â...lovely day, sweetheart, thank you. I appreciate you giving up so much of your time for your mother.â Astoria leaned in to kiss her son on his forehead, enjoying the fact that she could still lean down to do so while knowing that it wouldnât be for much longer; her son already showed every indication of inheriting the height of his fatherâs family and in another two or three years he was going to leaning down to kiss her. It was simultaneously a lovely and heartbreaking thought, knowing her little boy was growing up.
He was still her little boy, though, so when their farewells were interrupted by screaming, she lunged forward and caught her sonâs arm before he could pull away, pulling Scorpius in towards her and grabbing for her wand. âStay with me, sweetie,â she said, even as he was digging for his own wand and trying to say, âMum, get back--â
Astoriaâs heart was pounding, terrified of the crowd and the damage they could do; terrified of the illness that could reach her precious child no matter how well she protected him from the physical threats around them. She pulled him back towards the wall of the bookshop, trying to pull them out of the stream of running people -- but then she realized sheâd made a mistake; she should have pushed them to run right away before the crowds thickened. Had she trapped them here now, where running from the insidiousness of the disease (the very disease that had killed Scorpiusâs great-grandfather, she remembered suddenly) meant risking being trampled -- the sound of her own name sounded like salvation.
It took Astoria several seconds to realize who was shouting for her and for Scorpius; she wasnât used to having anyone but Draco, Daphne, and their respective parents around on whom to rely -- but Pansy. Pansy was here with them; they werenât alone. âPansy!â Astoria shouted, the cry coming out raw and jagged from her throat. âPansy! Over here!â Hurry, she wanted to add -- but she tried to swallow her fear. Was it pride, or an attempt to keep from frightening her son? Perhaps it didnât matter, because she wasnât even coming close to succeeding at hiding her terror.
Who: Pansy and @greengrassgrowthsâ
Where: Hogsmeade
When: As the Dragon Pox commotion begins (8-9pm)
Pansy watched as the last of the fireworks fade from the night sky leaving pale grey streaks of smoke hanging like ghosts in their wake. As she stood breathing in the night air for a moment another witch hurried by her muttering about âcorralling studentsâ and snapping Pansyâs attention back to the present. Sheâd lost Astoria and Scorpius again as the crowds had hurried to find a good spot to watch the fireworks and regretted it now hoping sheâd be able to catch them before Scorpius was whisked back away to school. As she made her way towards the direction of the school she ran her eyes over the crowd and watched as a sudden shift in tone seemed to spread from person to person coming from the direction of the Hogâs Head. A scream split the night with an explanation for the rising unease.
âDragon pox!â
Pansyâs spine stiffened with alarm and within seconds her wand was free from the clever holder sheâd sewn into her sleeve and held in a white-knuckled grip. Her first instinct was to runâŠÂ to apparate as quickly as possible from this cursed place and its newest threat but then she remembered.Â
âAstoria!!â she cried out spinning to gaze over the now panicked crowd hoping desperately to catch sight of Astoria or her son. A flash of pale blonde hair in the near distance caught her eye and sent her stumbling in that direction. âScorpius!âÂ
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zachariashsmithâ:
Disgusting. Gaudy. Tacky. Absolutely over-the-top and pointless. Zacharias was going through an entire dictionaryâs worth of adjectives as he and Aaron strolled down the streets of Hogsmeade and the little brat rambled on about school. Not that he wasnât listening too, of course; he was perfectly capable of multitasking and balancing his distaste for that stupid holiday and his affection for his boy.
He hummed and nodded as Aaron proceeded to tell him all about his latest Quidditch match play-by-play, scowled and huffed as he complained about grades, and, naturally, put his best teasing grin on when budding crushes were mentioned. It was fun, and it was relaxing, and not for the first time, he was incredibly grateful Aaron made things so easy for him; parenting was tough, even more so on your own, and Zacharias thanked his lucky stars heâd ended up with a kid like his.
But he was getting emotional and even in the privacy of his own mind, he bristled at those thoughts. He was here to have a good time, not to mope around and get lost in his head â the irony of that statement wasnât lost to him, either, as he couldnât say heâd ever been accused of thinking too much. To make up for his moment of weakness, though, he slowed down to examine a particularly ugly pumpkin and was in the middle of frowning at it when he heard his name being called.
His initial reaction was to roll his eyes; there really was no escaping, was there? But then he followed the voice to Astoria, a person he genuinely didnât mind, and the corner of his lips twitched. âAstoria Malfoy in the flesh,â he returned the greeting and shook her hand. âIâd say the pleasure is all mine, but, well, my company is pretty delightful. And hello to you too, little Malfoy.â
Aaron rolled his eyes, used to his antics, but even then, the gesture didnât seem hostile or annoyed as it did whenever Zacharias did it. The kid definitely took after his mom. âOy,â Zacharias nodded his head at Astoria and Scorpius. âSay hi, punk.â
âHi, Mrs Malfoy, my nameâs Aaron, lovely to meet you! How do you do?â He was much better at the whole charming and nice thing, smiling at them like he was genuinely enjoying the whole exchange, and Zacharias shook his head, amused. âAnd hi, Scorpius. I saw your last game, you did great! Slytherinâs got a real good shot at the Cup this year! Not that weâll make it easy for you guys, of course.â
âOkay,â Zacharias decided to step in. âWhy donât you two let the adults chat for a bit? Talk about Quidditch or buy some shit, I donât care,â he said as he handed some money to Aaron, nodding at one of the stalls nearby. âJust donât go off too far, stayââ
ââwithin sight and donât talk to shady bastards, yes, tati, I know,â Aaron finished dutifully though did a piss-poor job of hiding his amusement. What a brat.
âAnyway,â Zacharias turned back to Astoria. âIâd bet youâre enjoying this made-up holiday about as much as I am, huh?â
.
Astoria didnât need to be looking to see her sonâs eyebrows shoot up in outrage at being called little Malfoy -- she had a perfectly functioning imagination, thank you very much, and beyond that she knew her son -- but for once she didnât take offense on his behalf; indeed it was refreshing to hear someone needling her precious boy without snarling about Death Eaters or traitors of one sort or another, and the smile she had directed at Zacharias and his own son widened in gratitude at the normalcy of it all. Scorpius didnât get nearly enough of that in his life...although from the look on his face when she did turn to glance at him as the charming Smith the Younger introduced himself, Scorpius very much thought that he did get more than enough of Aaron Smith, and then some.
Astoria, on the other hand, thought the other boy was darling, and said as much: âWell arenât you just darling. Itâs lovely to meet you as well, Aaron, thank you.â
âMother,â Scorpius hissed, no doubt meant to remind her that no adolescent wizard enjoyed being called darling, not even by a schoolmateâs mother.
Astoria pretended not to notice. Scorpius might have continued to press but when Aaron turned to speak to him, he promptly forgot his concerns with his mother in favor of staring incredulously at the Hufflepuff boy. Did he find the other too saccharine to be bearable, or did he think Aaron was putting on a façade for the parents? Astoria couldnât tell.
When Zacharias shooed the boys off together, Astoria almost protested -- she had come here to see her son, and she wasnât sure he wanted to talk with Aaron Smith anyway -- but she reminded herself that Scorpius was fourteen now and too old for her to smother...at least not all the time. So she swallowed her protests, smiled, and waved him away. The dubious look on Scorpiusâs face was unmistakable -- as was the suspicious glare he shot at Mister Smith before he turned and slunk after Aaron, radiating offended dignity like a drenched cat.
Astoria smiled indulgently, the expression slipping sideways into a smirk as her attention was drawn back to Zacharias. ââShady bastardsâ?â she repeated. âI do hope youâre not counting any of my relatives in that moratorium, Mister Smith. Not that I expect Lucius to put in an appearance today -- but I hate to think of your lovely son being torn between disobeying your edict and being rude to Scorpiusâs grandfather.â
She was teasing, of course -- neither of her in-laws nor her husband would have dreamed of setting foot anywhere near something called âHarry Potter Day,â and it was only the lure of Scorpius that had pulled her there against her better judgement -- but if their previous conversation was anything to go by, Zacharias was not adverse to banter...as his own words proved soon enough, drawing a tinkling little laugh out of her.
âPerhaps slightly less than you,â Astoria allowed, still smirking. âAt least you donât have to wonder how many of the other revelers are weighing whether or not the day would be improved by burning you in effigy at the end of the celebrations.â Teasing, again -- although perhaps with a faint note of bitterness this time. Not that Astoria thought anyone was actually contemplating such a fate for her, but had her husband dared to show his face...
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Diagon Alley is by far the most famous shopping street of magical Britain, a small sliver of a hidden world tucked away in the center of Muggle London â but that sliver is not a single street, for all that most people refer to it that way. Diagon Alley is the main road, both in terms of title and commerce: the best shops, the biggest shops, the most well-known shops, all crowd themselves onto the main alley. But there are other streets â Knockturn being the most famous (or infamous) of the lot, but itâs hardly the only road to branch away from Diagon.
One of the least famous is Spindrift Lane, a cramped and shabby little side street full of cramped and shabby shops. It is no Knockturn; if there is any Dark Magic there, it is a cheap and petty darkness that exists more to filch a few extra knuts to fill the gaps between paydays than for any grand ambitions of wild wickedness. If any corpses wash-up in their corners, they are ones who died of want rather than from murderous wands.
Spindrift Lane is host to shops of second- and third-hand robes, dented cauldrons, and outdated brooms; it is riddled with tiny eateries selling thin sandwiches and yesterdayâs bread and hot cheap tea; it is defined by broken cobbles and missing shingles and windowpanes that have been repaired so many times theyâve lost all trace of shine. The stores themselves are no finer: Jugsonâs Junk Shoppe is the largest on the street, a narrow building stacked seven stories high above a teetering brick arch. Halfway down the lane lies Greengrass Growths, a cheap apothecary with a wizened greenhouse crammed between its chimneys; on the corner of Diagon, edging towards a better life by inches, sits Galahad & Dukes; and tucked just behind the rubbish bins lies dusty old Tedricâs Tomes, which sells used books so worn that their spines have split their second bindings and their texts tend to be three versions out of date.
The people who live there are as thin and worn and tight-faced as the shops; their pockets are light and their shoulders are heavy; their hands are quick and clutching and they waste nothing not because they are more responsible than other wix, but because they cannot afford to be anything but frugal if they want to make it through to the next month without a stern visit from Gringottsâ goblins.
You can find happiness there too, of course; you can find happiness anywhere that there are people, for people can be trusted to conjure happiness from thin air when they have nothing else left. There are loving marriages on Spindrift Lane (although they wear thin, sometimes, under the strain of missed rent and overdue grocerâs bills) and there are doting parents on Spindrift Lane (although they must squeeze their cherishing in between customers and lunch breaks) and there are laughing, carefree siblingsâŠalthough the cares come young to Spindrift Lane, and they rarely leave.
The children of Spindrift Lane have holes in their shoes and patches on their robes and sharp, darting eyes that miss nothing; they are hungry, always hungry, even when they are freshly fed; hungry not for food â although some days, yes, for that too â but rather for more. More than shabby shops and cracked cobbles and hand-me-down robes; more than rattling windows and dripping eaves and cold drafts under the door; more than a narrow, hardscrabble, hand-to-mouth life; more than just getting by.
They are Slytherins and Hufflepuffs, the children of Spindrift: children who know the value of hard work and the intoxicating taste of ambition. There are few brash Gryffindors to be found among those who know that daring too much can leave one destitute; few Ravenclaws there who can afford to dream for the sake of dreaming alone. These are children who were weaned on their parentsâ fear of rent notices and desperate work ethic; children who cut their teeth on their parentsâ sour dreams and broken ambitions. Children who leave Spindrift Lane do not come back â not unless they have to; not unless they fail.
Spindrift Lane is the street where failures come to restâŠand sometimes, to fade until they die.
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LOCATION: Hogsmeade Village
DATE: October 31, 2020
@zachariashsmithâ
Astoria was delighted that the annual celebration of âHarry Potter Dayâ took place in Hogsmeade now -- not because she had a particular fondness for the place, nor for the holiday, but because the students of Hogwarts were permitted to join the festivities as well and Astoria missed her son desperately while he was away at school. Getting to see him, even only for a few hours, between his September departure and December holidays was a balm to her soul -- even if she did have to remember to share him with his friends.
Fortunately for her, Scorpius has always been a sweet boy and adolescence had not taken that from him, so he was willing to indulge his mother and was currently walking down the street whose decorations they were eyeing with mutual uncertainty over their steaming mugs of hot butterbeer. The aesthetics of combining a celebration of Halloweâen with that of the erstwhile Chosen One who had defeated the Dark Lord not once but twice was often questionable and this yearâs dĂ©cor, in Astoriaâs opinion anyway, was no exception.
Scorpius clearly agreed. âWho do you think decided carving lightning bolts over the eyes of all the jack-o-lanterns was a good idea?â he drawled, smirking as they passed another plump orange pumpkin. âBecause whomever they are, they ought to be sent to grandfather for fashion lessons.â
Astoria laughed mid-sip of her warm butterbeer and giggled harder as the bubbles went up her nose. âScorpius!â she protested, not meaning her outrage at all. âThatâs not very nice!â
Scorpius shrugged, unabashed. âHonest, though,â he pointed-out, and Astoria couldnât argue -- not that she often tried. Her precious son was practically perfect, after all, so what would be the point in arguing about him on almost anything? He continued, warming to the topic: âYou canât deny that itâs tacky at best and -- look,â Scorpius interrupted himself to point to the next row of pumpkins, where a blonde wizard stood staring down at them. âSomebody else looks less than impressed, too.â
âItâs not polite to point,â Astoria said without censure, ânor to assume.â Although she had to agree that the unknown wizard did seem less than impressed -- but he wasnât unknown at all, she realized belatedly, and found herself smiling at him as they approached. âZacharias Smith,â Astoria said, extending her free hand in greeting. âWhat a pleasure to see you again. And this is my son, Scorpius. Say hello, darling.â
Scorpius raised his eyebrow and Astoria could practically see him thinking over the merits of deliberately misinterpreting her words to say Hello darling aloud -- teenagers really were all alike in some ways, werenât they? -- but he settled for a mumbled, âHullo Mr. Smith.â
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Congrats, Nicky, you have been accepted to IMPERIA for the role of Astoria Malfoy (FC: Morena Baccarin). We canât wait to see her in-action! Please send in your blog in the next 24 hours and be sure to take a look at our New Member Checklist. Welcome home (once again), weâre so excited to have you join our family!
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NAME: Astoria Regina Greengrass
AGE: 42 (28 December 1978)
GENDER: Female (she/her)
SPECIES: Wix, Pureblood
OCCUPATION: Mother, Wife, Herbologist â in that order.
ALLEGIANCES: Neutral, with a pro-government lean; while the Malfoy family has learned the perils of politics, and the Greengrasses never really dabbled in the arena (not in recent years, anyway), Astoria cannot help but approve of any measures that keeps those filthy fearsome Muggles far, far away from her world.
Astoria was always easy to overlook. The quiet, bookish second daughter of the family behind Greengrass Growths, a mid-range apothecary and herbologist shop just around the corner of Diagon Alley, she spent her life in Daphneâs shadow. Content to stay there, Astoria was widely thought to lack the ambition common to Slytherins â but as any true daughter of Herbologists could have told you, some plants flourish best in the shade. And being quiet makes it easier to listen â which Astoria did. While everyone was ignoring the quiet little witch with her nose in a book, Astoria was drinking in knowledge like nutrients. When the war came to Hogwarts, it came as no shock to Astoria; when the cost of that war finally became apparent to so many housemates who had assumed they would waltz through it with ease to a better world, she did not share their bewildered horror. Of course, she didnât share their conviction that the erstwhile âpurityâ of their blood mattered one whit either; she would have known enough from her cross-breeding experiments in the family greenhouse to know that that was nonsense even if she hadnât had ample observational evidence around her every day to undercut the supposition. She wasnât dumb enough to say as much, of course â but then, Astoria kept her own counsel on most things. Perhaps that was why her marriage to the heir of the disgraced Malfoy family came as such a surprise even to those who knew her bestâŠor perhaps the problem was simply that no one knew who she really was outside the shadow of her sister.
ASTORIA MALFOY is TAKEN. This character is written by NICKY, and played with MORENA BACCARIN.
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Of Roses and Scorpions
ministerhgrangerâ:
Hermione had a few guilty pleasuresâ a square of dark chocolate before bed, a cheesy romance hidden among her stack of more serious booksâ but her biggest guilty pleasure of all had to be her meetings with Astoria.
It had started off as simply a way to keep tabs on her daughter, her darling Rose. Rose and Scorpius had hit it off in a way their parents had never even come close to. And like most parents, Hermione was eager for any scrap of news about her childâs lifeâ and equally as left in the dark as said child grew older. But together, she and Astoria could piece together the facts of their livesâ or at the very least an outline more solid than they vague one they received in letters.
Plus, if Hermione was being truly honest with herself, it felt good to just do something so lighthearted, so almost frivolous, every once in awhile. Not that Hermione didnât take these conversations completely seriously, of course.
Her grin met Astoriaâs as she entered their usual tea shop, amazed at how quickly she had come to like this woman. It was far from perfectâ too many bad memories lurking in the shadowsâ but there was a warmth there that Hermione never wouldâve expected. Some days, she felt rather sad that they hadnât found a way to be friends at school.
âAstoria,â she returned warmly, giving her hand a squeeze. âItâs good to see you, and even better to be out of the rain.â She shed her coat, and settled into the seat opposite Astoria. âNot to mention I needed an excuse to get away from the office for a minute. Iâve spent half my nights there this week, Iâm sure of it.â She shook her head ruefully. âHow are you? Have you had a letter? Rose hasnât written in over three weeks, but I donât want to nag.â
âYou work too hard,â Astoria said -- an automatic response, one that fell off her lips with far too much ease after the many, many times sheâd scolded her husband for pushing himself too hard in his teaching duties. (Did first years really care if their beetle eyes were separate by species? Yes, it made a difference in some brews -- but not the sort of basic things they were going to be fumbling their way through in their earliest lessons! There was absolutely no reason to stay up half the night sorting through the jumbled contents of the schoolâs store of supplies.) It was undoubtedly true of Hermione as well, though -- perhaps even more so than of Draco. After all, he only had a few hundred students to look after. She had the entirety of magical Britain.
âIâm glad to offer you an excuse for a break, at least,â Astoria continued, and meant it. She had had little to nothing to do with Hermione Granger when theyâd been in school -- had known of the other witch mainly through hearing her name bandied-about in complaint, usually by Draco or Thedore Nott whinging that sheâd outscored them in some class yet again, or with increasing regularity in conjunction with whatever nonsense Harry Potter had gotten up to that year which had derailed their usual schedule of exams and education... None of what Astoria had known had endeared Hermione to her then, and certainly hadnât provided her with so much as an inkling that theyâd ever even associate in future, let alone be -- perhaps -- friends, or something like it...
But Astoria had come to like spending time with her. She hesitated to call Hermione âfriendâ more for fear that the other witch would protest such a label coming from anyone with the surname of Malfoy, let alone one whoâd chosen to marry the man whoâd caused her such grief when they were both children than because she felt it was inaccurate -- but Astoria didnât mind the distance. Sheâd never learned how to have close friends, anyway, so what she and Hermione had now, whatever you called it, was more or less perfect in her eyes.
âI have indeed had a letter,â Astoria said, making no effort to hide her delight. âAnd even better, Iâve had intelligence brought to me directly, on which basis I wrote a letter of my own, and Scorpius sent his response.â Astoria was nearly biting her lip to contain herself. âAdmittedly I did not ask him for confirmation of Dracoâs observations directly, and so I got no direct response...but.â She beamed at Hermione. âReading between the lines, well, I think itâs nearly guaranteed that Scorpius has recently developed a new crush...on no less than your own dear Rose.â
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zachariashsmithâ:
He raised his hands at her âscoldingâ though even then, he couldnât keep the amusement off his face. âMy sincerest apologies, maâam. Indeed Iâve accused you of great crimes and so thoughtlessly at that. I am truly ashamed of myself and I hope you can find it in your heart to forgive me.â He paused for a moment, letting his facade drop, and threw her a grin. âSo. Howâd I do? I slept through most of my pretentious asshole classes but I do like to think Iâm adaptable.â
It was definitely a first of anyone suggesting he might be meeting any sort of standards and he huffed another laugh. âWell, youâre not wrong, are you? Iâm a delight. And youâre okay, at least, so shallow or not, I suppose I can continue gracing you with my presence.â
His laugh only got louder at her offence at his supposed favourite colour. âMerry fucking Christmas, then â I was messing with you. Iâm pretty sure all those years of putting up with those horrendous Puff robes have put me off of yellow forever. Nah, I like more neutral colours. Black. Grey. That sorta shit.â
Astoria laughed. âItâs a start at least,â she said, âbut then again, do consider who I share a home with. My standards for pretension are exceedingly high. Iâm not sure anyone of our generation can quite measure-up honestly, but youâve made an admirable effort. I suppose even if youâve a preference for dull, drab colors, youâve proven yourself interesting enough company in other areas that I can overlook it. Weâll have to make an effort to see more of one another after this, Mister Smith -- but if youâll excuse me,â she interrupted herself politely, âI see someone who looks remarkably like my husband standing a little too close to the dance floor for comfort. Iâd best run to the rescue...or prod him into doing something entertaining for all of us.â Astoria grinned wickedly. âI havenât decided yet.
END.
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Of Roses and Scorpions
LOCATION: Rosemary House Tea Shoppe, Diagon Alley
@ministerhgranger
Astoria ought to have been more conscious of her privileged position; it wasnât just anyone who could secure a last-minute meeting over tea with the Minister of Magic, after all! But Astoria didnât think about it that way; she wasnât vying for political influence, after all -- she was just here to talk about their children. And since there was nothing more important in Astoriaâs life than her precious Scorpius, it simply never occurred to her that a witch who had the entire British magical community to run might not have as easy as time as she did of dropping everything to gossip about their offspring.
Besides, theyâd started these little chats before Hermione ascended to the highest office in the land. The fact that things were different for the other witch now was an idea that had yet to cross Astoriaâs mind.
So when the Minister of Magic walked in to join Astoria at their usual table in the quiet corner of the Rosemary House, Astoria greeted her with a warm and guileless smile. Yes, things could still sometimes get a bit awkward between the two of them -- there was a lot of bad blood under their shared bridges, most of it on the side of Astoriaâs in-laws -- but the three years in which their children had been friends had tempered some of the harsher edges between them, and while Astoria wasnât yet sure if Hermione counted her as a friend, she was happy to consider the other witch...well, something like a friend, certainly.
They had mutual interests, after all.
âHermione!â Astoria said, putting down the list of todayâs tea blends to greet the other witch. âIâm so glad you could join me -- itâs a lovely day for a cup of tea, isnât it?â The drizzly weather certainly suited the hot, restorative beverage...even if the tea was more of an excuse than a cause, today. âAnd perhaps a bit of chit-chat from Hogwarts,â she added slyly.
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sacredbyparkinsonâ:
Pansy breathed out a sigh of relief as she stepped out from the floo onto the solid and familiar floors of Malfoy Manor. She knew it should strike her as strange how much more at home she felt here than at her own familyâs manor - or rather her own manor now that her father had slipped the mortal coil and left it behind in her somewhat reluctant hands - but it did not. Malfoy Manor had been more a home to her than almost any other place. Sheâd spent days and days traipsing through its halls with Draco during their youth and even during her infrequent visits back to England over the years, she tended to spend twice as long here than she did back âhomeâ in York. There was another layer to it as well though she refused to think on it here and now with the present Mrs. Malfoy awaiting her with open arms of friendship despite the fact that the lack of notice Pansy had provided for this visit fell well outside of the bounds of proper manners even between close friends⊠or close friends of the family at least.Â
For all that Pansy found herself growing fond of the other woman over the years, despite the unusual circumstances under which their relationship had sprouted in the first place, she had not managed to spend much time with her directly. Certainly, they had not spent enough together to call their relationship truly close. Though Pansy had visited the family and the Manor over the years the witchesâ mutual attention had naturally centered more on the loved ones they had in common rather than on each other during those visits. However, now that she was facing a considerable stay in England Pansy had decided it was high time for that to change.Â
Pansy gathered up her gifts carefully under one arm before reaching out and squeezing one of Astoriaâs hands with the one she had just freed. âAstoria, I canât begin to tell you how lovely it is to see you.â Pansy met the other witchâs smile with one of her own colored with equal parts gratitude and reticence- regardless of the circumstances and her own good intentions it was still quite rude to show up like this with such little notice.Â
How are you holding up? Such questions were to be expected of course but that didnât make them any easier to answer. In truth, Pansy had hardly had time to consider her own feelings in the wake of her fatherâs death. There was simply too much to do, what with having had to uproot her life overnight only to come home to a Manor tainted by the Ministry and besieged by the press. Then, of course, there was the funeral to think of and missives she had to send back home to France to keep on top of her own business. With all of that on her mind, there was little room for the rather muddled river of grief, regret, and guilty relief that was hovering somewhere in the back of her mind to flow to the forefront. None of that was Astoriaâs fault or problem however so Pansy carefully maintained a smile as she shrugged off the question.
âOh darling youâre so sweet to worry, you know me⊠Iâll be alright. Tea does sound absolutely wonderful and youâre already doing so much, truly, I canât thank you enough for having me at such short notice I feel just dreadful for putting you on the spot like this butâŠâ Even after all these years, it was hard for her to admit the merest hint of weakness even among friends but she had tried to learn to be more open with those that deserved it and she decided in this case that a lie would serve little purpose. âIt was getting a little overwhelming back at the manor. Itâs a relief to be able to step away and to see a friendly face. Which speaking of, how are you doing lately? I feel as though it has been woefully long since Iâve written, I do hope you will forgive me.âÂ
âOf course youâll be all right,â Astoria said -- perhaps a bit too blunt of a statement to be spoken between witches whose relationship, while positive, was more vicarious than anything else, but it was true and Astoria knew her too well to doubt it: Pansy Parkinson was a survivor. She was strong in ways that Astoria herself could only admire; ways that she knew her own husband had often envied. Perhaps she didnât have the right to say that she knew Pansy well since most of what she knew had come secondhand through first sister and later husband...but she knew her, nonetheless. Pansy would always be all right.
That didnât mean she always had to be.
âBut that doesnât mean it hasnât been hard,â Astoria continued, tucking Pansyâs free arm in with her own and leading the other witch forward toward the table. âPlease donât apologize,â she went on sincerely, âa spot of tea and some relaxation is the least I can do. And you know youâre as good as family; you should feel free to drop in anytime. Iâm only sorry Draco canât get away from Hogwarts so easily as to join us...â
Astoria hesitated; would Pansy think she was overstepping, or acting petty? Well, if the stories sheâd heard were anything to go by -- and Astoria could only assume they were; while both Daphne and Draco were skilled liars, they didnât often lie to her -- then neither of those things were likely to outrage Pansy Parkinson. She screwed her courage to the sticking place and added: âAlthough to be honest, it is nice to have you to myself for once. We so rarely get to talk -- I feel like I know you so much better than I have the right to.â She laughed at her own silliness, truthful though it was.
âPlease,â she tugged Pansy to a chair and snapped her fingers for a house-elf to clear part of the table to make room for Pansyâs items. âSit and letâs amend that.â Astoria smiled as she settled in her own chair and began: âThings here have been as well as ever -- which is to say, occasionally horrid when other people get involved, but largely lovely. Scorpius has a new crush,â she added conspiratorially as she reached to pour the tea, âso that should be worth several weeksâ worth of entertainment. And you? Any romantic interests on the horizon for the most fashionable woman in France?â
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hannahgrace-abbottâ:
âAh yes, it was quite the scandal. It turns out he had used that tactic many times before, obliviating people and taking credit for their heroic deeds in order to write novels about it and become famous.â Hannah shrugged, thinking back with a smile to her own naive belief that Gilderoy Lockhart was a dreamboat and a hero for their world. âBut he was once very well loved, especially by witches, so I suppose Morag must not have gotten over her schoolgirl crush.â Besides, Morag wasnât known for her classy or subtle decoration style, so it wasnât that much of a surprise to Hannah.
Hannah appreciated Astoriaâs apology, even though the other woman had nothing to do with the untenableness of the situation. Still, Hannah could tell that it was a genuine statement, and she appreciated that from the other woman. Maybe friendship with Astoria wasnât so far off after all. Hannah brightened at the thought.Â
Hannah laughed. It was quite the strange event, and Hannah couldnât say it was one of the most enjoyable evenings for her, either. There was something about getting together with all of her old classmates that brought an awkwardness with it that didnât seem to pop up when they interacted with each other in the outside world. She didnât quite understand why everyone was so desperate to have these reunions. âAh, well, Iâm about ready to call it a night, so if that tells you anything,â she replied with a laugh. âOh yes, Zacharias is great. Heâs always good for a laugh.â With a smile, Hannah stood up. âReady to head back?â She began to lead the way back through the maze to the party, hoping that the couples she had come across there were gone.Â
Astoria wasnât ready in the least, wasnât looking forward to it in the least -- but what else could she do? Sit out here alone in the hedge maze all night? Admittedly that sounded like a slightly better way to spend her evening than going back in to the party, but it would make it hard for Draco to find her when theyâd finally met their obligations and could go home. So instead she forced a smile and lied, âAbsolutely,â and followed Hannah back through the maze and into the ugly tumult of society.
END.
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missdaphnegreengrassâ:
Daphne smiled at her sisterâs response, closing the door behind her before turning to attend to the teapot that had begun to whistle on the stovetop. With a flick of her wrist, the lock turned and the two women were shut out from the muggle world. Her chosen lodgings was a discussion Daphne had swiftly shut down time and again. She was aware that there were many wixen communities to choose from, and yet they all came with the weariness of being observed. If there was one place to truly disappear it was among those who donât even know your existence. Here she was merely the distant, and mysterious woman who lived on the third floor, she wasnât Daphne Greengrass, and all that came with it. It was surprisingly relaxing.Â
Taking the kettle off, Daphne glanced towards Astoria as she popped the bags into the pot and placed it on a tray alongside the cups and biscuits. âOh please, you know I would never avoid you, I would have clung to you like a life raft,â she said, a chastising note in her tone as she made her way towards the sitting room. âNo, it simply sounded like something out of a nightmare,â Daphne stated candidly. âAll those people in one place again⊠We donât need to pretend that one weâre one happy Hogwarts family. I didnât wish to spend the evening with people who tried to kill one another once upon a time.âÂ
Daphne sat down, displacing her cat who walked away with a rapid swish of its tail and clearly peeved. âBut do spill. How was it?âÂ
âIt was a nightmare,â Astoria confessed, enough though she knew it hadnât been that bad, really -- but if she couldnât vent some hyperbole to her sister, what was the point of conversation at all? âMost of them didnât recognize me,â she continued, which hadnât been a surprise; Astoria had never been an outgoing witch even back at Hogwarts, and the intervening years had only enable her to become more reclusive. âThat was nice...until I had to introduce myself, of course, and watch everyone struggle to decide whether to recoil or hide their revulsion long enough to make an excuse to leave.â
She rolled her eyes as she settled herself on Daphneâs couch, kicking off her shoes to tuck her feet up under the skirts of her robes and try to relax and laugh-off the memories of the bad night. âI suspect that Entwhistle threw his drink on me on purpose,â she added with a sigh, âalthough it could have been a natural lack of grace, who knows...â Astoria smiled after the retreating cat and was ignored. Too used to the moodiness of felines (and Malfoys) to take offense, she held the smile in place and added a wry eyebrow as she took her tea. âThere were some highlights you might have enjoyed, though. I met a fellow named Zacharias Smith who turned out to be rather amusing...and Draco danced, of course.â
Astoria smirked into her tea as she let that revelation hang in the air a moment before she clarified: âThe band was playing this absurd song about Harry Potter, and Draco was rather tipsy, and I might have encouraged him rather more than I should have...he was a bit cross with himself for it after, once heâd sobered-up,â she admitted with a laugh. âI felt a little bad for letting him do something I knew heâd regret -- but it was very entertaining at the time.â
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chohee-changâ:
âIâm fine, thanks,â Cho responded stiffly. Of course this would happen to her today of all days. Bad things happened in threes, right? First she had a shit day at work, next she dropped all her personal belongings including the ice cream she had just purchased in the middle of the street, and now, Astoria Malfoy was standing in front of her, smiling at her. Choâs scowl grew at the other womanâs polite smile, as if she hadnât practically ran away from her last time they talked. If she didnât know any better, Cho wouldnât have been to tell that the smile was fake. And now Cho couldnât be outright rude without looking like the bad guy.Â
But then Astoriaâs face changed, her eyes widening at the sight of Choâs belogings. Specifically, the pamphlet on muggle rights she had shoved into her bag a couple days ago without thinking much of it. âJust some light reading,â Cho said lightly as she took her things from Astoria and it was now her turn to plaster on a fake smile. But where Astoriaâs had been polite, Choâs was sickly sweet, waiting for the other woman to react.Â
âAre you here with your husband?â Cho asked as she shoved everything back into her bag and realized Astoria was still standing there. She hadnât seen Malfoy in decades and was more than happy to keep it that way. She was ready to make a run for it if he was anywhere near by, ice cream be damned. She really should have gone for alcohol today instead.
âLight reading,â Astoria repeated, staring white-faced and wide-eyed at the horrors detailed on Choâs manifesto -- not that she had gotten more than a glimpse, but a glimpse was more than enough. How could anyone believe and support such horrible ideas?
âWhat?â she asked at Choâs question, distracted, her mind whirling in knots over the other womanâs radical notions. âOh, no,â she shook her head, âno, Draco is at Hogwarts. Thereâs a month and a bit yet before the winter holidays, you know,â Astoria added -- wondering if Cho had spent so much time and energy focused on Muggle barbarians that she had forgotten how education worked in civilized parts of the world. (Did Muggles even have schools? They were so ignorant; perhaps they didnât know anything worth bothering to teach to their children...)
How could Cho possibly be so foolish, though? She seemed so intelligent -- and she was a Healer! Didnât choosing to go into a career centered around mending other people imply a caring nature by default? How could she be so callous?
The words burst out before Astoria could make the conscious decision whether or not to speak them: âHow can a woman as intelligent and compassionate as you possibly support such dangerous notions?â she wailed, waving at the crumpled parchment. âHave you no concern for how much damage and destruction would ensure? I donât understand!â
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zachariashsmithâ:
Well, look at that, Zacharias thought as he preened at Astoriaâs giggles. He was practically a comedian. âFertilizer, yeah, of course,â he nodded along, brow furrowed in mock-seriousness before he cracked a grin once again. âA damn shame you didnât wear anything puce tonight if you ask me. Or have you just charmed your lovely ensemble not to look like⊠crap? See, I tried to avoid âshitâ there, but it all just goes right back âround.â He hadnât expected heâd be having conversations about âpuceâ tonight (the air quotations were very present in his mind every time he thought about that damn colour because it was that ridiculous) and yet here he was. Zacharias spent a brief moment just marvelling at what a glorious trainwreck the night was before turning his full attention back to Mrs Malfoy.
âI definitely find your company very delightful,â he said with a wink. He didnât consider it flirting, not really, and he hoped Malfoy wouldnât either because honestly, that guy could be damn scary. On the other hand, no one could deny it would be hilarious to see how heâd react to someone making a move on his wife â as long as said poor fuck wasnât Zacharias, of course. âDonât take it personally, Potter and co. have always had terrible taste.â
He didnât mind talking about himself â hell, it was one of his favourite pastimes, usually â but at the moment, he was definitely more interested in finding out more about Astoria. Even if it was just a favourite colour. âSo what youâre saying is you have something in common with Lockhart. Truly tragic. My thoughts and prayers are with you.â It couldâve been worse, he supposed. She couldâve said red (which in his mind equalled Gryffindor so, bad) or puce (which was just a damn ugly colour, apparently, so, also bad). âI guess now I gotta show you mine, huh? Would you believe me if I said yellow? Puff pride and all that?â
Astoria laughed again and shook her finger at Zacharias in mock-scold. âHow rude, sir! How rude indeed. To suggest that I would ever wear puce by choice? And then to compound the insult by accusing me of falsifying my garments in order to avoid the embarrassment of being seen to have made such a mistake? I am offended, sir, for both myself and on behalf of the designer of my robes.â She tossed her head. âI fear that your attempts to moderate the coarseness of your language are made futile by the context of your speech, sir.â
She patted his arm and added, âBut donât worry, I donât take any of it personally.â Not much, anyway; not any more than she could help. âEspecially the offenses that come from such delightful a source as yourself. Those are easier to shrug off, I admit,â she chuckled. âDoes that make me shallow? Or just possessed of standards?â
She shook her head and continued, âAlthough Iâm not sure that Iâm willing to forgive that one as easily, given what youâve told me about him so far. I may have to consult with Draco to decide how offended I should be; Iâm not sure I can trust you to be objective. Not when you admit to so much bias that even your favorite color is dictated by your allegiances.â
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Astoria had been lounging (not sulking, not quite sulking), sprawled sideways across a plush fainting couch in the library in a dressing gown, hair undone and bare feet turned toward the crackling fireplace. A stack of discarded books beside her spoke mute testimony to her scattered thoughts and unsettled mood; a half-empty bowl of candied fruits on the table beside her had proved a stickier, but no more satisfying, distraction.
She was waiting for Angelinaâs decision about the childrenâs Quidditch league; she was waiting for Terrence Boot to drop the other shoe on her; she was waiting for word back from Draco about the increasingly-distressing stories coming out of Hogwarts where their son was. Nothing for which she was waiting were anything which she could in any way influence or speed-up, but neither could she put them out of her mind. Instead she fretted, and sought -- and discarded -- distraction after distraction.
When an elf brought her one that she couldnât ignore in the form of a note from one Pansy Parkinson announcing an intention to visit, it was a relief -- even if it also meant a bit of a frantic hurry on Astoriaâs part to get everything presentable. âTea,â she barked to the elf, even as she scribbled a quick Oh yes, how lovely please do! of her own and thrust it at the little creature to take it back to the owl for an immediate reply. âWeâll need tea for two with light pastries, fruits, and cheese snacks. Set it up in the green study overlooking the back gardens. Proper company settings!â she added as she hurried up the stairs to her room. âNot just casual family cups!â
Astoria blessed her years of gardening as she threw herself into a quick-change from lazy housewife in a dressing gown to properly dressed witch ready to receive company -- not that she would have met the standards of, say for an example, Narcissa; she wasnât wearing nearly enough jewelry and her hair remained in loose curls with only a single comb to hold part of it back in a loose swoop, but at least she was dressed -- and dressed well, thanks to the very woman who was about to arrive. It was probably just as well that Pansy hadnât given her more warning; Astoria would have only fretted over what to wear then, too. She had known Pansy for years, of course, had known her since her first day at Hogwarts -- but only in passing. So the idea of still wanting to make a good impression carried weight.
Pansy had been her sisterâs friend, then after her marriage, her husbandâs friend. (One of the few who didnât turn on him, for all that she was no longer living close enough to offer actual support to Draco in the aftermath of war and trials.) Later years had brought them closer, but still always through Draco, because of Draco -- never on their own, not really. Not, still, in anything more than fond passing. When Astoria heard that the tragic news of Pansyâs father death had the silver lining of bringing the other witch back to England for more than a passing visit, she had been delighted at the chance to get to know her in person rather than merely through letters -- but also nervous.
So when Pansy stepped out of the floo, Astoriaâs smile was as worried as it was welcoming. She hurried forward, holding out her hands to the other witch. âPansy, itâs so good to see you, although Iâm sorry about the circumstances. How are you holding up?â She gestured down the hall and added, âIâve tea waiting in the green study, if youâre thirsty, but is there anything else I can do to possibly help with anything right now?â
Who: Pansy and @greengrassgrowths
Where: Parkinson Manor & Malfoy Manor
When: TBD (Sometime between October 19 & 26)
Pansy found herself feeling strangely out of place at the manor where she had been born. Once the halls had been as familiar to her as the sight of her own hand pushing a needle through bespelled fabric but now she felt like she had landed on a foreign shore that was utterly lacking in familiarity. Perhaps it was the ocean of time that had passed since her last visit which had been years ago as the papers were all too happy to crow about that in the wake of her fatherâs death. Estranged Daughter Returns Too Late. Or perhaps it was the sliver of the actual ocean that she had crossed when returning from the country that had sheltered her for the past two decades that made her feel like a foreigner on her own native soil. She had always been just a bit French, speaking the language like a native and even carrying a slight accent picked up from her mother when she spoke English, but now she was very nearly Parisian to her bones herself having devoted herself to living within the pulse of the famed city for so long. However, it was also possible that the sense of alienating strangeness did not spring from such sources but rather from the signs left over from the Ministryâs invasion of her home.
Portraits that once stared haughtily down at her from the walls now looked balefully up from their resting places against the base of those walls as they awaited the opportunity to be rehung after having been ripped down during the raid. Books were strewn all about the library mourning their lost brothers and sisters that had been snatched away for the crime of being âtoo darkâ. And her motherâs room which had lain nearly untouched since her death⊠well Pansy actually didnât know the extent of the damage that awaited her there one glance into the room was enough to make her firmly shut the door. Which was how sheâd found herself standing with her back pressed against the door to her late motherâs room her eyes closed as she counted out four slow breaths. She opened her eyes in time to see a house-elf creep into view and quickly made a decision snapping her fingers to draw the elf to her side.Â
âI want photos of every single thing thatâs been moved out of place, and thenâŠâ she could hear the next words meant to come out of her mouth âI want this mess cleaned up.â Sheâd heard her father say them countless times as he slunk shame-faced from his study or one of the various guest bedrooms. As much as she wanted the signs of the Ministryâs disrespect swept out of her sight it did not feel right to dismiss it out of turn without first weighing her options. âAwait my further instructions.â With that, she turned and swept from the hall. She would deal with this mess later, personally, but first, she needed to breathe and it was getting frighteningly hard to do so within the walls of her once home.Â
It seemed to her that an escape was in order but she had no wish to face the crowds of journalists that had amassed outside of the manor. There was a discrete apparition point in the woods out back but Pansy was which left only a few options reachable by floo. It did not take her long to settle on Malfoy Manor deciding that it would be prudent to check the security of the long-unused connection between her home and the Malfoyâs. Pansy had written the Malfoys once already upon her return sending her love and setting an intention to visit as soon as possible after the funeral was in order but desperate times called for quicker measures. Pansy quickly penned a note sending another owl, this time directly to Astoria, setting an intention to pop in for a quick visit and tea, if possible of course, and set off through the halls until she reached a small study tucked away down the hall from her childhood room.
The room was a mess much like the others but she was pleased to see a layer of dust lying mostly unsettled over the fireplace. She backtracked to her room to grab a small pouch of floo powder and a box of floral confections she had bought as a gift for Astoria on her way out of Paris from her bags along with a few other small items for any other Malfoys she may encounter on her visit. Gifts in order, she returned to the study wrinkling her nose at the dust and casting a quick preemptive scourgify, it wouldnât save her from the soot but she hardly wanted to turn up at Mafloy Manor coated in cobwebs and dust on top of the expected floo residue, before she tossed a handful of floo powder and stepped into the green flames that rose up beneath the stone arch of the hearth.Â
âMalfoy Manor,â she stated firmly tucking her arms and gifts carefully close to her body as she was whisked away through the floo network to another scene from her childhood that would hopefully offer more comfort than the echoes of her fatherâs empty home.Â
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angelinaweasleyâ:
Angelina looks on with a weary sense of indifference. Somehow, she manages to make the effort to nod in all of the right places. It seems like Astoriaâs a bit confused, to say the least. For Angelina to say that sheâs a professional communicator would be a lie, but her career forces her to be better than average. For once, maybe due to her exhaustion and the fact that sheâs not talking to a close friend but Astoria Malfoy, words seem to fail her. Itâs not that Angelina intends to be meanâshe had pushed away openly criticizing her former house rivals at the end of her Hogwarts daysâbut explaining herself in several different ways for the sake of her audience wears her out easier than it once used to. Even if, in this case, she has an audience of one.Â
At the mention of âeliteâ, Angelina gives Astoria a funny look. Does she really think Angelina wanted to stop underprivileged children from joining the league? Angelina Weasley, a halfblood from a lower-middle class family? Being kept in Malfoy Manor for two long obviously prevented Astoria from viewing the world they shared the way Angelina sees it. The league was created so wix of all backgrounds could fly, especially those who came from a disadvantage. Angelina figures that itâs not worth trying to figure out where Astoriaâs way of thinking came from, as she has accepted that there are just some things in life sheâll never understand. This includes pureblood society. If there is one area she desires to remain ignorant, it is here.Â
With several less than pleasant thoughts bouncing around Angelinaâs brain, she smiles at Astoria tiredly. âMaking an anonymous donation would be optimal. We might not be able to thank you in public, but I can tell you that weâre definitely grateful for your contribution to the cause.â She has to admit that sheâs impressed by the womanâs flexibility, and, on a greater level, humility. Just because she may be pompous by some things doesnât means sheâs pompous about everything, and Angelina can appreciate that.Â
âIâm sure I can get Albus and Scorpius to volunteer. Itâd be a good bonding experience for the two of them,â Angelina remarks. With thoughts of home and silencing her mind for the day, she flags down a waiter with a small but friendly wave of her hand. As they start to make their way over, she looks over to Astoria and says, âWith all that business done, itâs time for tea, isnât it? We have to do what we came here for. And, I could really use a refill of pumpkin fizz. What a classic.âÂ
Astoria manages to keep her smile in place -- barely -- as the waiter steps to their table, but she holds up a hand to delay the man when he opens his mouth to ask for her order. Her eyes are still fixed on Angelina and her words are meant for the other witch, not for the tea shop wizard: âIâm afraid anonymous donations of more than a handful of galleons arenât on the table for anyone in my family,â she says, her voice flat and tired. âWe need to have a paper trail to prove where our money goes, should anyone from the Ministry be curious about what weâre spending.â Technically there was no law against them doing whatever they wanted with their money, short of actual illegal action -- but while technicalities of law might have kept generations of Malfoys out of Azkaban, these days the law was no longer on their side and technicalities were all the people who enforced it needed to justify bringing as much weight as they could down on Astoriaâs family.
She was sure that her father-in-law, at least, still had enough back-channel connections to make money disappear whenever he wanted to -- and the goblins at Gringotts would always cooperate with gold more than with laws -- but Astoria wasnât going to ask Lucius to launder money for her just so she could donate to a childrenâs Quidditch group. Nor was she about to admit to Angelina that that was something within their power. âSo if you want the money, youâll have to accept the fact that itâs me whoâs giving it to you. Thereâs no reason that has to be public knowledge -- unless you think the Junior Quidditch Leagueâs financials are going to be investigated and exposed by the Ministry -- but it wonât be anonymous. I can afford to give money to children who need it; I canât afford anonymity.â That was life as a Malfoy in these times. âSo you decide whether my gold is worth it, and let me know.â
Astoria stood, the waiter stepping back to get out of her way, his expression somewhere halfway between confused and annoyed -- doubtless wondering why heâd been summoned to this table, if one of the party was leaving -- but Astoria didnât lift her gaze from Angelina to look at him. Her voice was bitter although she still held onto the edges of her smile as she added, âI donât know how much luck youâll have with the boys; Scorpius rather dislikes Quidditch. But youâre welcome to try.â She shrugged; her son had certainly been dragged to the schoolâs pitch more often than heâd ever wanted due to his friendship with Albus and Rose. Perhaps seeing how much other children liked the sport when they were young might kindle more interest in him than heâd mustered on his own; Astoria would like that. But it was clear that it wasnât something in which she was going to be welcome.
âI donât think Iâve got much appetite left for tea today, though. I appreciate the invitation, but I think Iâll head home. Itâs been a long day.â Astoria gripped her disappointment tightly in hand and nodded a polite farewell. âIâll look forward to the owl with your decision on the donation,â she said, and left the hapless waiter to fidget awkwardly by her empty chair for a few seconds before he turned to Angelina with an anxious smile.
âAh...anything else with that fizz refill then, maâam?â
END.
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Herbology could be a tricky practice. For all people said it was just grubbing in the mud it took real skill to grow honking daffodils, or manage bouncing bulbs, or leaping lilies or weeping wisteria. Even glowing goldenrod, the plant many wixen children were taught to tend, could be tricky if you didnât have gnome urine on hand, which let the plant glow so. And if your glowing goldenrod didnât glow then you didnât have your nightlights and see how quickly it can become irritating?
Then there were the herbs. Muggle ones could be cared for easily in comparison, a Florire or a raining spell could tend them well enough, but Black Knot Mint, or Lady-In-Waiting, or Dittany, or Anchovy Chive, or Bone Mallow, all could be so tricksy.
And after all that were the shrubs and trees, Flutterby bushes and Flitterblooms taking so much effort and Whomping Willows and Walking Trees having minds of their own.
You couldnât just grub in the mud to be a herbologist. You had to know what you were doing.
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