**I do not own anything in the Harry Potter-iverse, and am making no profit by this.
After the Library
“Damn,” Ginny muttered, seeing Madame Pince approach their table. The library matron looked much as Ginny herself did after a dose of pepper-up potion. Ginny looked down at the incriminating piece of chocolate in her hands. This makes, what? The third time? It’s a charm. “I forgot,” she told Harry.
He still had that sublime, adorable, hopeful look on his face, only there was now amusement there as well. They both scrambled from their seats and raced from the library, dodging books as though dodging bludgers--thank God for quidditch reflexes. It was all Ginny could do to contain her giggles until they were out in the corridor, gasping and leaning against the wall as Harry’s books, ink, bag, and quill clattered to the floor.
“Bloody Hell,” Ginny said, wheezing with laughter.
Harry stooped to gather his books and scrolls. He looked up at Ginny with flushed cheeks and, for the first time that week, eyes that didn’t look haunted by so much as a Cornish pixie. He grinned a little sheepishly.
“Thanks for the chocolate,” he said. He looked about to say more when the door opened behind them. Harry’s mask resettled over his features. He still looked happy, but his expression was guarded again. Ginny thought her heart would pound directly out of her ribcage when she realized that Harry had let her see himself. “Hey, Michael,” he said casually.
Ginny put on her brightest smile and turned to face her boyfriend. After seeing the Real Harry, she knew that she wasn’t ready for Michael, especially when she saw the chummy-but-not-so-chummy smile that Michael was giving Harry.
Ginny groaned inwardly. Bloody Hell. Not this again. She’d been through this with Michael before. First Harry, then Neville, Dean, Colin-- Terry Boot, for goodness sakes--and now Harry again.
“Hey, Harry.” Michael slipped his hand to Ginny’s waist, but Ginny avoided the contact by stooping to retrieve Harry’s bent quill. She was glad that Michael didn’t grab her arse like he had that one time--apparently the boy could actually take a hex--reinforced lesson. Good thing. (Must be that elusive Ravenclaw in him poking through) Michael wasn’t worth two detentions for casting hexes in the corridors. One, yes, but not two.
Ginny tucked Harry’s quill into his bag while Michael made some idle, uninteresting comment about quidditch or something. The three of them limped through a brief conversation. If Harry sensed the tension, he acted oblivious, but Ginny thought the corridor walls might actually be compressing, drawing closer, squeezing against her chest. She took a deep breath, and the tension eased somewhat.
When Harry had finished tucking the last of his books into his bag, he rose, clutching his ink pot. “See you, Michael, Ginny,” he said. Ginny didn’t miss the look of real gratitude in his eyes when he looked at her again, or his grin, or the smudge of chocolate egg that still clung to the corner of his mouth. She tried not to imagine what it would be like to... so stop imagining!
“See you, Harry,” she returned, glad that her voice didn’t come out as breathless as she felt...glad that she was already so flushed from their library exodus that Michael wouldn’t notice the effect that Harry’s parting, chocolatey grin had upon her.
She sighed a little. Completely oblivious, aren’t you, Harry?
Michael had the decency to wait until Harry had vanished around the corner before he started.
“What was that all about?”
Ginny shrugged. “Chocolate in the library again. Third time this year, can you believe it?” She steeled herself before looking up; she couldn’t remember the last time her acting skills had been called upon for something quite like this. “Mum sent us Easter eggs--just got through Umbridge’s system--Fred and George already got theirs, and I couldn’t give Ron his because he’s taken Jack Sloper up to the hospital wing--you’ll never guess what that idiot Jack did, today! Hit himself with his own bat, I think--and, anyhow, of course Mum sent an egg for Harry too.”
She held up the brown box and gave him a mock-seductive look. “Would you like a piece of mine?”
Michael didn’t say anything. Ginny waggled her brows as she opened and shut the box lid, but even pretending that the box was a textbook on Hagrid’s syllabus didn’t seem to assuage Michael’s anger. And the babbling hadn’t exactly distracted him, either.
Bloody Hell. Where had Michael’s humor vanished to, lately, anyway?
“You know this isn’t about chocolate, Ginny.”
She blinked. “Oh. Is it about that book I was supposed to loan Terry? Because I gave it to Luna before quidditch and she swore that she’d give it to him...she must have forgotten--you know Luna. Did you happen to...” She gave up changing the subject when she saw the muscle twitch in Michael’s jaw line.
“I saw the way you were looking at him, Ginny. In fact, I saw the way he was looking at you--like you were a bloody snitch or something. Cho warned me about this! Remember that Valentines Day quidditch practice you wouldn’t skive off for me? Cho caught him staring at you as she and Harry were walking out to Hogsmead! Can you believe that prat? Valentine’s Day!”
It was the most ridiculous accusation Ginny had heard in her life. Of course Harry had been watching the quidditch pitch while he and Cho walked to Hogsmead. It was impossible not to--especially if you were the greatest Gryffindor seeker in Hogwarts history (Though possibly not as good as Charlie) and the quidditch pitch was right there. This was nothing but more petty jealousy from Cho combined with a dollop of ridiculous jealousy from Michael.
Stupid git...
Ginny blanched. She could actually feel the blood rushing from her face. It was such an unusual sensation--she was so used to the opposite, and here she was, blanching. Livid. Some distant part of her brain knew that this was bad. Very, very bad. She’d seen her mother turn white, once--the entire house had started rattling. Ginny closed her eyes and counted. She couldn’t blow it now. But he was accusing Harry of something, and Harry didn’t need that. It was one thing for Michael to accuse her of getting cozy with other guys, but this... Harry didn’t need this.
“Look,” she said, staring up at Michael again. “All I did was give Harry one of Mum’s eggs. Harry’s a worse chocolate fanatic than me--” (...small white lie...small white lie...) “--and anyone who’s been cramped up in the library this week would look like that if they got a stupid chocolate egg during a ruddy study session.” Or, popped an unbidden thought, if you were finally able to confide in someone that wasn’t Hermione and wasn’t going to say ‘that’s the stupidest idea I’ve ever heard,’ or Ron who would give up the situation as hopeless. Thinking about Michael’s accusation, Ginny felt her anger building again, rushing in hot color back to her cheeks. “If you want to be a git about it, then fine. I need a shower, I’m starving, I’ve got five inches left on my potions paper, and I DON’T HAVE TIME FOR THIS!”
He’s lucky I don’t hex him. He’s lucky I don’t hex him. He’s lucky I don’t...
It was worth the second detention, but she swept past him and counted her steps. One, two, three...
She closed her eyes.
Michael was at her side, then, with his arms around her.
Ginny spent the appropriate amount of time embracing him back, murmuring her forgiveness, snogging; it was a relief when she could finally escape back to Gryffindor tower. Michael would forget all about it by tomorrow. He tried to make her agree to come down and catch the end of dinner, but Ginny lied and said that Hermione had already saved some for her. She would tickle the pear, later, and get food from the house elves. Then she was gone, gone, running down the corridor while she remembered that look on Harry’s face.
He didn’t want to talk to Cho. He didn’t care about Cho anymore. He really didn’t--Harry had actually seemed a little bewildered when she suggested he speak to her. Ginny felt like skipping. He had confided in her about wanting to talk to Sirius…and he had told Hermione that he was upset about Cho. But he wasn’t upset about Cho--he looked almost bewildered when I mentioned her name. He didn’t want to talk to Cho... Ginny felt as though her face would split from smiling. And he talked to ME... And Ginny, who sometimes thought she knew Harry far better than he knew himself, felt certain that their brief conversation had actually lifted some of the melancholy from him.
And stupid, bloody-git, idiot boy, Ravenclaw, know-it-all Michael had had to bloody go and ruin the moment... Of course, Madame Pince did ruin it first... Ginny touched the back of her head; there was a lump there from where Harry’s transfiguration book had smacked her.
She thought about Michael again. Stupid git. Stupid, brainless, idiot git. How did he get sorted into Ravenclaw, anyway?
Hermione looked up from her runes notes when Ginny entered the common room. Harry was seated across the table from her with his back to the portrait door.
Hermione’s gaze met hers. Ginny raised her eyebrows, pointed to the dormitory stairs, signaled “five minutes,” and went up to her room before Harry could turn around. In her dorm room, she threw the box of eggs onto the floor and flung herself onto the bed before kicking off her shoes. One of the shoes glanced off the door just as Hermione opened it. The older girl gave her a stern look.
“I should take points away for that, Ginny,” she teased.
“Bloody Hell,” Ginny groaned, flouncing upright. It wasn’t until that point that Ginny realized how badly she was shaking. Excitement, fear, nervousness for the future... This was so stupid. But it felt...it really seemed like...she had felt it, there, while Harry looked at her in the library. Something had changed.
She buried her face in her hands.
Bloody Hell. Michael. What am I going to do about him? She began shaking uncontrollably.
In a moment, Hermione was sitting next to her with an arm around Ginny’s shoulders.
“What happened?”
“It’s that idiot, Michael,” she muttered, shrugging off Hermione’s arm; she flung herself onto her back again, making the bed bounce. Hermione looked down at her in amusement.
“What this time?”
“Well, this time, it was me giving Mum’s dirty great chocolate egg to Harry in the library.” She put her hands over her face. “Michael says I was looking at Harry. Now, granted...I was looking at Harry, but you sort of have to look at a bloke when he’s talking to you, don’t you?” She removed her hands from her face to find Hermione with a hand over her mouth and laughter in her eyes. Ginny snorted, unable to help grinning. “Hermione...”
Hermione grinned. “So Michael yelled at you for looking at Harry Potter.”
Ginny put her hands over her face again. “Argh. No. Michael yelled at me because Harry Bloody Potter was looking at me. ”
Hermione squealed and fell backwards onto the bed. She giggled and Ginny again unburied her face. Hermione turned onto her side.
“Finally! But was he really looking at you, or was Michael being a git again?”
Ginny blushed. “I don’t know. But I think so--about Harry, that is. I mean...I don’t think he knew he was looking at me, but he got this look on his face...” She tried to imitate the look. “I’ve seen that look often enough, now; I know what that look means.” She scowled. “It bloody figures that Michael knows that look too.”
Ginny was thinking about one of her past conversations with Hermione in which Hermione stated that Michael seemed to be looking at Padma, Susan, Cho, Hannah...Madame Hooch?...Lavender, Luna even.... At the time, Ginny had defended Michael--what did it matter if a boy appreciated beauty in another woman, anyway. (Though, if he was looking at Madame Hooch, one had to wonder about the boy.) But now...
“So how did it happen--the look?” Hermione asked.
Ginny opened her mouth, then closed it. She knew that she couldn’t tell Hermione anything about her conversation with Harry. Hermione would be dead against anything having to do with Harry and Sirius conversing. Besides, there was something very...private about her conversation with Harry. He really wasn’t the sort of person who confided things in people. Ginny felt a little thrill go through her again that he had confided in her. Ginny wasn’t sure that Harry would want her to share his confidence--not with Hermione, anyway--and Ginny knew that she didn’t want to give up that private moment for anything. Not yet. At least, not to Hermione who had had a thousand private moments. No, not yet. This was, after all, the first time that Harry had confided something in her alone.
So. “We shared his chocolate egg,” Ginny lied. “And I told him about Jack Sloper hitting himself with his own bat, and then he...” Ginny continued to tell Hermione what she could, delighting in the older girl’s squeals until Ginny at last found herself relaxing again. She was glad--for once--to have had something worth sharing.
And Hermione, silly girl, didn’t find it at all strange for Harry to give a “look” over a shared chocolate egg and quidditch gossip.
~~~~~~~~
Later, after everyone in Gryffindor Tower had gone to bed, Ginny snuck downstairs and climbed back up the boy’s stairs, up to the seventh year dorm. She knocked softly. There was muffled laughter on the other side of the door.
“Boxers or briefs,” she heard Fred say, his voice sounding close to the door.
“Boxers,” Ginny said, grinning.
“Cannons or--”
“Cannons!”
“Michael or Harry?”
“Fred!!”
“Ewww. No thanks, little sister. You’re cute and all that, but...no way! Butterbeer or pumpkin juice?”
“Firewhisky, you idiot! Come on, Fred, let me in!”
He pulled the door open so quickly that Ginny stumbled into him, laughing. Fred picked her up and spun her around.
“What are you doing up here, little terror. You didn’t come up to our dorm to start snogging Lee, now, did you? I thought you were still with that Corner git.” He swung her over Lee’s bed and laughed while Lee held open his arms and made smooching noises. Ginny squealed and wrapped her arms more tightly around Fred’s neck.
“Fred Weasley! If you drop me, I swear I’ll tell everyone about--”
“Whoa there, little terror.” He swung her over to George’s bed, dropped her, and hopped into bed beside her. He and George made a show of squashing and tickling her until their dormmates told them to shove it and shut it.
“Headache,” Lee said apologetically.
“Sorry,” Ginny whispered.
George winked down at her. Fred pulled the curtains closed, muttered a silencing spell, and made a bluebell flame they could see by.
“So what brings our dearest--”
“--sweetest--”
“--scariest protege up to see her favorite brothers?”
“Mischief. A great feat requiring skill, daring, a mastery of the prank, deviousness, a desire to pull one over Umbridge, and…a willingness to help a mutual friend.”
Fred and George exchanged a grin.
“Sounds dangerous,” said George. “Who for?”
“Harry,” Ginny said firmly. And then was horrified when she did something that she had not done in over a year...she blushed.
Fred smirked. “For ickle Harry?”
Ginny glared. “Look. Don’t start with me,” she said coolly. “When I took Harry his egg this afternoon, he mentioned that he wants to talk to...someone that we know whom will get into trouble if someone like Umbridge were to--”
“Padfoot,” George whispered. He and Fred both wore thoughtful expressions. They stared at each other long enough for Ginny’s foot to fall asleep.
Fred spoke at last: “How long of a talk, do you think?”
Ginny bit her lip. “Well…Harry’s been really down for a while, now. I think he means to say more than hello and ‘did you have kippers for breakfast or not, Sirius?’”
“Umbridge’s Floo.” Fred and George said together.
“That’s what I was thinking, too,” Ginny said. “He’d need fifteen minutes, at least. Twenty. I wish he could have a whole bloody day...”
George looked slightly uncomfortable. Fred closed his eyes. “You know what this requires, don’t you, Forge?”
“Yes. But we still haven’t worked out that last bit, yet… Scourgify is a hard spell to get around.”
“We’re close, though.”
“And we’ll have to find the right location. Time it so that Filch and Umbridge are both stranded and have to use the other staircase back to the office–”
“Brilliant. Unless Umbridge decides to wade.”
“Ha! She’ll walk...and that’d take...”
“Twenty minutes. Tops,” Fred said. He opened his eyes and looked at Ginny. “Don’t mention anything to Harry, yet. We’ve got something in mind, but it’s our biggest product yet--”
George grinned broadly. “And our most foulest smelling. It might take a week to get the kinks sorted out...we’ll approach him when it’s ready.” His smile faded. “But things won’t be the same, afterwards...”
Ginny was surprised when Fred took his twin's hand. “We’re ready,” he said firmly.
After a moment, George gave a sharp nod.
Ginny felt as though she’d missed something, but she trusted her brothers. They would help Harry. Harry had trusted her, and she would trust them, and Harry would trust Sirius with whatever it was that seemed to be bothering him.
Ginny sat in front of the common room fire with Fred and George’s parting letter open in her lap and red-rimmed eyes. “Dear Terror,” it began. They had known it would happen. They had known...but they were ready. Their shop awaited them, “Good luck with Harry, and we’ll see you at King’s Cross if Mum doesn’t kill us first.”
Ginny felt as though she had traded Fred and George for Harry--not that she got to keep Harry, but she had to admit that Harry seemed relieved by his conversation with Sirius. He had eaten dinner with his usual appetite, and had laughed when she told him about how half her DADA class planned to use skiving snackboxes for Umbridge’s class the next day--Ginny included.
And she, Ginny, was dating a stupid idiot who refused to see anything wrong with criticizing her brothers for an “ill-advised prank that earned them no profit.” Git. Prat. And what a Slytherin thing to say besides.
“Ginny?”
She looked up to see Hermione in her dressing gown; there was concern and apology in her eyes. Ginny looked back to the fire, blinking rapidly. Hermione had been upset with her since breakfast, when Fred and George had approached Harry in the great hall. Though they hadn’t spoken, Ginny knew that Hermione had figured out what else she and Harry had discussed that day in the library. Ginny was pretty sure that Hermione blamed her for everything that had happened today.
Maybe Hermione should get together with Michael instead of Ron so that they can go and be idiots together.
“Ginny, can I sit with you?”
Ginny swallowed and nodded. She had lost Fred and George. She didn’t have to lose Hermione as well.
“I couldn’t tell you,” Ginny said after Hermione had settled beside her. “You know that, right?”
Hermione sighed. “Yes. Ginny, I’m sorry.”
Ginny shrugged. “It’s fine.”
They stared at the fire for a while.
“Do you know why he wanted to talk to Snuffles?”
Ginny shook her head. “No, but I could tell it was important.”
Hermione didn’t say anything for a long while. Then, "It was," she said heavily.
A log on the fire gave a sharp pop, and the tension seemed to go out of the room. Hermione drew a long breath.
“You know, Ginny...” Her tone was light again. “That is, you must realize that Harry...that this...well, this means far more than a look from Harry, even if he doesn’t know it, yet.”
Ginny felt her eyes begin to water. “I know,” she whispered, thinking about Michael.
“He doesn’t like Cho...doesn’t love her, anyway.”
“He’s over her,” Ginny said quietly. She swallowed, thinking about what Cho had told Michael about Valentines Day and the quidditch pitch. Ginny remembered that day. She remembered Harry watching and had brushed it off at the time, but, what if...
Hermione snorted. “Harry’s so oblivious.” Ginny turned to find Hermione giving her a wry grin. “Do you know that your oblivious brother had it all figured out the very day that Cho kissed him?--well, that Harry didn’t want to be with her really.”
Ginny raised a brow. “Did he? Is Ron as protective of Harry’s dating as he is of mine?”
Hermione looked thoughtful, then shook herself. “Well, the point is: I was pressing Harry about whether he was going to ask Cho out, and Ron got this look on his face and said that, maybe, Harry didn’t really want to ask her out. Harry didn’t say anything. And do you know what? I think your brother was right.”
Ginny laughed. “Ron said that?” She shook her head. “My brother mystifies me sometimes. But, then...I think he’s becoming less oblivious. Though...he should have thought of a better perfume than eau de Weasley Pond Swamp.”
They dissolved into giggles and moved onto other topics.
That night, Ginny lay awake in bed for a long while, thinking about how it was becoming less and less impossible that Harry might come to love her. When she slept at last, she dreamt about Harry’s chocolatey grin.
|