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Books » Harry Potter » Easier To Be
hgfan1111
Author of 27 Stories
Rated: M - English - Romance/Drama - Harry P. & Ginny W. - Reviews: 729 - Updated: 12-05-08 - Published: 11-07-08 - Complete - id:4641003
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Disclaimer:

All stories in this archive are based on characters and situations created and owned by JK Rowling, various publishers including but not limited to Bloomsbury Books, Scholastic Books and Raincoast Books, and AOL Time Warner, and have been used without permission. Rights to these characters and their images is neither claimed nor implied. It is not endorsed by any of the aforementioned parties.

All recognizable characters, song lyrics, settings, and ideas not associated with the world of Harry Potter remain the property of their respective owners and all original characters, situations, places and ideas are the sole property of their creators. Original content viewed here may not be used without their permission.

This story is intended for entertainment purposes only. No money is being made and no copyright or trademark infringement is intended.

A/N: Welcome to another story. This one is the most AU I've written, but it's by far the least angsty, I think. I'll ask you to be patient as the backstory unfolds in the chapters. This one is rated as it is for a reason. There will be mature content as we go along. If that's not your thing, that's fine. The story title is from a song by Lifehouse. Thanks to my amazing beta team on this one: Ella, Deb and Mel. I couldn't have done it without you ladies. Love you all. Happy reading!

Chapter One: Serendipity

The soreness in his side hadn't gone away, even though the healers said it would. Harry rotated his arm against the stiffness and growled to the empty flat when it caught. It had been a completely chance curse that made it through his shield; the trainee had been lucky. The look on the kid's face, however, when he realized he'd struck Harry Potter…that was the only thing that had stopped Harry from retaliating. Harry shook his head, still seeing the wide, panicked eyes looking down at him, hearing the breathless apology.

Three bruised ribs. That's what this last assignment had got him.

He definitely felt older than his twenty-one years today. And the empty flat when he'd come home hadn't improved his mood. The bare walls seemed to close in on him, even as they expanded to be more than he could handle. That made no sense, he told himself. Yet it did.

It was just another of his moods, he decided. His eyes rested on his large entertainment unit and he pondered watching a movie. There were several action flicks that he had been interested in seeing. And maybe some take-out…

An hour later, Harry sat low in his sofa, his feet propped on the coffee table in front of him, his box of Chinese take-out resting in his lap as he pushed buttons on his remote control.

The movie wasn't bad, he supposed, but it did little to ease the restlessness in his system. Maybe a late night walk would help, he decided. It was becoming rather a habit of his, these midnight walks around London. It probably wasn't the safest idea, but Harry could handle himself in a fight. He'd proved that time and time again over his whole life.

Bundled up against the frigid January air, Harry navigated the streets around his flat, widening his usual route and finally ending up at a coffee house that was open all night. It was becoming as much routine as Harry had, ending up here. But in the middle of the night, it was quiet, and he could sit near the window and watch the dark streets, and wonder why on earth he was in England at all.

He ordered a cup of strong coffee, foregoing any sugar and savoring the bitter taste of the hot liquid on his tongue. It had been six months since he'd moved to London on nothing more than a whim. Even he couldn't explain his reasons to himself, let alone to his family. Sirius had been the most vocally opposed to the move, while Remus had just looked thoughtfully at Harry and nodded his acceptance.

Something in England just seemed to…call to him. When he'd first decided to come back after being gone for eighteen years, he'd convinced himself that it was to connect to his heritage, to learn more about where he'd come from. He didn't necessarily count the months he'd been in England for the war—it hadn't felt like he'd been anywhere, really, other than hell. His days and nights had blended together into a running battle to destroy Horcruxes and stop Death Eaters.

The loneliness wasn't something that he'd considered. It helped that his job with the International Confederation of Wizards kept him busy at least three weeks out of the month. Every job they offered, Harry took.

Returning back to his London flat always put him in a funk, though. He'd only been there two months the first time he'd packed his bags and stood staring at the deserted flat, trying to convince himself that he really should leave. He missed the Portkey back to the United States, sitting on his sofa, staring at his bags.

Last month had been the closest he'd come to actually leaving. Harry had gone back to the U.S. and spent a few days at Sirius' house on the Oregon Coast, convinced that he should just stay there, But sitting there in the U.S. made him feel a bit like a quitter; like a coward for taking the easy way out of something, even when he wasn't quite sure what it was. At the end of a few days of moping, Harry had packed his bags and returned to London.

Harry watched a couple walk down the street, holding hands and snuggling into each other for warmth. They walked the length of the block and disappeared around the corner. Harry sighed and rubbed his sore ribs.

Damn, he was in a maudlin mood. He hated feeling like this. It wasn't even a relationship that he craved, really. No doubt, he missed sex, but it was somebody, anybody, to talk to that he needed the most. It didn't even need to be in a romantic way. Hell, it was probably better if it wasn't. Harry's luck on that front had never been all that impressive.

"Refill?"

Harry snapped out of his musing and stared at the young woman who stood in front of his table, the only occupied one in the deserted place, holding up a pot of rich black coffee.

"I probably shouldn't," Harry shook his head, quirking a small smile. "I'll never sleep as it is."

She nodded, but caught his eye, something flashing in her look.

Harry shifted uncomfortably, feeling like he was being tested in some way. "I'll see you later," he hastily said, gathering up his heavy wool coat and swinging it over his shoulders, wincing as his ribs protested.

"Yeah," she mumbled, a disappointed look on her face.

On his way out the door, Harry stopped in the small entry to pull on a knit hat—snow had begun to fall again. His eyes lifted to the notice board on one wall. Colorful papers advertising all sorts of services and needs were stuck to the wall. A conversation with Remus during his visit to the States came back to him.

"You might try finding a flatmate," his mentor had suggested when Harry had let it slip how quiet the flat was—eerily so at times. Harry had scoffed at the idea, pushing right past it and almost forgetting it completely.

"A flatmate," he said softly now, running his finger along a wrinkled advertisement for a young woman to childmind.

The thought intrigued him the whole way back to the flat. He walked slowly, watching large snowflakes dance through the air, some to melt on the roads and sidewalks, some to pile up on benches and lamp posts.

The sound of his key echoed through the deserted rooms, making it sound hollow on the inside. Harry sighed and hung up his coat, brushing the collected moisture drops from the heavy fabric. His eyes settled on the closed laptop sitting on his counter.

The bright blue light from the screen made him squint and he rubbed his tired eyes, wincing at the dryness of them. Ever since he'd had laser surgery to correct his vision, his eyes seemed to be dry all the time.

His fingers clicked over the keys, his mind a million miles away as words and phrases formed in front of him on the screen.

When he'd finally printed the paper, he held it in front of him and read it to himself. Shrugging, he decided that he'd think about it tomorrow. He could always change his mind. Who knew, maybe he'd get someone interesting to reply to it. Anything would liven up this place, he thought as he set the paper on the counter and closed the laptop.

Harry didn't bother to turn on any lights as he made his way down the hall, undressed in his bedroom and crawled in between the cold sheets, rolling so that he was on the side that wasn't bruised.

Outside, a lone siren wailed in the distance, the bright lights flashing through Harry's window and lighting up the room. He watched them fade and closed his eyes on the silence.


Twenty year-old Ginevra Weasley blew the thick clump of red hair that had fallen in her face away from her eyes. The wind that gusted in and out of the doorway fluttered the papers and advertisements tacked to the board that she was searching. Once again, they lifted and shifted in their spots as a group of people, bundled up against the cold outside, walked past her.

Ginny sighed in frustration. She hadn't been looking for anything specific on the board, just something that would catch her eye and maybe give her a little something to think about while she sat and sipped her daily cup of tea with lemon.

There were advertisements for the latest weight loss craze, flyers showing pets up for sale, a handwritten note on a napkin begging for someone to call if they located a lost textbook, brightly lettered slips showing job openings and sales for the small shops that surrounded the busy coffee house.

Ginny let her eyes slide over the same old things and sighed to herself again. She fingered a photograph of a lost tabby cat and smiled at the offer for a young woman to childmind. Another person entered and the papers ruffled again as the man held the door open for his companion to enter. A single notice, typewritten on pale blue paper, lost its battle with the wind and fluttered to the floor, getting stuck just under the edge of Ginny's shoe and soaking up a bit of the muddy water that had been tracked in.

"Hmm," Ginny muttered to herself as she picked up the paper and looked for the place it had come from. "A flatmate," she mused as she searched in vain for the spot it had fallen from. There were no blank spots on the wall where the paper had come from. She shrugged and vowed to tack it up after her tea and once she inquired inside about a tack or pin to hold it up.

She forgot all about the blue paper sticking out of her pocket a few seconds later when Rebecca, a friend from work, bustled in the door and the two sat at a table and gossiped about the two store managers, who were rumored to be having a hot-and-heavy affair.

Apparating home to the Burrow, Ginny dragged her feet walking in the back door. She knew her mother would be waiting, probably with a list of chores longer than her arm.

It was Saturday, and the whole family would be coming early tomorrow morning for the Traditional Weasley Sunday Brunch. Honestly, they all called it that. Ginny rolled her eyes. All of her brothers would be there, even Charlie, who was recovering from another nasty burn and had agreed to come home to recuperate. She knew he would be gone the moment the Healer pronounced him well enough. Ginny had seen the secret, panicked looks the Dragon Tamer wore whenever their mother mentioned marriage or children to him.

Thinking about it made her chuckle. Maybe she could exploit that weakness and turn it around so that the focus of the meal wouldn't be on Ginny's lack of a life.

"You're home late," her mother observed, less than casually, as she pointed her wand at the bricks in the fireplace, systematically removing soot from their worn faces.

"Sorry, Mum," Ginny rolled her eyes, biting her tongue before she said something that would cause another argument. Instead, she removed her scarf and hung her coat on the peg by the back door. "Is there anything I can do to help?" She grit her teeth and hoped that if she actually volunteered to do some chores, maybe her mother wouldn't bury her alive in them.

And it worked, because her mother's eyes went wide and she stared open-mouthed at her daughter. "Oh…well, then you can just clean the bathrooms then."

Squashing the rise of frustration, Ginny nodded. "Sure, I can do that." Quickly gathering the cleaning supplies she would need, Ginny hurried out of the kitchen. Maybe if she dawdled long enough on the two bathrooms in the house, her mother would forget about adding to her list. It was silly and childish, Ginny knew, and it would never work—because it hadn't ever worked on Molly Weasley—but she couldn't help but try again.

Slipping into the living room and heading for the bathroom on the first floor, Ginny had to chuckle at the sight of her father. Fred and George had presented him with a plush, Muggle recliner for his birthday this past year and it quickly became the most important piece of furniture in the house. To Ginny, her father's enthusiastic, and even childlike, reaction to the gift was enough to help her covertly fight against her mother's attempts to displace the 'unsightly, strange beast' from the living room. Just last week she had come upon the chair tucked in the back of an extra bedroom at the Burrow, draped with an old bedsheet. Ginny had levitated it back down the stairs and applied a permanent sticking charm to the feet on the bottom.

It was a silly little war to have, but one that both of her parents secretly enjoyed.

"You look comfortable," she called to her father now, as he perched in his chair, legs lifted high and the Daily Prophet spread all around his lap.

"Evening, Ginny," he greeted her with a large grin. "Have a good day today?"

"I did," she nodded, shifting the bucket of cleaning supplies to her hip. "The silliest old man came into the store today. He was looking for a book on Auto Repair." The way her father's face lit up when she shared these stories from working in the Muggle world made Ginny try to find one small thing to remember to tell him every evening. She finished the story and her father chuckled.

"One of these days I need to come back in and see you there."

"I'd love to have you," Ginny laughed. His last visit, with her mother in tow, hadn't turned out well as he'd been so enamored by the size and selection of the Muggle book store that he'd accidentally tipped over a huge display of travel books. It was one of the funniest things that Ginny could remember.

"Well, I'm off to clean the bathrooms," she informed him, indicating the bucket in her arms.

He raised an eyebrow at her, but chuckled. "Don't give her too much argument."

"I won't," Ginny soothed. A stab of guilt shot through her as she thought of the distance that existed between mother and daughter. It hadn't always been this way. There was a time when the Weasley women were inseparable—standing up against all those boys, you needed an ally, Ginny knew.

'Nothing I can do about it now,' she sighed to herself.

Cleaning the bathrooms took much less time than Ginny had hoped. In less than half an hour, she was back in the kitchen.

"Help me with this bread dough?" her mother asked, using the back of her hand to push a piece of hair out of her face, inadvertently wiping flour over the side of her face.

"Sure," Ginny shrugged. The bread could be kneaded by magic, but her mother always preferred to do it by hand, claiming that it just tasted better that way.

"It'll be so good to have everyone together again."

"It will," Ginny said. Surprisingly, her animosity toward her mother had been somewhat exorcised by casting cleaning charms. For now she was content to be in the warmth of the kitchen, smelling the wonderful smells and letting the comfort of home sink in.

"George is bringing a date," her mother observed, much too causally. And the moment of contentment was broken.

"Hmm," Ginny murmured, willing her irritation to stay hidden. She channeled it into the pile of pliant white dough in front of her, punching it down and rolling it completely before beginning the process again.

"And, of course, Ron is bringing Hermione."

Ginny couldn't help but smile at the thought. Who would have ever thought that her shy, bookish friend would have found her match in Ginny's older brother, the Quidditch-obsessed prat, Ron. And now they were engaged to be married.

"You're welcome to bring a date as well, Ginny, dear."

The motion of her hand faltered and the punch she laid into the dough had more force than she wanted, sending up a small cloud of flour from the countertop.

"Or if there's someone else special," her mother continued, oblivious to the shameless murdering of bread that was happening beside her.

"There's no one special, Mum," Ginny bit out through her teeth.

"Oh," she sighed. "Well, I just wondered if you'd had a chance to talk to Michael lately. I ran into him the other day in Diagon Alley and he asked after you." A coy smile appeared on her face and Ginny rolled the dough harder still.

"Michael and I are over, Mum, you know that."

"I know," she sighed dramatically, sweeping up her own dough and plopping the perfect form into a greased loaf pan. Ginny looked down at her own pathetic lump, grimacing at the indentations and misshapen form. "But I had always hoped that you may just need time…"

It was always the same argument, or close to it anyway. If it wasn't about her dumping Michael, it was about her career choices—or lack of, the way her mother saw it.

Molly Weasley was a very headstrong woman who had definite ideas about what she wanted for her only daughter to do in life. Unfortunately, Ginny's ideas were much different.

She had not taken any of the Ministry positions that were offered to her once her N.E.W.T. scores had been received. The offer of a position at Healer's School went unheeded and unanswered.

"It's time for you to make a decision about your life, young lady," Molly always scolded. But the only time that Ginny had mentioned that she might want to play Quidditch, Molly had fussed and flailed and nearly hyperventilated until Ginny left to her room to avoid the scene altogether.

She wasn't completely sure Professional Quidditch was what she wanted to do anyhow. It was a decent idea, though, and her friends assured her that they thought she would make it. But her family was another story. Even Charlie, who had had the shot at a professional career himself, showed reservations.

Maybe it was the fact that Ginny had broken things off with her long time boyfriend that Molly objected to most of all. The Weasley matriarch had been humming the Wedding March for months before Ginny finally called it quits with Michael. Molly had cried more than Ginny had afterwards.

"He just isn't what I want," Ginny had explained to her family-her entire family-at dinner the night she had told Michael she wouldn't marry him and she didn't want to see him again.

"What is it you want, firefly?" Bill asked.

Ginny had looked at his scarred face and smiled. "I'm not sure, but I'll let you know when I find it."

"I just worry about you, Ginny," her mother said now, coming over to look at her work. "Oh, Ginny, what have you managed to do to that poor bread?"

Ginny threw up her hands, bits of dough and flour raining down. "I don't know. I can't do this. I have a…bread block, or something. Mine never turns out well."

Her mother glared at the offending lump before vanishing it completely and huffing as she pulled out the ingredients to begin again.

Without another word, Ginny cleaned her hands and pulled her coat and scarf from the peg. "I'll be back later," she mumbled before disappearing out the door.

The cold night air on her face as she raced her broom around the orchard felt refreshing and helped to calm her anger. A dark shadow floated out from her bedroom window and drifted along, standing out against the overcast sky. It was her owl, Armstrong, the very first thing she'd bought with her first paycheck. Her mother had called the purchase silly as Ginny didn't have many people to correspond with at all. But Ginny loved the small barn owl all the same. Besides, he kept Pig in line with a sharp rap on the head when the excitable owl needed one. That, alone, was reason enough to keep him in Ginny's mind.

"Why can't she let me live my own life?" she demanded to the night air. Even as the question escaped, the answer floated forward in her mind, making her cheeks flush.

"She doesn't trust me."

It was a simple statement, but one that Ginny believed completely. And maybe it was a bit harsh, but for six years it had been the same thing.

Her fingers on the broom handle were white, both from her tight grip and the frigid January air. Slowing her flight, Ginny hovered near the ground, the toes of her shoes skimming the snowy ground. She shivered and tucked her hands into the pockets of her coat, crumpling something inside when she did.

Scowling, Ginny tugged the paper out and lay it on her knee, pressing the wrinkled corners and brushing off a bit of the dry mud that obscured the writing a bit, making it smear toward the edge of the paper.

"Wanted: clean and responsible person to share a three bedroom flat in downtown London." Ginny read the words in a mumble and glanced up at the black night sky, stars twinkling high above her. She'd try to remember to repost it the next time she went in to the coffee shop, otherwise, this individual would never find a flatmate.


The next morning Ginny tried to sleep in. But the sounds of her family downstairs were enough to raise the dead, she determined, wincing when someone ran up the stairs, two at a time, thumping loudly the whole way.

"Fred," she mumbled into her pillow, folding it over her head to try and grasp the last precious few moments of sleep. A knock at the door forced them away however.

"Come in, Hermione," Ginny called from the bed. It had to be Hermione—her brothers never knocked, and her mother was far more forceful when she pounded on the wood to get Ginny out of bed.

"Are you hiding," Hermione peeked her head around the door, "or just being lazy?"

"Both," Ginny sighed, staring up at the ceiling.

Hermione chuckled and came into the room fully, glancing around at the haphazard piles of organization that were Ginny's standard attempt at cleaning her bedroom. "Oh, come on, it's not that bad."

"No offense, Hermione, but you're not family."

"You're so dramatic, Ginny," Hermione rolled her eyes and sat down on the edge of the bed, carefully avoiding the teetering stack of school books that Ginny still hadn't found a home for since her graduation from Hogwarts. Armstrong, in his perch by the window, fluttered his dark brown feathers in annoyance and turned his back on the two women. He, apparently, was not a morning person either, Hermione noted.

"You know how they treat me," Ginny sighed, slowly pulling herself up to lean on Hermione. "Like I'm still fourteen and they've just found out…" her voice broke and she huffed out the rest of her breath in frustration.

"Ginny—"

"No," she pushed away from the bed, and away from Hermione's look, full of pity. She didn't want to deal with this right now. The guilt and hurt welled up in her, making her throat thick. "I'm just being…difficult today. I'll be fine."

"You know if you ever want to talk about it—"

"I know, Hermione," Ginny said, sitting at her vanity and lifting a brush to her tangled hair. She caught Hermione's eyes in the mirror and smiled gratefully. "You know I will."

Hermione studied her for a long minute before shrugging and coming behind her, taking over brushing Ginny's hair.

"Ron and I finally set a date," she smiled widely.

Ginny grinned. "When?"

"May thirtieth," Hermione said, giggling just a bit.

Ginny sighed, happy to have something safe to talk about, rather than the dark shadows of the past. "That's perfect," she agreed. "Tell me everything you have planned."

"Well…"

The two women giggled and gossiped like school girls while Ginny got ready for the day—taking entirely too long. Ron's head, peeking in the room, finally broke them from their planning.

"Ron," Hermione scolded, "you should have knocked. What if your sister had been changing?"

Ron smirked, brushing shaggy red fringe out of his eyes. "Gin knows that we don't knock…"

Hermione huffed, crossing her arms in front of her and standing in front of a fully dressed Ginny.

"She's still entitled to privacy, Ronald Weasley."

"It's alright," Ginny soothed. "I'm ready to go down and face the horde."

Ron laughed and clapped her on the shoulder as he wrapped an arm around Hermione's waist. "You'd better be ready. Mum said she won't hold things for you any longer."

"Let's just get this over with," Ginny grumbled, her earlier feelings of happiness fading quickly as she trudged her way downstairs.

Complete bedlam reigned in the kitchen, dishes of eggs and breakfast meats levitated over the table, and ten different conversations were going on at once.

'You can do this,' she steeled herself and took her usual spot in between her father and Fred.

"Morning, everyone," she said, pasting a fake smile on her face. Her brothers and their significant others returned the greeting and continued with their chatter.

Over it all was Molly Weasley's gentle scolding and directions to keep the food rotating around so that everyone could serve themselves.

"How's the job, Ginny?" Bill asked from his spot opposite her.

Ginny's head shot up from her where she was filling her plate and studied her oldest brother. "It's good," she said cautiously. Honestly, none of them really understood about her desire to work in a Muggle bookstore—or in the Muggle world at all. She knew they were all humoring her until she figured out what she wanted to do in life.

"Still thinking about Quidditch?" he asked after helping himself to the fried eggs.

"Maybe," she shrugged, ignoring her mother's low growl at the question. "The Harpies are having open tryouts in the Spring. I thought about trying then."

Bill nodded, but she could see he was thinking deeply about the idea.

"The Law Enforcement Office is looking for a file clerk," Percy said hesitantly. He looked at her for a minute before looking back down at his food.

Ginny fought the urge to roll her eyes and shrugged one shoulder. "I don't think that really suits, Perce, but thanks anyway." Her relationship with Percy had never been great, so his suggestion surprised her. But the stuffy Ministry just wasn't the place for a witch like Ginny.

"We might need someone in a few weeks," Fred offered half-heartedly. Ginny shook her head, knowing that they really couldn't afford adding anyone right now. Their first shop had just opened this summer, and, while it was a smash success, costs of starting up were still high.

"I have no desire to spend the day with rabbit ears or spouting tropical feathers," Ginny answered dryly.

Fred perked up, snapping his fingers at George. "Are you writing this down? Those are great ideas, Gin-Gin."

Ginny rolled her eyes. "If you do use them, I get half."

Her words fell on deaf ears as the twins were lost in a haze of whispered words and quill scratching.

"Way to go, half-pint," Charlie laughed. "You could always come back with me to the Reserve—"

"She'll do no such thing," her mother huffed from the far side of the table, her mouth dropping agape at Charlie's suggestion.

"That's okay," Ginny said to him, ignoring her mother's outburst, "I don't think I can keep up with dragons."

"If you're so set on Quidditch," Ron said after he swallowed his bite, "why don't you apply at the Department of Magical Sports and Games."

Ginny was impressed at his increased table manners, but stifled a laugh. She nudged Hermione's foot under the table. "Thanks, Ron, I'll think about it," she lied. Once again, sitting in an office all day didn't sound right either.

Bill cleared his throat, staring at the piece of toast he was systematically destroying on his plate. "I'm leaving for Egypt again."

Ginny watched him continue to pick at his breakfast while their parents—rather their mother—grilled him on every reason he might be leaving. In a way, Ginny envied him, being free enough to travel when he wanted; not tied down to any one place. She understood his reasons, though, and did not envy him for them at all. Bill and Charlie had seen too much during the war and neither had fully recovered, in Ginny's opinion.

Not that she could call herself fully recovered either.

Once, in the middle of her mother's tears over his imminent departure, Bill caught Ginny's eye and winked at her. She silently thanked him for sacrificing himself so that the focus shifted from her. He was good about that.

"Don't let them push you around," he whispered to her later as they sat in the living room, bent over the worn chessboard. "Take your time, when you find the right thing, you'll know it."

Ginny looked up from her move, her finger not leaving the piece. Bill's scarred face was painted with shadows from the sun streaming in the windows.

"You as well," she said softly, turning her focus back to her move.

"Is there a reason that you like being out there?" he asked a few minutes later.

Ginny didn't have to think hard to understand his question. All of the odd jobs she had taken over the past years had been in the Muggle world, much to her father's pleasure and her mother's chagrin. There was the three months she worked in the Italian restaurant, the excruciating six months as a day nanny, the eight months in a bakery and various other jobs. Her current position in a large retail book store seemed the most promising because it allowed her great variety in what she did.

"I don't know," she said. It wasn't that she didn't want anything to do with the magical world; it was more that she wanted to experience more than was in her small tight-knit community before she settled down, if she ever did.

"Hermione and I were talking about Muggle University the other day."

"Is that something that interests you?" he asked, surprise in his tone.

Ginny sighed, looking away from the game and staring at the dust motes that swirled in the morning sunshine. "I don't know. Ron thought the idea was funny."

"But what do you think?" Bill asked, watching her intently.

"It's something to think about," she answered noncommittally. "I'm sure I'll find something out there. For now, I'm content where I am. I get to meet new people and see new things."

"Variety is a good thing," Bill agreed, prodding his queen forward with his wand. "Checkmate."

"Bugger," Ginny growled quietly.

Her small twin bed just wasn't comfortable that night as she stared at the cracked, faded ceiling and wondered what to do with her life. Down the hall, she could hear the twins mumbling and the clinking of what sounded like a ladle on the side of a cauldron-she decided that it was better that she not know what they were working on, especially since it might involve her participation if she showed any interest at all. Her parents had been more than a little nervous when the two had asked to stay for a few days, but ultimately, they couldn't turn down their children.

The door down the way opened and light poured in under the gap at the bottom of her own door. Someone hurried by in the hallway quickly enough to make a breeze come in through the cracks. Ginny watched as the pale blue paper she had found again this evening and placed on her desk fluttered to the floor.

"A flatmate…" Ginny thought, for the first time in her life, that maybe leaving the Burrow to live elsewhere might be the answer.

She thought back to the ad. The price for rent was a bit more than she should probably pay, but it wasn't out of her means. Ginny had saved most of the money she'd made from every job she'd worked and had a healthy sum piling up in a Gringotts vault. Her living expenses would be meager, she knew. She could make do without many extras.

Hurried footsteps back up the stairs and down the hall again made the paper skid toward her along the bare hardwood floors. Ginny watched with interest as the paper stopped moving. She could just make out the dark letters, but not read what they said.

"Lumos," she muttered and her wand tip brightened. "Accio." Another spell brought the paper into her hand and Ginny read the ad again. Maybe this was the answer for her right now. Maybe she needed to get out on her own and experience life without a family member looking over her shoulder.

She'd have to talk to Hermione about it tomorrow. She darkened her wand, placed the paper on the small, unsteady bedside table and lay back down into her bed, pulling the homemade quilt up to her shoulders. A small smile played on her lips as she nodded off to sleep.


As it turned out, it took two days for Hermione to squeeze enough time in her schedule between work at the Ministry and wedding planning for Ginny. 'After all, Ginny, there are only six months to get this whole wedding planned!'

They met at a new restaurant in Diagon Alley not too far down from her brothers' new store. Once the waiter had delivered their lunch, Ginny took a deep breath.

"I was thinking of moving out," she blurted, wincing at how abrupt it sounded. Hermione stared at her, pausing in chewing her mouthful. She slowly swallowed and wiped her mouth with a napkin, as she scrutinized Ginny. "Well?" Ginny asked, her hand darting forward in nervousness to finger the salt dispenser.

"Moving out of the Burrow." It was more a statement than a question, and Ginny watched the different expressions cross her friend's face. "That's a large step."

"I'm ready for it," Ginny assured her. "I just…I can't do this anymore, Hermione. I need…"

"You need to find out who you are." Hermione nodded. Sympathy, but not pity, filled her face.

Grimacing just a bit at the cliché, Ginny nodded. "I guess so. More like I need the space to make sure who I think I am is who I really am."

Hermione looked at her again, thoughtfully cataloging everything. "I'm sorry it's been so hard for you."

"Don't apologize, Hermione," Ginny flushed, glancing around, worrying who could overhear their conversation. It had only been six years, after all. Bringing all that up again would just make a mess. "You know how I feel about it."

"Still," Hermione continued, "it isn't right how they treat you. I've spoken to Ron about it—"

"Ron?" Ginny scowled down at her soup, fighting the feeling that her appetite had just disappeared completely.

"I know," Hermione placated, holding her hands up in front of her before dropping them and sighing. "You were fourteen, Ginny…"

"What do you think about me moving out?" Ginny rode over the top of her, pushing the uncomfortable panic back down to where it lived, deep beneath the surface.

Hermione hesitated, biting her lip in the way she did when she was deliberating research or practical experiments. Seven years of friendship meant that Ginny knew the look well. "I think it's a great idea," she concluded, letting a genuinely enthusiastic smile creep up on her. "And it's very character building to support yourself. But can you really afford a flat on your own?"

Feeling a bit guilty, but not letting it show, Ginny smiled. "I was thinking about getting a flatmate, or maybe finding someone who needed one."

"That's an idea," Hermione conceded as she picked at her bread. "I could check at the Ministry and see if anyone's heard anything."

"I was thinking I'd look…outside Diagon Alley, actually," Ginny said as she nudged her soup bowl back and forth in front of her. Finally, she took a small taste and savored the rich flavor. Maybe her appetite had returned after all.

Hermione smiled and shook her head. "You and the Muggle world."

"What?" Ginny questioned with a smile. She and Hermione had had this conversation many times. "I just think…I don't know. It's like we only live in this small little corner of the world and there, just beyond is this whole huge place that we hardly know anything about."

Hermione laughed. "I agree with you, Ginny. In fact, I wish Ron were more open to doing things the Muggle way or traveling more or…well anything beyond what he's always known. I mean, the closest he's really come to anything different is when I force him to go to my parent's house, or the time he tried to be friends with Dean Thomas when the two of you were dating."

"Don't remind me," Ginny scrunched up her nose. "Besides, I've always felt this…pull when I think about the Muggle world." She threw up her hands in frustration. "I can't explain it. I've tried a thousand times to understand it myself. It's just like…I feel that there's something out there for me and I need to discover it for myself."

"You always were the most adventurous Weasley," Hermione shook her head.

"Hardly," Ginny snorted, glancing around the room again. "Bill and Charlie traveled all over in the war, Fred and George do who knows what in that shop of theirs, hell, even Ron has an exciting job with his Quidditch. I'm just little Ginny Weasley."

Hermione raised an eyebrow. "Little Ginny Weasley? Record holder for the most detentions at Hogwarts, winner of the prize for most detentions ever given by Professor Snape; you are the twin's sister in every way."

"Yeah, yeah, yeah," Ginny giggled. "I had to do something, school would have been dead boring if I'd only studied and read books." Her challenging look made Hermione blush a bit. "School was for snogging as many boys as I could, blowing up a few potions and escaping the castle any way possible."

"Well, I'm certainly glad you achieved all your goals in life," Hermione said dryly.

"It's not like anyone ever let me do anything helpful," Ginny grumbled. The past welled up inside her and she struggled to control it. There was a very good reason that everyone wanted to wrap her in cotton wool and only take her out on special occasions. But they never spoke of it. Protect Ginny—that's what they all did—even though she fought against it constantly.

Hermione reached out and placed a warm hand over Ginny's cold one. "We all felt a bit useless, didn't we? Stuck in that castle while your brothers went off to war. I'm just glad it's over and everyone came back alive."

Ginny nodded absently, her mind picturing each of her families' faces one by one. "We were very lucky." She winced as she thought of Bill's scarred face and the fact that they'd almost lost him.

Hermione must have felt the past brush close again too, as she shook the memories out of her head a bit and returned to their earlier topic. "When are you going to break the news to your parents?"

"Not until I decide for sure," Ginny said. She hesitated before producing the smudged paper and passing it over to Hermione.

The brunette read through it and raised her eyes to meet Ginny's. "You ihave/i thought this through."

Ginny smiled and nodded. "I have. It was actually an accident that I ended up with that paper, but it is what got me thinking about it."

"This was written by a man," Hermione stated.

"How can you tell?" Ginny asked as she snatched the ad and read it again. The thought hadn't occurred to her and it sent her plans into a spin.

"I can't for sure. It's just a feeling I get. The sentence structure—the way it's written is fairly formal. I'd say you're looking at an educated, younger man. It is possible that it could be a woman, but she'd probably be very formal and stiff."

Ginny bit the inside of her lip for a moment before shrugging. "It hadn't even entered my mind that it might be a man. I guess I just got this picture in my head and… Well, I'm not sure what to do now."

"Would it really matter?" Hermione asked, rebelliously. A small smile graced her lips and Ginny almost laughed. "I mean, it's just sharing a flat."

"It's not me that would have a problem with it," Ginny protested.

Hermione nodded and sipped at her ice water. "You're right. I think you'd have six rather large problems."

"Eight," Ginny confirmed with a heavy sigh. "I don't see Mum or Dad being too accepting of it."

"Well, just keep looking around," Hermione suggested. "There's bound to be someone out there looking for a flatmate."

Ginny nodded hesitatingly and glanced down at the blue paper again. "I think I'll call on this one anyway. It wouldn't hurt to meet him, would it?"

"Not at all," Hermione protested. "And you may find it's just what you need."

Ginny returned the rather mischievous smile of her future sister-in-law, grateful that someone in the family understood her rebellious spirit a bit.

"Let me know how it turns out."


Harry was just about to take a bite of his food when his cell phone buzzed and sang in his pocket. Sighing and looking down at the rapidly cooling sausage, wrapped in thick bread and currently leaking grease through the flimsy paper and onto his jeans, he fumbled for the phone.

"Hello?"

Very few people had this number and Harry wondered who would be calling him in the middle of the day.

"Hello," a pleasant, female voice answered and then hesitated. "I found your ad about a flatmate." She hesitated again and Harry opened his mouth to respond. "Are you still looking for someone?"

His lunch lay forgotten in his lap. Harry's eyes scanned the park in front of him. It was a warm enough day in the middle of January for him to escape his flat and walk the streets, searching for something to keep his free time from driving him insane.

"Yeah," he answered, almost without thinking. 'A woman?' his brain protested, but his mouth wasn't listening. "Yeah, I'm still looking."

"Oh," she said, sounding as if she were as shocked at the answer as he was. "Well, I'm interested." He found himself smiling at her nervousness; it echoed his own perfectly.

"I never really thought you'd be…well," she continued.

"A guy," Harry smiled.

"Yeah," she chuckled, relief flooding her voice. "I just got this picture in my head and…well, it doesn't really matter. I mean…it doesn't."

"Okay," Harry agreed, amused at her flustered speech. Taking a deep breath, he continued, "Well, the flat is in London, obviously. Three bedrooms, with one loo. There's a washing machine and clothes dryer." He felt extremely stupid for carrying on like this, but his brain wasn't in control of his mouth it seemed and he felt himself feeling more comfortable with the idea of a flatmate as he rambled on.

"It sounds good," she agreed. "I wonder…is there a time—"

"We can meet," Harry nodded, interrupting her. "Sure. Um…"

"I'm at work now," she continued. "But I have tomorrow off…if you're available."

"Sure, yeah," Harry blurted, feeling his cheeks heat at his own enthusiasm. "Tomorrow would be good."

He knew the address of the coffee shop she gave well—it was the one he visited almost every night, and where he'd posted the advertisement.

"I'll be there," he agreed.

"Okay," she agreed. They sat for several seconds in awkward silence before both of them said 'goodbye' at the same time. They chuckled and then ended the call.

Mechanically, Harry slid his phone back into the pocket of his coat and stared down at his grease-stained pants. He picked a bit at the bread surrounding the sausage, nibbling at it.

Harry wasn't sure what made him tack the notice to the board at the coffee house at all. He'd taken it with him one night, drank his coffee and avoided the openly flirtatious looks of the woman serving him. On his way out that night, he'd paused at the notices, his eyes taking all of them in.

The paper crinkled in his coat pocket and he pulled it out, glancing at it and then back at the board. What would happen if he just tacked it up there? Nothing, really, he assured himself. Someone might call, but he could easily turn them down. He could say it was rented, or he'd changed his mind…

So he wasn't committing to anything by simply putting up the advertisement. Yet, somehow, it felt like a big commitment, putting himself out there like this.

Harry had never been particularly close to anyone besides Sirius and Remus. Training as a soldier didn't allow much time for friends, girlfriends or anything like it. Allowing someone into his very closed life would be a huge step.

'You can always say no,' he told himself. A picture of what waited for him at home entered his mind—empty flat, silent as the grave—and he took a deep breath. Finding an unoccupied push pin, Harry put the notice up on the board.

That had been almost a month ago, Harry mused as he took a slow bite of his lunch and chewed thoughtfully. He'd completely forgotten all about it until now. And no one else had called.

He could still tell her no, he assured himself once more. He would be polite and meet with her. In all the time he'd spent pondering putting the flyer up, the thought that a woman might answer it hadn't entered his mind. It was completely logical, though, given that he hadn't specified that he was male, or that he was expecting a male flatmate.

Then again, what did it really matter? The chances of this person being interested enough, and the two of them getting along well enough for Harry to allow her to move in were probably next to nothing.

So, he decided with a casual shrug to himself, he'd give it a try.

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