clark.”
He was why Camille had apparated halfway around the world, trailing her annoying, blonde charge.
He was why Maggie was suddenly letting emotion bleed into her decisions.
He was why Camille might lose her job.
The cardinal rule to going undercover was to never let your cover slip. Camille had mastered that from a young age. The problem was that she had no real reason to follow Kirsten Clark except for Maggie’s insistence. When she fought with Kirsten about being there for moral support - a soap bubble thin reason if there ever was one - the truth had come screeching out of her. From that moment on she stopped treating Kirsten like her roommate and started treating Ed Clark as her case.
Step one was to find more information on Ed’s whereabouts. Kirsten took to Hogwarts. She interrogated several of his colleagues, including a curly-haired Muggle Studies professor. When Camille left them she could hear their verbal sparring from outside the walls of the school. Camille decided to take to the morgue. Her badge could get her access and better answers. No one would sugarcoat Ed’s final hours for an Auror.
“You’re in luck. I’m just wrapping up my notes on him.” Amanda gestured for Camille to join her. “Do you have identification?”
Camille held up her badge. Her mood dropped slightly at Amanda’s much more professional tone. “The deceased’s daughter called earlier to confirm his body was here.”
“‘Body’ is a strong word. There was barely enough to identify him by.”
Suspicion twitched at Camille’s fingertips. “Is it possible the rest of his body is elsewhere?”
Amanda nodded. “Very possible.” She hesitated. “I’m not supposed to speculate without hard evidence.”
“I won’t tell if you won’t,” Camille said softly, willing Amanda to trust her enough with whatever she wanted to say.
The comment earned Camille a smile that brought back some of the joy she felt earlier.
“I think he’s still alive.”
The whisper was barely loud enough to hear over Camille’s breathing.
“The entire crime scene felt like it was staged. It was too perfect. There was just enough blood for me to test.” Amanda paused. “Plus, he was friends with the Stingers.”
Camille’s brain whirled at the thought of Ed Clark not only being alive, but reunited with Jacqueline and Daniel. “I’ve got to go. You’ve been great. I’ll owl if I need anything else.”
Amanda curled her fingers around Camille’s wrist. “Wait.” She held up a pen. “So you know where to send it.”
Camille’s hand grew warm under Amanda’s. The pen slowly rolled over her skin. It left Amanda’s name and address in its wake. Camille noticed that she wrote much slower than she had before.
“Or if you want to see me again.”
Yes.
It’s on the tip of Camille’s tongue. She wants to agree so badly. Every single cell in her body is screaming at her to say yes before Amanda could change her mind.
“I won’t be in town very long.” Camille withdrew her hand sadly. “I’m sorry.”
Amanda frowned. “Me too.”
With that Camille walked out the door. She willed herself to keep going, to not look back. It wasn’t easy considering she was going toward Maggie and possibly the end of her career.
Upon arrival, Camille was expecting to get completely chewed out. She was not expecting a hug. There was something so warm about Maggie’s hugs. They were rare, but when she gave them she threw all of herself into it. Camille chalked it up to her sadness over what happened - or according to Amanda didn’t happen - to Ed.
In the hours since Camille had left, Kirsten had grown quite comfortable in Ed’s home. His squat hut was located at the furthest boundary of the school. It was quiet, secluded, and home to a number of cozy pieces of furniture. It helped too that the Muggle Studies professor was at her side as she unravelled some of Ed’s research. They had discovered a spell he had been perfecting that allowed people to project the memories of the dead.
Camille kept waiting for Maggie to fire her. She had broken the cardinal rule. There was no way they could keep her after that. And yet Maggie continued to treat Camille like family even after she shared Amanda’s suspicions about Ed being alive.
On the fourth day Kirsten accepted Ed’s position as Herbology professor. The school year was starting the following week, and she seemed like the logical successor. Maggie had arranged for a local Auror named Fisher to help Kirsten with questioning if she needed it. That seemed like the beginning of the end for Camille.
Until Maggie told her that Fisher’s department was severely understaffed. She wondered if maybe Camille would like to stop going undercover and stay put for more than a few months at a time. Her first case could be with Fisher and Kirsten.
Camille could feel the pieces of her life slowly starting to knit together. There was one more she needed to get right though.
Luckily, it was a Friday.
The Lowdown was a tiny pub on a winding street. Camille passed it three times before she spotted the place. She wasn’t sure if it was her nerves or the lack of signage that gave her trouble. Once inside, she had no trouble spotting Amanda even though she wore all black. It took Camille a couple of moments to gather herself. Amanda didn’t notice her until they were nearly face to face. She looked surprised to see Camille, though not unhappy.
“I thought you were leaving town,” she said casually.
Camille ran a hand through her hair. “Turns out I’m not. I just got transferred.”
A smile threatened to overtake the smirk on Amanda’s face. “Really? How interesting. Does that mean I’ll see you in the morgue again?”
“Only on Monday’s and Friday’s,” Camille told her. “I’d like to see you outside the morgue some days too.” Amanda’s smile lit up the dark pub. “That could definitely be arranged.”
“Without the scalpel,” Camille joked as she twined one of her hands with Amanda’s.
“Oh that might be a dealbreaker.” Amanda took Camille’s free hand in hers.
Camille took a step toward her. “Really?”
“No.”
Amanda whispered the word against Camille’s mouth before kissing her. Camille disentangled the hands and slid hers around the back of Amanda’s neck. Her fingers toyed with the soft skin there. She wanted to spin the moment out as long as she could. They were on the brink of something wonderful, something new. Camille would’ve bottled the moment and trapped it in a pensieve so she could live it over and over again if she could’ve.
They both pulled back slightly, lips barely brushing together. Amanda rested her forehead against Camille’s.
“I’m really glad you came and found me.”
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