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Author of 20 Stories |
Disclaimer: Unfortunately, I don't own the characters. More's the shame. Reviews always welcome.
Boundary
It is over. He triumphs over me, his wand at my forehead as I kneel before him. "No last words?" he asks mockingly. I close my eyes.
An agonised shout bursts from the woman above me and I let go in shock. It takes me a few seconds to realise I no longer have the pretty red stuff and I begin to wail.
After a few minutes I grow bored and toddle away and Dudley runs to find out what I was doing. He sees my mud sweets and he shoves them in his mouth – but I barely notice for I am inspecting the remains of a plant Dudley has jumped on. Auntie notices though, and with a scream she rushes to her Dudder's side.
I am sent to my cupboard with no dinner.
I stretch out in my cupboard. It is too small for me now. My feet drape over the end of my bed and when I sit up I hit my head on the wooden ceiling. I can hear Dudley outside waddling up the stairs, loudly rustling a packet of crisps, and my stomach rumbles.
I sigh and flick a spider off my bed, trying to turn my attention to my Science homework with Harry the Hydrocarbon.
The snitch is let out and I chase after it, glorying in the responsiveness of my broom. This, I feel, is where I belong. I am not the Boy Who Lived here, or the Person Who Sirius Black Is After, but a seeker. A bloody good seeker admittedly, but just a seeker nonetheless.
I catch the snitch and move to land as the practise is declared over.
Blaise Zabini is crying beside me. He has just killed his brother, and he knows he will never become a death eater now. He has declared his allegiance to the Light. I look at him, with his tall body and thin face, and I wonder if I could have ever been like him. If I could have turned my back on my family to fight for a side not my own in defence of morals I didn't really believe in.
I offer him my hand, and he continues his crying on my shoulder.
I look at the determined face of Dennis Creevey, the blank look on Ginny's face and the scarred coldness of Luna's that now rivals Moody's. I cannot lose.
"You forget Potter," he whispers. "This is hell."
He raises his wand again, and I try not to flinch as he says those implacable words.
And then there is a blinding green light and I am flying free.