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ourgoddessathena · 7 days
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everytime he uploads a video of him playing and caressing/scratching his cat, something in me awoken
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ourgoddessathena · 9 days
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Love how tumblr has its own folk stories. Yeah the God of Arepo we’ve all heard the story and we all still cry about it. Yeah that one about the woman locked up for centuries finally getting free. That one about the witch who would marry anyone who could get her house key from her cat and it’s revealed she IS the cat after the narrator befriends the cat.
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ourgoddessathena · 18 days
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By LabradoriteKing on Pinterest
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ourgoddessathena · 21 days
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rereading my own writing is just a constant fluctuation between "damn, girl, you wrote this? (affectionate)" and "damn, girl, you wrote this? (derogatory)"
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ourgoddessathena · 22 days
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today is the five years anniversary for the season one's apocalypse. in 2002, five hargreeves time travels too far, he accidentally landed on 2019 (five years ago), when the apocalypse started. happy apocalypse day, i guess :D
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ourgoddessathena · 24 days
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Thalia doesn’t keep many things in the hundreds of years she’s been alive. 
But long ago, there were people, their names all but distant memories, who mattered in her 1st lifetime. It’s their things that stay hidden in her bag, reminding her of her mortal life. 
A blue hoodie, worn almost threadbare. The scent of its original owner, long since leached from the fabric. But if she closes her eyes, she can almost see the blue eyes of her first and only love. 
A pair of glasses. Frames cracked and crooked. A reminder of a brother she never got to truly know. 
A baseball cap. It’s magic long faded, branded with a forgotten logo. Memories of a blonde girl laughing hidden deep within. 
A letter. Ink fading, paper yellow. The last words of a dying friend. Words that wish her well, words that wished her well in a world they had fought side by side to save. 
Thalia doesn’t keep a lot of things, but even after all this time, Luke, Jason, Annabeth, and Percy will stay with her forever. The memories of her first family to remind her why life is so beautiful.
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ourgoddessathena · 1 month
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My favorite thing about Thomas the Tank Engine is that it canonically takes place in a train post-apocalypse where the Island of Sodor is the only safe zone in a totalitarian dystopia in which steam trains are routinely killed and their body parts are sold or cannibalized for repair
If you think I’m kidding you need to read the original books
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ourgoddessathena · 2 months
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Apples
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Pairing: Luke Castellan x Reader
Summary: You tossed an apple to Luke without knowing the meaning of it in Greek Mythology (fluff, friends to lovers, happy ending)
Note: Just wanted to write something lighthearted and funny. Since I saw somewhere that apparently throwing an apple at someone means something in Greek Mythology, thought I should use it as a prompt.
Word count: 3.1k
You have been at Camp Half-Blood for a year. Within that time, you’ve been claimed by your Godly parent, learned so many things about Greek mythology, and, best of all, made friends who understood exactly what you were going through and all whom you loved dearly. 
One of them was Luke Castellan. You two were relatively close friends, though you swore he treated you differently than he would with others at camp. But you didn’t want to be foolish and assumed it was something. That didn’t mean you don’t treat him differently than you would with other campers though. You have always had a soft spot for Luke in your heart. You weren’t exactly sure when it happened, but you found yourself thinking about him too often.
“Anyway, Percy. Don’t worry too much, honestly. We all have been through what you’re currently going through. You’ll fit right in, yeah?” the younger boy offered you a lope-sided smile as you patted his back and stood up. 
“Alright, boys, I have to go now, but I’ll see you later,” you said before grabbing your plate, which would have been empty if it wasn’t for the apple you hadn’t eaten. The rest of the table - which included Chris, Luke, and Percy - said their goodbyes before chattering again as you walked away. However, you halted as you changed your mind about wasting the apple.
You turned back to look at the group before calling out, “Hey, Castellan.” However, you were slightly caught off guard to see Luke already having his eyes on you.
Luke swore that you have always had him mesmerized. If he even heard a whisper of your voice, his head would immediately try to locate you. To make matters worse, Chris even started calling Luke a “lost puppy” when he realized how your departure would always leave Luke like one. 
“Catch,” you tossed your apple at Luke. 
Multiple heads turned in your direction as the red apple hurled through the air before landing neatly in Luke’s hands. The Hermes cabin counselor had his eyes glued onto the fruit that was in his palms. You almost halted in your steps from his and other camper’s reactions. Some started whispering to their friends, pointing at you. You even heard one gasp. But you ignored them, finding it strange that people cared so much about such a small interaction.
“You can have it. I don’t think I’ll have time to eat it,” with that, you vanished from the scene, leaving at least half of the camp agape, including Luke and your friends. 
Then, the strangest of things happened for the next few days. It started with Luke already stationed outside when you exited your cabin the morning after. He cheekily presented you with one singular flower in his hand, and you took it with playful words, “Ooh, what did I do to deserve this special treatment today?”
“Nothing, just thought I should show how much I appreciate you,” Luke put his arm over your shoulder as the two of you made your way to the dining pavilion. You could feel your cheeks flushing at his action. He has never done this before. With his arms around you, the sides of your bodies brushed as the two of you walked. You noticed almost immediately how every other person would have their eyes on the two of you. But you ignored the attention and focused on Luke instead.
The sweet actions didn’t stop at flowers or more physical touches. For the next three days, Luke was stuck to your hip. So it was quite strange that you have not spotted the Hermes cabin counselor in the last two hours. Hence why you were spending some time with Clarisse, another close friend of yours. However, you felt an arm swinging around your shoulders, and you instantly recognized who it was from the familiar touch.
“Hey, Clarisse, can I borrow Y/N real quick?” Luke asked, quickly muttering a “thank you” when your friend nodded. “So, I have something to give you…” your face must have shown how surprised you were because he chuckled at your reaction. However, when the boy pulled his gift out from his cargo pocket, your mouth fell slightly agape at the reveal. 
Luke must have misinterpreted your reaction because he started nervously rambling, his voice a few octaves higher, “It’s not much, but honestly, this is all I can do with my arts and crafts skills. I’m just not really good with that y-”
“It’s perfect, Luke. Thank you so much!” you gave him a brief hug, but it was enough to stun him for a second. Luke felt this urgent sense of craving from how your bodies fit for a second. It’s as if he was made to hold you. He almost pulled you back into another hug but had to force himself to regain composure. Nevertheless, that didn’t last long because his eyes softened again at the sight of you trying on the bracelet he made. The beads in your favorite color, crafted with care, wrapped around your wrist perfectly, and you wonder how he knew just the right size to make it.
The truth was Luke had to ask Clarisse to steal one of your bracelets just so he could make a bracelet of the correct size. But you didn't need to know that, though - according to him.
The next night, there was a social gathering near the campfire. Luke reapproached the location with a hoodie in hand. Earlier, Luke excused himself to fetch the clothing item that was now in his hand that was meant for you. However, his brows scrunched as he spotted another figure next to you, sitting in the spot that he previously occupied. You were laughing at something they said. The way your laugh echoed in his head usually sounded like a lullaby or the enchanting voice of a siren. But right now, the idea that someone else elicited the same laugh made him want to hurl behind the bush he was standing next to.
Little did he know you were zoning out from whatever the other boy was speaking about, thus the fake laugh to not blow your cover. You were distracted just thinking about Luke and everything he has done so far - offering his portion of dessert to you because he knew it was your favorite; him winning Capture the Flag and ignoring everybody else to go hug you first, then having his eyes on you and only you afterwards; sneaking out of camp to go buy the items you mentioned once that you wish you had at camp and so on. 
Your mind quickly reminded you that the boy sitting next to you was still talking to you. However, when you snapped out of your thoughts again, you realized now he was looking at you expectantly and you scrambled your mind for a reply.
Thank Gods Luke plopped down on your other side, saving you from having to admit to the other boy that you were not listening to him. “Hey, you’re back,” you commented. Luke’s arm automatically threw itself around your shoulder and tugged you to him slightly. Your body leaned on the Hermes cabin counselor ever so naturally at this before you turned to him. Luke quickly set his clothing on your lap, and you stared at it questioningly.
“You’re cold, right?”
“Oh, yeah,” your cheeks flushed again at how he knew without you telling him. You shivered maybe once or twice earlier due to the night air lowering the temperature, but it was so brief you were sure nobody had noticed. As you put on the hoodie, Luke averted his gaze from you to the guy on your other side. 
The Hermes cabin counselor arched one of his eyebrows in a challenging manner. Almost immediately, his ‘opponent’ slightly raised both of his hands. Luke internally snickered at the quick motion of surrender. 
“My bad, man,” you heard the other boy say as you managed to put your head through the clothing item and pull it down. Luke was physically preening at the other boy’s words and departure. Meanwhile, you were distracted by how you were engulfed by the smell of Luke from his hoodie. Your height difference also meant you were swimming in it, but it felt so comfortable.
“What was that?” you asked once the other boy was gone. 
“Nothing…” even the most oblivious person could see that Luke was lying. But, once again, you did not question his actions and carried on with the gathering. You could also feel other campers staring at the two of you, but you ignored that as well. 
That night - like every other night since four days ago - he walked you back to your cabin. You were honestly completely smitten by the attention he has given you, not that you would admit that to him. You were still not sure what caused the change, but you were still elated about it. Maybe he did return your feelings? Either way, everything felt perfect lately, and you went to sleep that night feeling like the stars aligned for you.
“I guess congratulations are in order?” Percy spoke up as you lined up for food the following day. 
“What do you mean?” you asked, taking the plate of food. Today’s meal consisted of mac n’ cheese, steak, and an apple. 
“You’re engaged?” you almost dropped your plate at that and gave the son of Poseidon a questioning look. “You proposed to Luke like a week ago?”
“What? When?”
“When you threw him the apple? That is considered a marriage proposal.”
“Since when?”
“Uh, in ancient Greece, it’s considered a marriage proposal if a man throws an apple at a lady. But, I mean, it’s the 21st century, so I guess it can work both ways.” Percy finally took a plate of food for himself. “And if the recipient catches it, it’s considered an acceptance.”
“You saw this and knew this whole time without telling me?!?” 
“I thought you knew! And you two seem so smitten already, so I thought you did it on purpose.”
“Percy, no! Is this a well-known thing? Do you think other people who saw it too thought I proposed to Luke as well?” Seeing Percy’s look and how he was fumbling with his words, you quickly requested, “Actually, no, don’t answer that.” 
The two of you walked over to Luke and Chris with plates in hand. You picked up the apple on your plate and placed it on the table. 
“Luke, we need to talk,” You deliberately placed the fruit there, hoping the boy would get a hint about the topic you wanted to discuss. Luke’s eyes flicked from the fruit to you. Though the hint of amusement in his eyes and a sheepish grin made you realize he knew all along. Luke stood up and followed you out of sight and hearing distance from other campers whose eyes were trailing after the two of you.
“You knew what it meant, and you didn’t tell me?” You broke the silence as soon as you two were far away enough. 
“Listen, I appreciate your proposal. But, it’s a little bit fast, don’t you think?” Luke teased, and you instantly hit his arm at that, causing the boy to flinch slightly, but the smile on his face told you he was anything but mad at your action.
“But you caught it. So, technically, you said yes,” you rebutted, sighing as you rubbed your face, “My Gods, does everybody at camp think we’re engaged? Wait, is this a substitute for an engagement ring? Did you give this to me because of that?” you pointed to the bracelet Luke gave you, your mind now understanding Clarisse’s teasing and her implications. You could see the way Luke was stifling a laugh. He settled with saying something else when he saw the pure panic on your face.
“Sweetheart, calm down.” the nickname successfully silenced you. You hated how it made you feel, but you would not mind hearing that daily. “No, it’s not an engagement ring.”
“Oh, so were you doing all of these romantic gestures and gifts on purpose to make fun of me and the situation?” you asked, though it was more with a lighthearted tone than one of temper. However, something shifted because the expression on Luke’s face changed from one of humor to earnestness.
“No, I didn’t do all this to make fun of the situation or you…” Luke’s voice fell off as tried to find the right words to say next. In that split second, Luke took a deep breath, and you could see how nervous he suddenly became, though he still kept a light tone. “I did it because I took it as a chance to maybe…win you over, and it also gives me an advantage because it fended off many other guys.” 
Undoubtedly, you were frozen in place, unable to register the words he was saying and the implications they bear. Neither did the boy in front of you act like the Luke you usually know - somebody who was usually confident, outgoing, always having his way with words. No, the person in front of you could not even hold eye contact, the pink hue on his cheeks now spreading to the tip of his ears as he shifted left and right. Luke broke the silence first, giving away the nerves that were gnawing him away from your lack of response.
“How about this? I’ll say ‘no’ to your mind-blowing marriage proposal for now,” you lightheartedly hit him again, rolling your eyes playfully. Seeing a positive reaction from you, Luke let out a small breath of relief, but the nerves quickly overtook again as he mustered up all the courage to utter his counter proposal: “But maybe we could start with something slower like going on a date? — Or I’ll even settle with you allowing me to try and ‘woo’ you.” Luke added the last bit as insurance, in case you didn’t want to take up on the date. Part of his mind wanted to scowl at himself for seeming so desperate - but Gods, he has always been a desperate man when it comes to you. 
“You’re such a dork.”
“Yet you still proposed to me.”
“You’ll never let me live that down, will you?” Luke only shook his head in response. Once again, you haven’t responded to his offer. Luke could see that you were in deep thought, the cogs turning in your head as you digested what he just said.
“You mean it? That you wanna go on a date? That you wanna “woo” me and sweep me off my feet?” you questioned. Despite the humor in your voice, there was also a hint of vulnerability and cautiousness. “Does this mean what you’ve been doing for the past few days…they are all genuine?”
“Is it that hard to believe that I like you? I don’t think you even fully understand the feelings I have for you. I’ve had my eyes on you for a year now, which is the entire time I know you, and I’m afraid I can’t see that changing any time soon.” Luke had to bite his tongue to prevent himself from saying more because he was sure he would never stop talking about you if he could. Maybe those unspoken words ought to be things Luke would disclose in the future. If you give him the chance, he will ensure you hear everything he adored about you.
“Well, that’s good then, ‘cause I happen to like you too,” your words made Luke’s eyes snap to yours, almost in disbelief. 
Luke felt as if his heart was blocking his airway by the way it was thumping so hard in his chest to the point he could feel the vibration in his neck. He held his breath over your confession and the way you were looking at him. Oh, Luke was convinced he was utterly doomed because how could he be so affected by one single look. He was suddenly unsure whether he would be able to handle your affections or ever live without it if it was taken from him. He’d spend the rest of eternity like a deprived man.
“Aw, look who is nervous now,” you teased, deciding to somewhat torture him and get him back for teasing you earlier. “I did not think I had this kind of effect on you, Castellan,” you approached him slowly, keeping eye contact with his now dilated pupils. 
“I mean…all I did was say a couple of words and you’re all tongue tied. What would happen to you if I do this?” you swiftly grabbed Luke’s camp beads and pulled him down, eliminating a significant amount of space between your faces, though not completely. To steady himself during your action, Luke’s hands steadied on your hips and stumbled slightly, though you did not mind the touch.
You never knew it was possible for his face to flush even more, but it did. Luke gulped and your eyes casted down on the way his Adam’s apple moved when he did so. The way he reacted to you only intoxicated you with power even more. You glanced upwards a bit, eyes observing his lips for a split second before looking back up at his eyes. You smirked when you caught his eyes flickering back to yours from your lips as well. 
Just as you were about to close the distance, Luke pulled back just a bit, finally able to speak, though his words were heavy warnings, “If this happens—” Luke stopped, unsure he should let you know. Luke shook his head lightly as his eyes traced over your features before continuing, “If we kiss, there is no going back for me. I don’t think I could just…forget about it. So, please, just be sure before you do it.” Your eyes softened at his words.
“I promise, Luke. I am sure,” you muttered, though Luke knew you meant the words by heart from the way you were looking at him. 
You finally pulled the boy down again using his camp necklace. 
As your lips touched Luke’s, he let out a content sigh. His hands clung onto your hips, pulling you flush against his own body while you caressed both sides of his face in your hands. Luke felt like the world was swallowing him whole. The boy now knew what your lips tasted like, and it felt like an addiction. He could feel his heart waving white flags at that moment, completely surrendering to you. He was right before. There was no going back from this. 
But oh, if Luke knew an apple was all it took, he would have tossed one to you himself.
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masterlist
join my Luke Castellan taglist
taglist: @nininehaaa @perseus-jackass @tanifsblog @bubbly0 @hinata7346 @justanotherkpopstanlol @mysteris-things @randomgurl2326 @star611 @2hiigh2cry @seriously-slytherin22 @spideytingley @blondervoi @stuffyownswrld @fantasticchaosthing @amortencjja @chunkiwhunki @bookwormlu @crack240 @fandomthings-blog @sh0-ya @milkncookies143 @burdeningbitch @bugcuti3 @alexisishaunted @lilacspider @olivegirl123 @nellyjan-th @kehlanislefttoe @awenthealchemist @intergalactic-padawan @ricciardolover @whorecruxfortom @locknco @vanessa-rafesgirl
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ourgoddessathena · 2 months
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Masterlist
hello I'm lily, 18! find me on discord (@/paraphernalia_05), twitter (@/lewkwoodnco also), letterboxd, spotify :)
Requests are open!
Add/remove yourself from my taglist here!
As a little treat, have u seen my FAV set of locklyle incorrect quotes?
my locklyle/l&c vibes playlist (follows the events in the books so spoilers?):
Lockwood
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Mini series (can also be read as stand-alone oneshots)
Timeless (fluff, angst, happy ending, 900) Cruel Summer (Part 1) (angst, fluff, 1.5k) Cruel Summer (Part 2) (angst, fluff, happy ending, 1.6k) August (tsitp version) (angst, 1.3k) The Alcott (angst, happy ending, 1.9k)
1989 Vault Series
Slut!* (angst, happy ending, 5.4k) ⚡️ Say Don’t Go (angst, 3.8k) Now That We Don't Talk (angst, 3.1k) love to think you'll never forget (angst, 2.5k)
Oneshots
I Can See You* (angst, enemies to lovers, happy ending, 5.9k) ⚡️
You Belong With Me (angst, fluff, happy ending, 2.4k) ⚡️
False God (angst, happy ending, 4k)
Question...? (angst, happy ending, 4.8k)
Dress* (slight angst, 3.5k) ⚡️
You Are In Love (fluff, some angst, 2.4k)
Gold Rush (fluff, some angst, 2.8k) ⚡️
Safe and Sound (angst, hurt/comfort, 2k) ⚡️
get him BACK!* (fluff/crack? 5.4k)
London Boy (fluff fluff fluff, 3.1k) ⚡️
How You Get the Girl (angsttt, happy ending, 4.8k) ⚡️
Invisible String (fluff, 5.4k) ⚡️
only love can hurt like this (angsttt, lil fluff, happy ending, 4.7k)
buy me presents! (fluffy fluff, jealous!lockwood, 2.6k)❄️ ⚡️ I got options, babe (moreee fluffy fluff, a bit of jealous!reader, 2.6k)
tis the damn season (angst, estranged best friends to lovers, 5.1k)❄️
I take you like you do your tea, with lemon and with honey (fluff, bit of angst, Lockwood’s pov, 2nd person, 720 w)
Falling for You (FLUFF fluff, pick up lines overload, 2.6k) ❣️⚡️
Locklyle
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Northern Attitude (angst, neutral ish ending, 2.1k) ❄️
I take you like you do your tea, with lemon and with honey (fluff, bit of angst, Lockwood’s pov, 2nd person, 720 w)
George
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Wildest Dreams (slight angst, happy ending, 3.3k)
After Hours (mostly fluff, mild angst, happy ending, 2.7k)
Be More (baking fluff, lockwood n george bromance supremacy, 2.8k) ❣️
Edits
Timeless locklyle gifset
Figure you out locklyle video edit
L&C series gifsets: ep 1 ⚡️| ep 2 ⚡️| ep 3 ⚡️| ep 4 ⚡️| ep 5 ⚡️ | ep 6 | ep 7 | ep 8 ⚡️
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ourgoddessathena · 3 months
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as a book reader, i choose percy over anyone else. as a show watcher, i still choose percy. but, damn, luke.
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ourgoddessathena · 5 months
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EXPECTO PATRONUM II ☁︎ ANTHONY LOCKWOOD
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GENRE ➺ HOGWARTS AU [slytherin! lockwood x fem! ravenclaw! reader]. rivals to lovers (and a dash of 'everyone knows but them'). fluff and angst.
WC ➺ 17.4k
SYNOPSIS ➺ after a six year rivalry with lockwood, your patronus suddenly matches his when it didn't before.
DISCLAIMER ➺ reader is implied to be shorter than lockwood. appearance of harry potter next gen characters and a few ocs. lockwood calls reader 'sweetheart' and 'dearest vexation', (+'my girl). prefect! lockwood. jessica lockwood lives!! (i also headcanon him being a cunning-flirt, so lockwood might read slightly ooc.)
WARNINGS ➺ strained family dynamics (for reader). boggarts, and a lot of unpolished dialogue. QUILL KIPPS. blood and injuries (tending to wounds). mentions of kids and marriage at the end.
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⚜ PART 1 | SERIES MASTERLIST
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In true Slytherin and Gryffindor fashion, neither of the boys hesitated. Lockwood swung a hex at you. You deflected with a basic protego. He advanced, closing the distance to aim better.
On the other side, Daria flung offensive spells at James. She managed to cast levicorpus on him. He hung upside down, chained in the air. That didn't dampen the flames of his spirit. He threw more charms and jinxes at her. She responded just as quickly.
You almost lost sight of Lockwood before he casted an impressive disillusionment charm on himself. He melted into the background as your blood rushed. You opened your senses and spun revelios in attempt to unveil him.
James's feet found the floor thanks to Lockwood, and the Potter striked a petrificus totalus back at Daria. Instead of turning his attention on you, James nodded to the air and sat like his part was done. He was heaving but smirking.
The hairs on your neck rose and you turned to dodge a stupefy the still disillusioned Lockwood slung at you. You could only hear your breathing and your shoes tapping.
Every hair on your body stood as paranoia sunk in. You're tempted to give up, but you remembered who you were up against and regained your resolve.
You backed against one side of the cage, leaving three directions he could come at you from. In that position, he couldn't catch you from behind.
You'd obviously underestimated Lockwood's growth. The last time you saw him cast a spell as impressive as his disillusionment was the sleeping trance charm he used on the dragon. He used your lack of knowledge against you and you were both impressed and frightened by it.
You remind yourself that you were a Ravenclaw, one of the most highly acclaimed students under Professor Flitwick and the brightest witch of your age.
Everytime you won against Lockwood, it was because you were using your head. Then, it finally clicked for you.
You held out your wand and went on a limb as you spoke, "Accio Prefect Badge."
You heard a gasp to your left and spun your wand to cast revelio. Lockwood's face appeared, speeding towards you, left hand trying to remove the badge he often boasted about. You couldn't help but smile, raising your wand, ready to cast.
His wand rose to rival yours. You heard the beginnings of an explosion spell before adjusting yourself.
Your hand was furious and your lips moved at a speed you didn't know was possible. The beginnings of his firework charm surged towards you before the sound was cut off by the crippling noise akin to metal meeting metal.
The explosion was engulfed by silvery light. It swallowed the flames until all that remained was your patronus.
They say the devil's in the details, and you forgot about one in particular detail. Your smile faded as a silence befell the room.
Your patronus had stayed a crane. Its wings, pearlescent and broad as it hovered, a carbon copy of Lockwood's.
There was static in your ears. Your face drained of colour and your heart plummeted to your stomach.
The patronus's glow casted a faint veil between you and Lockwood. He looked back at you with a shocked but not surprised expression. Neither of you expected James to raise his wand and stupefy you.
Everything was all black for a while. You had no dreams. Yet, somewhere in the void, you began to hear giggles, familiar and chilling.
"Come on now," one spoke.
"Stumped by a stupefy!" another added, this one more energetic.
"And by Jamesie, no less."
"Potters are trouble," the other tutted.
The first gasped. "I saw her lids twitch!"
"We know you're awake already."
You cracked your eyes open, and, sure enough, you're greeted by two golden-haired rascals; Lorcan and Lysander Scamander.
Three years your juniors, they were Ravenclaw's notorious twins who were known to be as caring as they were mischievous.
Your throat dried, your neck stiffened, and you wished the duel was all a dream. You tried to sit up, to no avail.
Lorcan jumped into action, helping you up by propping a pillow behind you whilst Lysander passed you a cup of water. It wasn't spiked with anything, you pleasantly discovered. You finished the whole glass in one fell swoop.
When you shifted to return the glass to the bedside table, you felt a tug on your opposite arm and nearly jumped when you spotted curls of brown crushing your hand. He was slouched but there was no mistaking that resting sad face.
No wonder the twins were so smiley.
You turned to them. "How long has he been here?"
"Asking about him first?" Lorcan grinned.
Lysander cupped his chin. "That's awfully un-rival-like of you."
"Hush. Just tell me."
"Since you asked," Lorcan said with an attitude.
"Tony's been here since lunch," Lysander answered. You laxed. That wasn't so bad, it couldn't have been too long.
"Lunchtime yesterday," Lorcan corrected.
Your soul departed from your body.
"He would have come sooner if Madame Pomfrey didn't keep you under intensive care," Lysander continued, as if that was any better. "No visitors until she deemed you stable enough."
"He's very stubborn, you know."
"I think she knows, Lorcan."
"And you let him?" You kept your voice down but your tone was a borderline shriek.
"He wouldn't let up." Lorcan shrugged.
"Professor Flitwick said the best we could do is bring you two food and drink," Lysander backed up.
Your jaw loosened at the news. "The professors allowed this?"
The pressure on your hand lightened. Your lips smacked shut as Lockwood said, "I'm their best student, they let me do anything."
Say something smart, you told yourself. It's the only right reaction to an egoistic comment like that, but your mental function ceased at the rasp in his voice. His very, very groggy voice that made you feel like you've been hit by lightning.
One hand rested on yours while his other arm lazily held up his head. He looked like he was about to fall asleep again, yet, he looked like he hadn't slept at the same time. Gray swooped under his eyes, he turned more gaunt than the last time you saw him...
Goodness, the last time you saw him. Heat crawled up your neck.
The patronus. The crane, his crane. Now yours, too.
He knows.
The Scamander twins were on the same wavelength because Lorcan hopped onto an empty square of your bed and asked, "So... is it true?"
Lysander crossed his arms and placed them on the bed. "Did your patronus really change?"
"Did it?" Lockwood asked, just to drive the fact home. Though tired, he did that smirk-smile that you've committed to memory.
You blamed your near internal decapitation for your unaligned state of mind. You answered quietly, "It did."
Lorcan and Lysander exchanged looks. Bright-eyed, like they had just discovered a Fantastic Beast of their own. They both leaned toward you, forcing you to lean toward Lockwood to retain some of your personal bubble. He didn't mind, he even squeezed your hand to reassure you.
"How did it happen?"
"What was it before?"
"Did it happen consciously?"
"Did someone cause it to change?"
You didn't know which twin was speaking, their lips were moving at the same time. You processed their words before answering. "It just did. It was a giraffe. No, I didn't expect it to change at all. And I don't know."
The last answer wasn't really a lie. Lockwood didn't do anything special, but your patronus was now miraculously connected to his. He was involved somehow. You would be grasping at straws if you didn't consider your earlier adventures to be the catalyst.
Lorcan and Lysander had a whispery discussion while you drowned in your reverie. When they decided that they were sated with your answers, they waved you goodbye. You faintly hear a muttering of George's name and it all made sense.
George had sent the twins to gather intel because he knew you could never say no to them. That, or he was still upset at you over being dragged into the anti-Amortentia scheme. The bugger.
You sat up despite your aching head, but surrendered the moment Lockwood brushed a finger over your knuckles. It's odd to give in so quickly, but it was too late to go back on it.
Your eyes shifted to him and, just like before, his were already on you. A smile formed on his lips but it wasn't your favourite one. He gave you a tight-lipped grin that matched the ashen grey under his eyes.
"You were stupefied," he said.
You rolled your eyes and pretended not to see his smile grow. The weirdo missed seeing it.
"Unfortunately," he continued. "You had backed yourself too close to Professor's cage. The stupefy basically bludgeoned your skull against the cage and the protective spells sent you in the opposite direction."
Just hearing the technicalities made you grimace. You remained grateful he didn't mention Madam Pomfrey's methods of fixing you up. If you had broken your skull, you wanted to be ignorant of it. Lockwood understood your dread and kept the rest of the details to himself.
That still didn't answer the question that's been at the forefront of your mind. "Why are you here?"
He sucked in an audible breath, eyes wandering. Classic evasive Lockwood move. You already knew he was going to respond with a lie.
"Because I owe you one," he said.
You mastered the art of stoicism, but that didn't take away from the fact that it was harder to practise that time around.
"You don't owe me a thing," you replied, coughing away the dejection that bled into your voice. "We're even. The Romanian Longhorn incident, remember?"
"How could I forget?" He smiled at the floor. Another swipe over your knuckles that sent you into orbit. "But I would have been spell-bound for the rest of my life if you hadn't intervened."
Years—That's how long you'd been avoiding his eyes and how his emotions swam in them, but now, you couldn't convince your angel and devil to look away. Honey in a bottle eyes pried open so raw you physically felt the weight of his words, and then the shackles of your own guilt.
It clawed at your throat, coiling its gangly fingers around your windpipe and choking you until your fears were forced out. "You were spell-bound because of me."
He responded with a frigid laugh. "Are you kidding me?"
Your brows furrowed. "No? Why would I kid about something like this? You were under the influence of Amortentia. It's not the first time a tragedy had come from its misuse. Have we not learned from the story of Vol—"
The cold bit at you as he disentangled his hand from yours, pushing himself back to see you in full. "This is not about the moral of the story or what could've happened. Why are you blaming yourself?" He scoffed. "Sweetheart, you're not the one who tricked me. Some nutter did."
"Listen here," you gave a despondent sigh, crossing your arms and distancing yourself by pressing your back into the pillow. "She wouldn't have done that if you hadn't... been so fixed on me."
"Sorry, is that a sin?" He couldn't believe what he was hearing. "Fancying someone that isn't her isn't a crime. You didn't do anything to hurt me. What she did was the making of her own evils."
"Fancying? Lockwood– Nevermind that. She said—"
"You value her word over mine?"
"No!" Your heart clenched, your mind raced. "Merlin, no. I just mean that you would be better off without me."
Lockwood never looked so frustrated before. Not at you, at least. He pressed his lips together, fists on his hips as he paced.
Your eyes followed in wait. There's not much else you could say. You'd let the biggest resident of your mind go in that one exchange. You didn't take into account how anxious it would make you to see him react.
He stopped, as did your heart. You sat up straighter when he let his arms fall to his sides.
"You are the most despicable woman I have ever met," he said in one breath.
You had a lot to say about that. You were offended, humiliated, and humbled all at once. Yet, he didn't let you say a thing until he finished.
"And I could easily choose some other lovely lady who doesn't give me a migraine every time I speak to them, but I can't. Because I've been taken by you the moment you called me a twat for mistaking a llama and camel even though I am the raised as a muggle between us." He stole a breath to replenish his air. "And I try to make you understand that there is no getting rid of me, but your lack of awareness is equivalent of my lack of failure—"
You rolled your eyes at that and he cracked a smile.
"And if I had to guess, it would take about a million years and triple that of worshipping before I get you to understand that I am hopelessly, irrevocably in love with you; But I'm already aware, and I'm going to spend all of my mortal years trying, and then spend the rest of our reincarnations doing that over and over just so I can be yours. Don't even try to stop me, sweetheart. You know I never give up."
Your cheeks hurt from trying to repress a smile.
"Come on," Lockwood coaxed. "No need to be shy. You can smile, sweetheart."
And so, you did. But you didn't expect the waterworks to begin.
Salty tears slid down your cheeks and into your mouth. You tried to wipe them away to preserve the rest of your dignity in the face of Anthony Lockwood but it was for naught.
Your breath hitched as your chest constricted, but it's the first time you cried tears of joy. You couldn't help but laugh amidst the pain.
Years of trying to prove yourself to your family. Years trying to meet ungodly expectations just to earn your place at their table—they return to you at the same moment. You cried for every minute you fought for a modicum of love from people who preferred pride, all while Lockwood was right there. You didn't see it until he spelled it out for you.
Lockwood washed away the shattering memories with every swipe that dried your tears, then quelled the rest of your fears as his arms came around you.
He held you fast against him. "I hate to say it, but I love the way you keep my feet on the ground. Snarky attitude and all," he said.
Your head hurt from both the injury and the crying, but you'd never felt so seen, so loved.
It was pure instinct to try and hit him. That time, he let you. Your fist met his chest with a dull thud.
"Would you look at that," he chuckled against your hair. "You got me."
He earned a soft laugh from you, and you didn't see it, but he smiled your favourite smile.
You got him in more ways than one.
If you admonished one thing, it was whispering behind your back. The likelihood for people to do just that tripled since the patronus business got out.
You and Lockwood, renowned for butting heads at any given opportunity, had the same patronus. They were studying magic. Of course they knew what that meant.
In the recent days, you'd taken to hiding in the confines of the library. If not, you'd be tucking yourself in your room behind a good novel.
Lockwood had taken up the same hobbies.
You pulled a book out of its space to examine the cover, just to double take and peer between the space it left behind. You'd recognise that smirk anywhere. Only Lockwood would pose all suave against a shelf like that.
He smirked. "Like what you see?"
"I don't know. An ogre is covering a pretty, rebound version of Hogwarts, A History."
He laughed all dashingly then closed the book he pretended to read. He came closer, setting his forearm on the shelf.
"I open my heart to you and you wound me. You are a cruel, cruel woman."
"If you didn't like that about me, you would have handed your heart to someone else."
"Have I told you how much I love your feistiness?"
You cheeks strained from holding back a smile. "Bugger off."
He looked thoughtful for a moment, then duly decided to drop the act. "I don't feel like being obedient today. Come with me?"
You squinted at him. "Where?"
"It's a secret. Why, you scared, smart girl?"
You pursed your lips, miffed. "Please. You're the bigger pansy between the two of us."
His smile stretched. "Prove it."
"I will."
You returned the book to its place, locking Lockwood out of view. You heard his laugh and stifled yours as he was reprimanded by Madam Pince.
Calling Lockwood a danger magnet was putting it lightly. The man actively sought out danger like it was weaved into his state of being.
Somebody had to keep him in check, and some Higher Being had chosen you to be his keeper. So, there you found yourself, at the margins of the Forbidden Forest in the belly of the night.
"If I die, I want a special coffin in the likely event that my corpse leaps out and strangles yours."
"Sweetheart," Lockwood set his hand between your shoulders, easing you forward. "I'd be torn to bits before I ever let anything touch a hair on your head."
"Very reassuring."
He poked his head over your shoulder just to flash you a smile. "I know."
He chuckled as you shoved his face away.
Even if you were braced in your warmest cloak, the chill of being at the thresh of such a foreboding precinct of Hogwarts was overwhelming. It was like being face to face with a Roman Longhorn, except there were more than two eyes on you. You could already see their glowing irises peering at you behind the foliage.
They scrambled for the dark when Lockwood had casted lumos, lighting up the dirt path ahead. He eased his arm over your shoulder, squeezing you to him, before trudging on.
"What are we looking for?" you whispered. In your mind, the less creatures that knew you were ever in the Forbidden Forest, the better.
Students were punished to walk through the very path you were on, and here you and Lockwood stood, walking it on your own volition. Your reason for being there was to prove an arrogant Slytherin wrong, but you were walking the path regardless.
It took a moment for Lockwood to answer. He was already looking between the branches. "Promise you won't behead me if I tell you."
"I would behead you even if I did promise."
His lip quirked. "A spitfire as always."
You feigned politeness. "May I know now, please?"
"Since I'm doomed either way, I won't tell you that we're on the hunt for a unicorn."
Your feet dug into the dirt, halting Lockwood in his path. Disbelief written on your face. "A unicorn?!"
"Well, 'hunt' is an abrasive word. I suppose 'find' is a more apt verb—"
You slapped his chest, and he turned to you with a grin so blinding it outdid the lumos.
You motioned to the vast forest ahead. "Spotting one is as likely as becoming friends with a centaur."
"It isn't impossible," he quipped, as if that would inspire you.
"Lockwood," You pinched the bridge of your nose and exhaled, expelling all your murder ideations in the same breath. "You are as reckless as a Gryffindor."
"I take full offence. Gryffindors rush in with no clear goal. I, on the contrary, have a remarkable one."
You gave him the benefit of the doubt. "What would this 'remarkable' goal be?"
He was the picture of youth as he smiled. "To fulfil a childhood dream."
The nuance was lost on you. You trusted him to not have done something so particularly stupid.
He tapped your chin. "Why the face? You're the one who drew them all over your notebook."
You reeled. "Me? When?"
He looked dumbfounded. "When we met. You threw the whole notebook at me, remember?"
It dawned on you slowly. The cogs finally clicked into place, and you shoved him, just for him to catch your hand and grin.
"You remember it now?" he mused.
He let your hands fall between you, refusing to let you go.
Your cheeks warmed. "That was six years ago. Rowena knows where that notebook is now! I haven't drawn a unicorn since third-year Care of Magical Creatures."
He reclaimed his spot by your side, throwing his arm around you once more. "It's a testament to my impeccable memory."
"Your memory won't help if we're torn apart by rogue beasts," you chastised.
You expected a response. A real, apologetic response. But you watched as his eyes fell over your shoulder and simply stared instead.
You scoffed at him. "You are terrible—"
He cupped a hand over your mouth. "Shh!"
"Woat aye you loofing at?" You shook your head, freeing your mouth. "What are you looking at?"
A smile teased at his lips as he pointed over your shoulder. The glow at the end of his wand died, making the presence of the very real, very majestic unicorn prominent. Its coat shined like it was made of moonlight. You almost forgot to breathe as you watched it with the intrigue of a tyke.
Lockwood was much closer than before. His whispers loud in your ears. "Breathe, sweetheart. Can't have you fainting on me now."
You breathed a laugh then snapped to cover your own mouth. The creature craned its head around, allowing you to glimpse midnight blue eyes before it galloped into the trees. A short but worthwhile encounter.
Lockwood tugged on your arm, bringing you back to the present and leading you out of the forest.
You're still at a loss of words when you glimpsed his triumphant smile. "Not impossible," he reiterated.
You're on the brink of a laugh as you agreed, "Not impossible."
As you broke into safer forest, you realised that night wasn't over. Not for Lockwood, at least. His hand slipped down your arm before he twined his fingers with yours.
His smile brightened when you adjusted your grip to hold him tighter.
"We have one more stop before we succumb to sleep," he told you, leading you through the clearing.
Your curiosity grew as you passed Hagrid's hut. "Somewhere within Hogwarts, I hope. At this point, I find it plausible that you're scheming to sneak out to Hogsmeade."
A metaphorical lightbulb blinked above him. "Not yet, but that is a brilliant idea."
"There isn't a moment of peace when you're involved."
His fingers ghosted over your knuckles. It affected you more than you cared to show.
"Sweetheart, we both know we're susceptible to boredom when it's too quiet."
"I suppose," you hummed.
You did enjoy the cracks in the silence being filled by intelligent squabble or nonsensical arguments. But only if they involved one audacious Slytherin.
Your thoughts turned to static as torchlight began to cast a golden glow in the grass. This clearing was the opposite of empty. Torches and cages inflated where the air should have been. What fit in the cages were what stole the air from your lungs.
Lockwood was absolutely joyed that your first reaction was the dropping of your jaw.
The cages were filled by dragons. Luckily, asleep. The same ones that were supposed to be there for educational purposes.
You heard that they were on the loom for being transported back to Romania, but you never thought that they were being kept this close to the castle.
Lockwood led you by the hand, further between the cages. They shrunk in size until you were at the end of the line, facing a chillingly familiar face.
You laid a hand against the grainy bars, close but not too close to admire the sleeping beast. "The juvenile Romanian..."
Lockwood stared down at the nameplate welded against the bars. "Her name's Gorgonzola."
"She's named after a cheese?"
Lockwood chuckled. You felt the shake of his shoulder through your linked hands. "We were almost wiped out by aged dairy."
"It's a good thing we quelled her then." You nudged his side, and he nudged you right back. "Now, we're able to admire her without the impending threat of death."
"If that incident hadn't occurred, you would still hate me," he chuckled. It came out soulless.
You were taken aback. You weren't his biggest fan, but it would be too dire to say you hated him.
"Lockwood, I wouldn't hate you."
"Well," he downplayed the frown in his tone. "we wouldn't be friends."
You turned to face him. The toes of your shoes bumping his. He looked up, surprise evident in his eyes. You were so close, he could see his own reflection in your eyes.
His eyes followed every movement of your mouth. "Sulking over a version of us that doesn't even exist, snake boy?"
The edges of his lips upturned. "Just considering the possibilities, sweetheart."
You recognised that spark of mischief anywhere. You only had yourself to blame when he'd closed the distance even more.
"Besides," He cupped your cheek, drawing you closer. His fingers tickled the underside of your ear while his thumb brushed your cheek. "I like this reality better."
I do, too, you intended to say, but the words died on your tongue. Your lips parted as he inched closer and closer. Honesty lulling you together.
You felt his lips land on the corner of yours, teasing. You hummed in dismay before he drew away, leaning in to finally—
"Hey! What are you two doing here?" The dragon's caretaker, most likely. By the sound of it, he wasn't happy to see two miscreant students skulking around.
Lockwood bit his tongue, holding back the urge to call out and tell them to shove off just so he had a moment to kiss you—but the look on your face sobered him quickly.
You didn't have the luxury of being involved in trouble as he did. Your family would know if you got into trouble. The dominos would fall, and a sad you was the kind of thing Lockwood casted spells to avoid.
He tightened his hold on your hand. "We'll get back to this," he promised.
You nodded firmly, holding onto him with the same intensity.
Though the moment was left behind, Lockwood clung to the vision of your eyes fluttering shut. Your lovelorn face seared into the back of his mind, keeping him up all night.
You didn't know where you and Lockwood stood at that moment in time. You were walking the line between more than friends, less than lovers. Wherever your feet were, you realised you had a lot to make up for.
If he caught you at the right time, you might just blurt out that you loved him, too. You'd been fortunate enough to have the restraint to keep your confession contained.
The thought of telling him felt like bearing your soul. You were unprepared for it. But there were new ambitions that stirred in your thawing heart. They all centred around one, Anthony Lockwood.
You tried to be subtle, but in Lockwood's eyes, you were as subtle as a gun.
You remained your verbally abrasive self (how he found it enamoring eluded you), but you picked up the habit of awarding him with a kiss on the cheek when he drapes an arm over your shoulders. He's yet to brace himself and melts every time.
In the same time frame, you magically found a way to duplicate your notes so he didn't have to hurt his hands to write them.
His hands were perfectly fine. Lockwood said you're insane for it, but you replied with, "have I ever been sane?"
To that he'd shake his head and smile a smile that encompasses a million confessions.
On another morning, a gaggle of first-years delivered a gift box of his favourite knacks from Weasley's Wizarding Wheezes and Honeydukes sweets. They told him it was from an anonymous benefactor but one look up and his eagle eyes spotted your poorly done disillusionment charm.
He thanked the kids with a smile and sent them off just so he could tap your disillusioned arse as he passed, then had the gall to chuckle at your yelp.
The rest of Hogwarts progressively became aware of the development. Professor McGonagall purposely seated you apart. Professor Flitwick did the opposite. Professor Longbottom occasionally tipped off ideas like hiding spots and locations with a view.
Even Peeves seemed to be aware that you were unofficially an item. To your utmost surprise, the poltergeist took it easy on you.
Your shenanigans began to pay back Lockwood's six years of unnoticed pining. The man of the hour appreciated them but his heart could not take that much affection. Realistically, it could, but he never passed up an opportunity to be dramatic about it. Especially when he caught sight of you in his colours.
It was the last Quidditch match of the year—his final match as a student of Hogwarts; Gryffindor versus Slytherin.
He wholly expected to see you among your housemates, sporting the deep blue you looked so good in or even in red, just to spite him, but his heart stalled when he spotted you in steal-his-heart green.
He knew it was you even from miles away because you were sporting his number and wearing his jersey. The very jersey you said you'd never wear, you wore with a smile so bright it makes the cloudy skies part just for you.
He was just about ready to abandon his broom when you blew a cheeky kiss his way.
"Lockwood!" his teammate called urgently.
Lockwood begrudgingly looked away. He leaned into his broom to chase the Snitch, but he couldn't pry his eyes away from you for too long.
At the tail end of the game, the Snitch hovered right in front of you. You stared at it while Lockwood lunged for it, catching it in his palm and (un)covertly planting a kiss on your cheek.
It sent the stands into uproar and secured another win for Slytherin. He pointed to you as his team threw him up on their shoulders.
"You–" He snatched you from your path, beguiling you behind a fluted column. "–are unbelievable."
You smirked when you whirled to face him, resting an arm over his shoulder. The other against his forearm—and you chuckled when you felt him flex his arm to impress you. He couldn't help but smile.
His nose bumped yours, taunting. Judging by the way you raised your head to follow, you wanted the same thing he did.
Unfortunately for you, he was still Lockwood. He pulled his head back to coax that scowl from you. It sent him back to the first time he'd seen that look on your face. The weight of the world lightened every time he saw it.
You're not one to sulk, or beg, or admit you want something. Of course, you changed the topic. "Congratulations on the win, Captain."
"Captain? I like the sound of that." He did his best to remain chivalrous, but the thought of slipping his hands under your—his—jersey to caress your bare waist was meddlesome. It was tempting, and he barely fought the urge by drawing circles over the shirt instead. "Call me captain again, sweetheart."
You must be getting back at him. He had no other explanation for the rapturous grin on your face. "You're being too kind . . . I'm never going to call you that again."
"You are cruel, have I told you that before?"
You laughed, and he felt your breath on his neck. He found it reasonable to assume you're experienced in torturing boys who are in love with you. He clamped his lips when you graced him with a kiss on his chin. So close yet so far. "You love that about me though."
His fingers dug into your sides, keeping you to him even when you tried to pull away. Your fox grin only grew, confirming that you were torturing him on purpose.
He was immediately pardoned from guilt. He slid his hands down, and then up; touching your skin with chilled fingers. His smile reached his eyes as your mouth parted for a gasp.
"I do," he said, playing along and kissing the corner of your lip. "I'm forever harrowed by the very thought of you."
His form of play is quickly dispatched once his eyes meet yours. The mischief died away, leaving something deeper. More amorous. Yearning.
"Anthony..." It's but a whisper, but his fingers grappled to feel more of your skin. You felt them at the curve of your ribs, holding you with the prudence reserved for a fragile thing.
He drew you closer, as if the proximity of your mouths weren't enough to sate his cravings. "Say my name like that again."
"Anthony," you mused.
You're flush to him. If you were any closer, you'd feel his smirk against you, on your lips or your skin. You weren't picky.
His voice dropped to a lower register. "Yes, sweetheart?"
You lifted yourself on your toes. You met his eyes, but they travelled to his lips with intent. His eyes fluttered shut, transfixed on your smell, your hand tangling into his hair, your breath fanning his lip—everything. You drew closer and closer. He almost tasted the satisfaction of finally kissing–
"You better not be snogging behind there!" Kat Godwin, the dementor in disguise. Now, the person you wished to throw into the Black Lake.
You groaned and rocked back. Lockwood held on to your waist, closing the distance and allowing himself the reprieve of pressing his forehead against yours.
"We'll come back to this."
"Third time's the charm," you hoped.
His pulse raced as you snaked your hands up his torso, bracing your hands on his chest. If he didn't love you so much, he would have felt betrayed for the way you shoved him into the open.
"Anthony Lockwood," Godwin tutted. "I should have known..."
He glanced back at you, glimpsed your smile, and decided that he liked you too much to be mad.
He turned back to Godwin with a smirk. "I'm positive I saw a roach run through here." His lip twitched when her eyes darted down the hall.
Lockwood watched you book it for the opposite hall, ducking out of sight and escaping trouble. You blew a kiss before you turned the corner and he found that he didn't mind being your scapegoat.
Lockwood was aware that your beauty and brains could charm even the deadest of hearts. Some days, he wished you didn't have the magnetism you did. He dreaded every second watching that Gryffindor boy scamper up to you, a rose in hand.
Lockwood wasn't one to be mean up close, but he found glaring from a distance to be fair game.
You looked up from your book, innocent and unknowing, with a smile made for a princess. You turned the lion boy away, of course. You didn't even glance at the Gryffindor boy's love offering. The sad chap went off to wallow on his own.
Your head turned at the sound of Lockwood's footsteps. A smile coming to you before he even reached you.
"Hello, snake boy."
Lockwood didn't dawdle. "He was chatting you up."
"You were watching?"
"It's hard to miss trollop."
Amusement danced in your eyes. He forgot how gracious you were when he was caught up in his own mind-matter.
You shifted to the side and patted the spot next to you. Like a puppet on a string, he sat. Leaving no space between you, his arm flushed against yours.
"You're jealous," you said, with a lot more merriment than he expected from you.
His brows furrowed. "He's a twat. I'm just glad you had the sense to turn him away."
You crossed your legs and set your hands on your lap, exuding confidence that made him forget his own name. "So, you are jealous."
"Indefinitely," he said mindlessly.
"My poor serpent boy," you cooed sympathetically.
Your hands found his cheeks, and he had no reason to complain. He even nuzzled into your hold.
"You're never this touchy in public," he muttered, appreciating the closeness. He dipped his head to plant a gracious kiss on your palm.
You spoke like the action didn't rile you up. "I know someone adores me enough to be jealous of a boy I don't even know."
You felt his smile against your hand. Yours grew.
He planted one more kiss on your other palm before he drew himself away. He fought the urge to lean down and steal your first kiss right then and there because he had something much more fitting planned for you.
"I know you hate breaking rules but this is the last time I'm coaxing you to, I promise."
"I don't believe that for a second, but if you're so convinced, I don't see why I shouldn't be involved."
He turned your hand, placing a kiss on your knuckle. "The Astronomy Tower, after hours."
"Are you mad? The Astronomy Tower has special protection charms on it's doors."
Lockwood was mischief personified with a grin like that. "Have you no faith in me? I swear by Merlin's name, by the time you sneak out, I'll have the door open for you. I am a gentleman, after all."
It was glaringly obvious that you lost your ability to say 'no' to him.
You'd become acquainted with the darkest halls in your recent trysts with Lockwood. You would be lying if you said you weren't sceptical this time around.
The Astronomy Tower, a heavily guarded place following the murder of the previous Headmaster, was Lockwood's idea of a good time.
It was no easy feat to get in, especially when it was dark out and the charms were upped for maximum protection.
You let the glow from your wand guide you through the halls. Once you made it to the base of the stairs, you're greeted by the sight of Lockwood. Suave and plucked from your dreams, he kicked off the wall and pushed the door open with ease. All while wearing your favourite smile. You could have kissed him senseless.
He bowed at the waist, flourishing a hand at the open walkway. "Ladies first."
"You are... unbelievable. You actually did it."
He held his palm out towards you, like an invitation to dance. "Did you ever have a doubt?"
"For a moment," you admitted, placing your hand in his.
"Anything is possible, if you have enough nerve." He punctuated his statement by kissing your knuckle, his eyes never leaving yours. He was luring you in, and it was working. "Shall we?"
You nodded, allowing him to guide you up the stairs, passed the landing before you set foot on the observation deck. The gold accents of the room shone, even in moonlight. The books that filled the shelves vibrated, like they were dying to open themselves and unleash the knowledge they held, and the skyline ceiling was so brilliant, you could reach up and feel it against your skin.
If you spoke the want to touch a star, you had no doubt Lockwood would take a shot in the dark just to make it happen.
"Don't look at the books, sweetheart. Look at me."
"But the books are so pretty."
He grinned, holding back the urge to say something cliché. You could guess what it was.
Instead, he said, "Plenty of time for them later. I have to show you something."
He guided you to the balcony, the night's chill amplifying the feel of his warm hands on yours. It was getting hard to act like your heart wasn't jumping for joy.
The wind tousled your hair, the stars dotted the sky, and Anthony Lockwood made everything look so much brighter.
He rounded until your back was against his chest, pulling you in until you felt the thrum of his heart against your shoulder. Arms wound around you to shield you from the bite of frost than rolled in now that winter was one step through the door.
You found that his pulse was just as eratic as yours. Fervent in every sense of the word.
You'd never been in this position with anyone. The proximity was jarring, but it was welcomed nonetheless. You laxed into him, and he eased into you.
You weren't paying attention to the view as you hummed. "This is nice."
"I know... I was waiting until you didn't want to decapitate me to bring you here."
You turned your body to rest your cheek on his shoulder. "It's not my fault you're insufferable."
"Is that truly your favourite word to describe me? I hear it plenty."
"You tell me, serpent boy. I don't remember every little thing about myself."
"Remembering the little things about you is my job, thank you very much."
You felt the rumble of his laugh through his chest, reminiscent of a cat's purr of contentment. It took everything in you not to bring it up.
All whilst Lockwood was trying to keep himself together. Anything that involved you took a lot of restraint on his part.
Unexpectedly, you broke the silence. Your voice, the song of a lark in the night. "Have I ever told you how much I appreciate you?"
"No, I don't think you have." He hated to put a distance between you but he wanted to see your lips make the words as you said it. "Go on and tell me."
He memorised the way your smile reached your eyes and the softness of your brightened cheeks as the stars reflected in your eyes. You'd always been beautiful, but you were vibrant now. He liked to think he had something to do with it.
"I don't hate the way you know me better than I know myself."
He cracked a smile, cupping your cheek with the tenderness one reserves for their most precious thing. "Come on, you're more eloquent than that, sweetheart."
Your smile widened, and you melted into his palm. "If the world allowed it, I'd like to go back and return every stolen glance, every missed confession, and every chance we lost to be friends sooner."
His cheeks hurt from withholding a smile. "We can move past our regrets. Besides, aspirations have changed. I don't just want to be friends anymore, sweetheart." His thumb swiped against your cheek, printing the image of you into his memory. "I want to be your life's confidant, your harbinger of hope, your worst nightmare, and the object of your dreams. I want to be everything to you, because you are already everything to me."
Of course, he had to outdo you in words.
“Cheesy...” you teased.
His thumb travelled down the curve of your cheek, flitting over the plush of your lips. It took everything not to steal you away as you pressed your delicate lips against the pad of his thumb, like his confession didn't have to be returned in words.
And you didn't seem to be looking for words at all. Your hands found his lapels. With a sharp tug, you finally connect your lips to his. Years fell away as he grasped your neck, holding you to him as your fingers slid into his hair.
You exchanged breaths. A mess of clashing teeth and rushing emotions. Judging by the fervency in his grappling for skin, you got an idea of how long he'd been waiting for this, for you.
Yet, he wasn't savage about it. His movements were eager but equally as careful, savouring every stolen second he had you all to himself.
Even as the air ran short, he couldn't fathom the idea of being too far from you. You broke the kiss, chasing oxygen. He rested his forehead against yours, heaving with a smile that could brave you through your worst times.
His thumb swiped over your lips once more, already missing you. "Would you find it pathetic if I said I've dreamt of doing that?"
"I'd be more flattered, really. What girl wouldn't want to be wanted like this?"
You disarmed him as you cupped his chin.
"Can't imagine," he replied. He bumped his nose to yours, and you leaned into him even more.
Should have known that the world wasn't kind enough to give you much time to yourselves. Both of you jumped into action the second you heard the clicking of shoes coming up the stairs.
Anthony refused to release your hand, even as you rushed for cover. Your whispered urgencies fell on deaf ears. You didn't get far enough to hide fully.
Your back was against the wall, hidden from sight. Anthony was not. You were whispering for him to just duck beside you when he clamped a hand over your mouth and posed for whoever appeared inside the Tower.
"Lockwood?" Lucy Carlyle.
You sighed in relief. You weren't in inescapable trouble after all.
"Hey, Luce! Fancy seeing you here."
"What are you doing?" A few more steps.
Anthony panicked. "No! Sorry–" He cleared his throat. "I... made a mess of a hex. It's a disaster."
You bit his palm, offended. The way he sputtered was victory enough.
"Really?" Lucy questioned, deep in disbelief. "You look completely fine... Except your hair."
"Terrible winds, really. The mess is off to the side." His smile was so unconvincing you could laugh.
Instead, you started a trail of pecks across his palm, travelling down to his wrist until he choked on air. Your heart swelled and mischief bubbled to the surface. You grew audacious enough to nip at his skin.
Lucy's voice rang out. "I can help—"
"Absolutely not!" Anthony winced at the crack in his voice. "I mean, I have it handled."
You heard a few more steps. Anthony laxed. You assumed Lucy was walking away. "If you say so..."
"Haha. I appreciate the concern, Luce. Let's keep this between us, hm?"
"Sure..." Her steps echoed as she toed down the steps. Before she shut the door, she added, "Say 'hi' to the Ravenclaw for me."
Anthony slumped himself against you, sulking as you laughed. "Not as sly as we thought, hm?"
"I've had better days..."
You ran your hands through his hair, attempting to right the mess you made of it earlier. "Then you're blaming the night?"
He raised his head from your shoulder. "Don't tell me you're about to side with the moon again. I'll start to think I'm competing with it."
"Well, the moon is beautiful."
"Oh, come off it. I'm so much better."
He took it upon himself to prove it, pressing your hips into the wall as he stole another ground-shattering kiss from. You surrendered, musing his hair to your heart's content.
Anthony thought that the perfect way to start off a relationship was to demonstrate how you two truly clicked in terms of cruelty. Not that you'd call it that outright. You'd crossed out Lockwood's 'revenge' and wrote 'comeuppance' in its place.
He eyed the plans from over your shoulder. "Does it make a difference?"
"Comeuppance is just karmic debt being repaid. Revenge sounds like it could be a crime."
"It's only a crime if we get caught."
That could very well be Anthony's life motto.
You rolled the scroll up and casted a hasty concealment charm on it, packing it away in the bag of supplies before you looked down the hallway.
"You go cause a distraction."
He guffawed, clutching his cloak like he'd been stabbed. "I came up with the plan. Why do I get distraction duty?"
"Because," you drawled, fixing his tie. "You're a sweet boyfriend who does anything to pacify his vengeful girlfriend."
"Defence is a pivotal subject in the field I'm aiming for. I could lose my career if this goes wrong."
"I can cover all our future living expenses, and we won't get caught. Swish away the pessimism, captain."
"I'm not being pessimistic. I just want to be the one flinging oobleck balloons."
You smiled faultlessly. "We'll miss our chance if we don't time this correctly."
His shoulders sunk, a grumble shaking his chest before he righted himself. "Do what you please. Just... don't turn me into a ferret. I heard a terrible rumour about some other Slytherin being turned into one."
"You have my word."
An enchantment here and a flick of a wand there, and a baby eagle stood in the place of your lover. You cupped him in your hands, cooing cordially as he nipped at your fingers.
If a bird could blush, you assumed he would have. You set him on the window sill.
A ways down, Professor Loathes-Your-Guts strolled by. Unassuming and grumpy as ever.
"As good as I am, it won't last forever. Off you go, Cinderbird."
Anthony squawked indignantly before you shoved him off the sill. He stretched his wings, working out the complexities of flight right before he hit the pavement.
His odd way of flying seized the Professor's attention right away. She caught him in her hands, stopping right where you wanted her.
Anthony freed himself as the first balloon careened down and splat against her head, drenching her in watered starch. You muffled a laugh as she screamed bloody murder. She had yet to get the sludge out of her hair before you dropped three more.
Blood pumping, Anthony flew right up, turning human right as he shot through the window.
"Save some for me!"
You kicked the box of balloons toward him, absolutely riveted by the scene you'd caused below. You looked far too good doing evil, and he was the Slytherin.
He dropped five balloons before Peeves uncovered the plot and took matters into his hands.
The poltergeist bombarded the Professor with the remaining ammunition and left the basket over her head as a consolation prize. While she shrieked at him, you and Anthony booked it—hands connected, boasting matching smiles.
Operation: DADA Comeuppance — Success!
And thanks to the spirit of mischief, you were never caught.
Anthony found it ironic that your favourite views were of crepuscular rays; those beams of light that slice through dense foliage or part the clouds to shine on dreary ground, because it's how he often described you—rarely letting the light in but always magnificent when you do.
You were standing under one of those rays as you bowed to a Hippogriff, once again setting an example for the class. It's to nobody's surprise, he's the first to burst into applause.
You glared at him. He mimicked your deep bow in response. The twitch of your lip was reward enough for him.
It wasn't long until the party was assigned to pairs. It was an easy guess as to who leeched to your side the second people broke off into their groups.
You waved your finger at him, as if that would keep him from you. "If you keep tailing me, we'll end up on the Bulletin'."
"I love a good word in. About us, specifically," he replied.
You shook your head, more endeared than disappointed. "Of course, you would."
"If I were you, I'd be showing off my new boyfriend."
"You say 'boyfriend' with so much conviction, you would think we've been going out for years."
"My apologies, m'lady. Would 'husband' suit your tastes more?"
"Lockwood!"
He withheld a smile. "You can call me Anthony, sweetheart. In fact, you can keep my last name for yourself."
Your mouth dropped into an 'o'. "I cannot believe what I'm hearing."
He took a more tentative step towards you, closing distance. "What are you hearing?"
"Nonsense. I hear nonsense," you replied. You were doomed the second your back hit a tree. Anthony wasted no time to trap you against it. "You are..."
He leaned down, bumping your nose with his. It was inertia that drew him close enough to touch lips. "I'm what– Oof!"
He clutched his chest after you pushed him away, smiling like you were faultless. "I'd like a ring if you are seriously talking about stealing surnames. A nice, awe-inspiring ring. Not a common one. Something privy to us."
He rubbed his shirt as he spoke, a smile teasing his lips. "How's about a house to start?"
Your visage changed. Genuine surprise marred your features. "You're serious?"
"It's a big house, and it could use a magical touch."
The way your lips quirked into a smile made him forget himself. A mistake he'll try not to make in the future.
Under the spell of your gaze, he hadn't seen your Hippogriff friend rush for him. He received a headbutt to the side and crashed into a tree. If that weren't bad enough, a fat fruit thumped him right on the head.
For a fleeting moment, everything went blurry. He saw you as a smudge in his vision. When he tried to talk, all that came out was gibberish.
"He's a friend," you explained to the Hippogriff. It gave a ninny and nudged its snout against Lockwood's side as a form of apology.
When he came to, he got a faceful of Hippogriff cheek. You waved the gentle beast out of the way before cradling Anthony's head.
His foul sentiments dissipated. Perhaps he should get bodied by a Hippogriff more often if that meant he got to see you this doting again.
"Merlin, Lockwood... I forgot she was protective."
"That's 'Anthony' to you, sweetheart, and 's alright," he slurred, blinking his vision back to clarity. He smacked his lips, luckily not tasting blood. "I get protective of you, too."
"Not the time to flirt, serpent boy."
"You're holding me. There is no better time to flirt."
"Alright, Casanova."
Your hands travelled to his wrist, assessing his pulse, then pressing into his side to check the extent of the damage. If this was a glimpse of how you'd be as a healer, he was already jealous of the patients you'd be caring for.
The second his brain fog cleared, he patted his pockets in search of his gifts.
You sat back on your calves, staring him down like the wind could blow him over. "Looks like minor damage."
"Excellent news," he rasped. He took your hand and placed a solid metal something in your palm. "This is for, if you choose to accept my invitation." He fished in his pocket for a second object. He placed that into your closed palm as well. "And this is for you in general."
The first object was a heavy silver key. The ornamental kind of key you loved to hold as a child. You stared at it with so much intensity, he was convinced you were trying to set it on fire with your eyes.
"You're just... giving this to me?"
Worry crossed his face. "Yes. If you'd like it, of course."
"I like it," you said urgently. "How could I not? I just... Don't I have to do something to earn this? Like, giving up a handful of galleons or marrying–"
He let go of the breath he was holding.
"Hold it there, sweetheart," he grasped your hands the second he saw your mind going in all different directions. "I want us to live together, no conditions. I want to be close to you." Of course, he had to add, “I know, I couldn't believe it myself.”
Your hands tightened around his. He'd let you squeeze his fingers bloodless if it quelled your worries.
He cracked a smile, relieved to see you giving the effort to return it. He carefully unravelled your hands to show you the second object.
You gasped. As would any girl when they're presented with a ring. It was the metal that complimented your skin best. A solid band detailed in engravings and decadent carvings. Your worry morphed into panic. With tense shoulders, your eyes flit to Anthony's.
"Relax," he mused, turning the ring in his hands and sliding it on your third finger. "It's not an engagement ring. It's a passion project of mine..."
Your shoulders laxed. "Thank Merlin... Hogwarts is not a place to propose."
"Agreed, and I'd never disrespect you by proposing so drably." He chuckled, examining the ring on your finger before brandishing his matching one. "They're a pair, loaded with protective charms and a trace. It functions as a handy portkey, too."
You raised your hand to the light, examining the engravings in full. "Why turn it into a portkey?"
"The trace tells me if you're in trouble. The portkey will take me to you the second you are."
Only a witch like you would fall in love with intricate spell work. It made you susceptible to melting for gestures as thoughtful as Anthony's.
He admired you as you admired the ring. His heart jumped as you quickly turned your head to kiss his cheek.
"Thank you," you whispered. The raw, unfiltered gratitude in your voice made him fall for you all over again.
His smile reached his eyes. "Anytime, sweetheart."
Waiting on the last train out of Hogwarts felt like some kind of catharsis. A journey that spanned seven years felt like a short car ride home. There was happiness doled by sadness, and sadness doled by happiness.
It was in Anthony's nature to look on the bright side, but it was difficult when he hadn't seen you since the awarding ceremony. You outdid him, of course. Bringing home one medal more than him.
His initial plan was to sulk, maybe play kicked puppy and finesse himself a kiss, but his anticipation blurred into worry as the train entered view, but you didn't.
He broke from the crowd, leaving his things with Lucy and George before going off to find you.
He didn't peg you as the type to take a last walk to your favourite spots, but he found you in the dingy Defence classroom. As much as you loathed the lingering stench, you exalted the memories in that very room. The only subject of concern was a boy toying with an empty cage on the far side of the room. Anthony turned a blind eye to the stranger, for how could he look away from you?
Your eyes, that were peering ruefully out the window, snapped to Anthony's. He felt the beginnings of a smile creep up.
Without warning, a wardrobe wove open, the hinges holding it together rasped as a black form ballooned out of it. Your gaze fell on it, and horror replaced the nostalgia instantaneously.
He'd never heard you scream so loud.
Blood rushed to his head. He found his wand.
You fell to the floor, clamping your hands over your ears with your eyes shut tight.
Vision in red, he turned his attention to the boggart that crushed the air in the room. It took the form of four figures; A horrific scene sampled from the many tormented stories plucked from the war...
He paused, finding his own tortured face staring back at him and your anguished one shackled, unable to help. The two remaining figures must have been members of your family, looming over you and watching you without compassion. They were your boggart.
He didn't hesitate to mutter the counter-charm.
The illusion burst. The boggart whirled back into the closet with the wardrobe doors crashing shut.
The boy Anthony hadn't paid attention to stood to reopen it but Anthony threw a stupefy right at him. The boy nearly dented the wall with how hard he rammed into it.
Anthony advanced, fury heavy in his steps. It only heightened as he realised who the boy was. It was the Gryffindor boy you'd rejected all those weeks ago.
"You have got to be kidding me." Anthony scoffed.
The lion boy's nose flared, turning him twice as ugly. Anthony might have felt bad if he wasn't furious.
He didn't give the Gryffindor time to recuperate before he drew him up by the collar and cracked his back against the wall. "You bastard. You couldn't take the 'L', could you?"
The boy's head lulled. Anthony had to give it to him, he thought he'd be out cold with how solid the spell hit him, but the tosser had the resolve to spit at him.
There was no guilt in the way Anthony threw him to the floor. He could have done worse if you hadn't called for him.
"Anthony."
He turned his head, relieved to find that you'd returned to normal. Save the red that rimmed your eyes, you were fine. You were the one thing that kept him from bludgeoning the roach on the floor.
No words were needed.
The Gryffindor laughed, repulsed. "So, you were with him this whole time? Godric... you're a bitch—"
"Quite the mouth for someone who'd stoop low enough to unleash a boggart on a lady," Lockwood said dismally. "I suggest you scat. Before I show you what each of my accolades mean."
Courageous as the Gryffindor was, he was brainless. "Did you hand a few to her for 'favours'? Hm?"
Oh, the number of jinxes the human body could handle before breaking. The boy was lucky you were there. Anthony was gentleman enough not to hex in front of a lady.
He sufficed with carving crescents into his own palms to restrain himself. "Serpents don't concern themselves with the opinions of sheep. I suggest you stitch your mouth. There is a lady present, if you aren't too blind to see her."
"Kiss up," the Gryffindor simpered.
Patient as Anthony was, you weren't. You hurled a spell at the Gryffindor. After a twitch, his head hit the ground.
You showed Anthony your palms when you were met with inquisition.
"What? Was I supposed to let him speak to you like that?"
Holding back a smile was futile. He was proud. "You're cute."
You stepped over the Gryffindor and returned his smile. "I know." You brushed the imaginary dust off Anthony's shoulders and righted the orientation of his medals before you took his hand. "As I remember, we have a train to catch."
He twined your fingers, bringing your hand to his lips to worship your knuckles. "Shall we, m'lady?"
"We shall."
You exited the classroom, hands intertwined, leaving behind an incapacitated moron. If the rest of your lives were going to be spent like that, you had no qualms with it.
"Have I told you how gorgeous you look today?"
"No." You looked at him expectantly. "Tell me."
He pressed a kiss to your temple and gave your hand a squeeze as he said, "My dearest vexation, you are a vision. Aphrodite herself would be green with envy."
Definitely no qualms there.
"Why is it that you travel by this rather than apparating?"
You were always a sponge for knowledge, but your eyes were particularly bright once the train had delivered you to Platform 9¾. It spat you right out into the muggle world.
Anthony realised that he had never seen you in all-muggle clothes, and he wasn't shy of staring. He was rightfully in a daze until you'd asked the question.
"Cabs take us directly to where we want without raising suspicion from muggles."
"So, they willingly spend their sickles on simply getting home? How impractical, and expensive."
He hid a laugh. "It is the way it is, sweetheart. Nothing we can do to change that. It's best you avoid saying 'sickles' though. It'll confuse them."
"Noted."
Anthony loathed the silence, but he made due with it. He had you for a view, after all. He recounted all of your details, down to the flutter of your lashes as the breeze caressed your face.
Weirdly enough, the ride to Portland Row was much shorter than he remembered.
He slipped out first, flattening a hand at the top of the cab's door and taking the brunt of the impact when you expectedly bumped your head on the way out.
"Sorry."
"Don't mention it. I did the same as a kid."
You kissed his cheek anyway, and he turned his head to the side to make the warmth of his cheeks discreet.
As he unloaded the trunks, you absorbed the Lockwood family estate as it stood: A tall, classical home with wrought-iron fencing leading to the bricked door arch and its charming knocker... the picture of a fine London home.
The only thing out of place was the irritating, freckled face of a neighbour Anthony hoped disappeared.
"Tony! Done with community service?"
You turned to Quill Kipps with a frown. Anthony withheld a laugh. You had never met the man but you obviously disliked him already.
Kipps straightened, realising that you were present. "You have a dame with you... Quite the looker, too."
"I have a name, if you had the mind to ask." You crossed your arms. Anthony found that to be a sign to look away. You had yourself handled. "I suppose the oaf with room temperature IQ has a name, too?"
Quill Kipps's smirk faltered. "He does." His eyes shifted to Anthony before he clicked his tongue. "Just trying to rile up Tony. Hope you stick around though, sweetheart. He could use a backbone."
Anthony soured at the nickname.
You didn't let up your glare until Kipps vanished from sight.
You shifted your heated gaze to Anthony. "Did you hear what he called me? How have you not jinxed him?"
"Trust me, I'm not a fan of him either, but he's a muggle. Trying to fight him would be bullying."
"The lack of justice!"
He snorted. "It's bearable. Now, come on. There's someone who's been dying to meet you."
"I can stupefy the freckled redhead double quick."
"Sweetheart, no."
He seized your hand to make sure you didn't run off and break a law, no matter how entertaining that would be for the both of you.
"I'm Jessica Lockwood! Jess is preferable. It's a pleasure to meet you."
Your arm almost fell off from the intensity of her handshake. The older girl was twice as energetic as Anthony and triple times as smiley.
Your boyfriend was the one who saved your hand by taking it into his. "Jess, I like my girl with both her hands intact, please."
"Don't kid. You'd still be smitten if she was cursed into a worm." She slapped her brother's shoulder. You kept in a laugh as he struggled to remain upright. She didn't forget you for a second. "Once Anthony starts talking about you, it never truly ends. I didn't believe he hated you for a second. When he 'complained' about you, he'd use phrases like *'annoyingly distracting'* and *'unfairly attractive'*."
"Jess..."
"The truth was bound to come out." She shot you a knowing look. "You can tell in the smile. He does it without knowing"
"He is terribly obvious," you doubled, holding his hand in both of yours in a pacifying manner.
His mouth fell open. "My word . . . It's been five minutes and the pair of you are already cornering me."
"This is the beginning of something beautiful," Jessica sang. She winked at you before meandering to the door next to the steps. "Now show her your room and unpack before dinner. We're having potato soup. Are you allergic, sweets?"
You smiled until both of your cheeks hurt. "Not at all. I like the sound of potato soup. Before that, I'd like to formally introduce myself–"
"There's no need for it, really. Anthony blabbed about you enough. I'll call you two down when it's ready."
Anthony lead you to the stairs by the shoulders. "Up we go, sweetheart. Before Jess says more than she should."
"I think she's a treat, Anthony. I wish I had a sister like her."
"She kicked me into a lake once. You wouldn't find her very nice if she did that to you, would you?"
"I would kick you into a lake, too, if you were my brother."
"Let's not open that can of worms, sweetheart. I want to be your husband. Obliviate this conversation from my memory."
You laughed, patting his knuckles sympathetically. "Torturing you is just as fun as laughing about it."
"You and Jess get along like a house on fire. That said, I'm not sure how long I'll stay sane."
"I'll save you a room at St. Mungo's." He fought a smile as you stalled on the taller steps. He was a goner the second you turned to wrap your arms around him. "You love it though. And you love me."
He sighed into your hair. "Unfortunately."
His arms wound around you, pulling you close enough for your heartbeats to sync. He nuzzled into your shoulder, and you did the worst thing you could possibly do: you played with his hair. He melted.
The prospect of you being in his forever home made a strange feeling bubble in his stomach. He figured it was what he had been looking for—a sense of fulfilment, or maybe he just needed someone to play with his hair the way you did.
Jessica's voice speared through the tranquillity. "No funny business, both of you!"
"Yes, ma'am," Anthony responded. He stole a chaste kiss from you before leading you to the first door on the second floor.
He should have known you'd go straight for the bed. You were always lounging or reclining if you weren't working. Anthony developed a disease that entailed observing you every time you did. He could probably paint a portrait of you, if he only had the artistic talent.
You stretched like a starfish, relishing the softness of the sheets that still smelt of him.
"I could die here, happily."
Anthony kneeled in the space next you to fix the blanket over you. "Sweet as that is, I like you better alive."
"I'll live and die here," you cooed, pulling him down beside you. "So much better than my room... well, my old room. My parents decorated the house like it was a prison. Seeing your mess can make any place feel like home."
"Should I be offended? You just called my interior decorating skills a mess."
"You're ugly enough to distract them from the mess."
"Thank you, sweetheart. Much appreciated."
"You're welcome."
He lowered his body next to yours, throwing an arm over your waist. The brush of his fingers on your stomach did not go unnoticed.
You took the liberty to rest your head on his shoulder, snuggling deeper into the blanket as you did. The perfect plot to hide your warming cheeks.
"Getting cosy, already? In my room?"
"We can share, can't we?" The way you looked at him made the temptation of a cosy cuddle difficult to resist.
"Jess would behead me, and I don't mean metaphorically. We have a collection of axes from pivotal historic events downstairs."
"Just a nap then. We have some time before dinner."
You made a good bargain. There was only so much saying 'no' Anthony could do to you before he bent.
"Just this once."
"Just this once," you confirm with an unconvincing smile.
"I am a gentleman, you understand that? We can't stay here for too long."
"I know."
"Then why are you smiling like that?"
Your smile only grew. "Cause I'll be the barbarian this time. I demand to stay here."
"Sweetheart—"
"My mind's already made up. Sleep, Anthony."
“My sister—"
"Sleep."
He tapped your side in surrender. He dragged the blanket higher to cover your shoulders. "If I am putting my neck out for a cuddle, might as well ask for your input. Though, the idea itself might be absurd."
"Anthony, 'absurd' means 'innovative' in your language. Spill."
"Is it possible to shrink a patronus? I was thinking about the practicality of a smaller patronus after I signed up for the auror training programme."
"It'd be more covert."
"My thought exactly." His expression turned pensive. "I might use it to get into the specialised auror squadron."
"Well," You sat up and wiggled your wand out of your pocket. "Only one way to find out."
He couldn't leave it alone. "First person to do it gets a tick on the Tally."
"You're just bitter I got one more medallion than you."
"What can I say?" He tapped your nose, bringing the smile back to your face. "I love the competition."
The spellcasting didn't cease, even after dinner had passed.
You found yourselves under the covers, using the space between you as an arena for your patronuses. So far, every cast came out a regular-sized patronus.
Anthony's eyes drifted to the glint of your ring every time it was your turn. The engravings came to life every time it came into contact with magic. He felt the pulse of it through his own ring. He shouldn't have felt as thrilled as he did, but he couldn't help it.
"Anthony. Are you sleeping with your eyes open?"
"No. Just looking at you."
Your lip curled. "Cheesy."
"You love it."
"No comment."
He laughed before picking up his wand. He concentrated as best as he could, but one glimpse at your face, and it slipped. His patronus emerged as it usually did.
Magnificent, iridescent, and face-slapping. Its silvery sands dissipated as Anthony received a well-placed smack to the cheek.
"That was worse than the last one," you snorted.
Anthony nudged your knee. "I'd like to see you do better."
Even if a million failed attempts already plagued you, you went through the motions. This time, the swishes of your wand were smaller and more slurred—like your wrist was limp as you cast.
Your patronus burst forth. Beautiful and respectable, and the size of a mouse.
"Aha!" You threw your hands up, sending the blanket flying and letting the cold air rush in. "I win! Get the Tally, give me my point."
"Merlin, sweetheart. Careful." Anthony chuckled, gathering the blanket and quickly chucking it over your head before getting up from the bed to fetch the notebook.
Your head poked out of the swaths of fabric, just to prop your chin on his shoulder and watch as he drew another line under your column. Two points more than his.
He leaned his head on yours. "Happy?"
"Very," you quipped.
The patronus trounced over his hand, soaring over your head like a halo before perching on his nose.
"Try it." You coaxed. "Smaller shapes, dramatic flicks."
"You're going to laugh if it fails, aren't you?"
"When do I not?"
The crane flew over to the nightstand, preening it's feathers before cocking its head at Anthony. Urging him to go on.
With a sigh, he gave in and gave it another go. The first attempt was as bad as the last. The second one worked like a charm.
His patronus skipped the usual fly around the room, preferring to head straight for yours, landing next to it and dancing around it before they took off like butterflies in the wind.
Your lips parted for a yawn. Anthony felt your weight press against his side, his arm instinctively finding home around your waist.
"How late is it?" Your eyes were too bleary to read the time.
Anthony found the clock. "A quarter to midnight." He hauled you closer, settling you against the pillows before dimming the lights. "I think we're due for some shut-eye."
"A Slytherin who values a proper sleep schedule . . . Boo!"
He didn't even try to fight you. You were already swaying.
You felt his chest rumble as he spoke. "We can stay up then."
"Your idea, not mine."
Your head rested against him, the steady lub-dub of his heart pounding against your cheek. He felt yours against your ribs as he rubbed circles under your shirt. Even then, he couldn't tear his eyes away from your miniature patronuses.
They lit up the room like restless twin flames. Your eyes followed them, too, but not for long.
The combination of the patronuses' light and Lockwood's gentle massaging proved to be an effective sleeping pill. It wasn't long 'till your earlier words were void and your breath evened out.
"Thought we were staying up," Anthony whispered, more endeared than anything. He couldn't help but place a kiss on your forehead.
The curious thing was... your patronus hadn't disappeared, even as you slept.
The pair of tiny cranes danced in flight. Nipping playfully before beautifully looping around one another.
He observed them for a while more before the drowse began to creep in. He dispelled his patronus, and only then did both of them disappear. Never leaving one without the other.
He cracked a smile as he slipped the blanket tighter around you, blessing your head with another kiss before he, himself, succumbed to the symphonies of sleep.
When life spun from essays and practicals to work and elbow grease, Anthony often found himself thinking of the future, of the past and where the two met in the middle.
He wondered if you ever missed the opulence of living in a pureblood home: The fluted columns, the glistening chandeliers, and the sunlight that streamed through ceiling-length windows.
He'd stare at the back of your head, feeling the doubt creep in. Then, you'd turn and chide him about some miscellaneous argument you refused to let rest, then all would be right in the world.
On a particularly gruelling day, he traipsed straight to bed without breakfast, too tuckered out to even lift a finger.
He heard you and Jessica chattering while you cleaned downstairs—moving furniture and kicking the ol' vacuum back to life. Sometime after dusting the bookshelves, you carefully opened the door to your (Lockwood's) room—mindful not to wake him with its creaking. He watched you through lidded eyes. You didn't notice his blinking.
Your hands glided a cloth over the nightstand pictures. When you'd reached the family portrait, you smiled. He found himself holding his breath.
"Your son is a dolt, you know," you snitched as if they'd be ready to gossip with you. You brought the picture to the light and rubbed away a stain on the glass. "Can't even take care of himself these days. He's lucky Jess and I are here to scold him . . . But he is a good man. A polite, romantic, and utterly chaotic one," You took a breath to calm yourself. "but I can't bring myself to hate him more than I... Well, I can't get the word out, but I will eventually. I've only been here for a while but living seems so much easier now. Not to alarm you, but it may have something to do with your son."
It was complete agony to continue feigning sleep after that. You cleaned the other night table, then adjusted the blanket so he was fully covered.
You left the room like you hadn't taken his heart with you.
On the dreaded eve of his parents' death, you approached him as he scrutinised the chipping paint and the stick-on stars on the ceiling.
Detached wasn't an apt word to describe how he had been acting all day. He was somewhere else mentally. Not even Jessica could break through to him.
"Jess told me to check on you," you said quietly, trying not to startle him.
All he did was hum in return.
You filled the empty space on the bed. "Anthony . . . Grief is just love with nowhere to go." You set your hand on his cheek, carefully swiping over his cheek, catching tears that have yet to fall. "No need to repress anything in front of me, serpent boy."
He took a shuddering breath. The first time he truly took a breath all day. It shattered you as his eyes glazed over. Even then, he refused to look at you. Refused to show you how torn up he was.
"I just... I miss them, but it's been so many years since they left. I thought–" He sucked in a breath, pinching the bridge of his nose just to cover his eyes. "I thought it would be easier. It's supposed to be easier."
You shifted closer, the bed dipping at your weight and bringing him closer to you. He thought he'd seen it all, but he'd never seen that kind of softness on your face. You pried his fingers away and wiped his tears yourself.
He was reduced to a little boy, and you were still sticking around. No barbs, no sharp sarcasm. Just your caring eyes and even more careful hands grasping his cheeks.
"Grief never really leaves, Anthony. They're your parents, of course you'd miss them." You mustered a smile, but it only revealed the tears gathering at your eyeline. "But you don't have to feel it alone. Jessica is here, and she loves you more than anything. It hurts her to see you so distant." He reached up to hold your hand in his. Your melancholic smile stretched. "And I'm here, too. You'd have to be pretty daft to forget your roommate."
He managed a smile, squeezing your hand in silent thanks — just before he had felt his façade fracture.
Anthony sat up, pulling you onto his thighs and wrapping you in a hug that was all-encompassing. He hid his face in your shoulder, and you rubbed his back as he finally let the tears free.
Sobs racked his body, his heart picked itself apart once more, but at least he could breath. Keeping all of the heartache to himself was like holding his breath. There was only so much he could hold before he needed air.
He didn't know how long Jessica had stood at the door before you beckoned her closer. Another pair of arms came around you two, washing away all the misplaced guilt he'd been stewing in since morning.
It didn't make him miss his parents less, but it reminded him that there were still people he got to hold hands with. And you were right, it was easier than doing it alone.
The conversation at dinner was a calm one. Less on banter and more on planning what to do in the morning.
The general consensus was to pick up flowers and bring some things to picnic with before visiting the Lockwoods' graves.
Jessica hugged Lockwood extra tight before letting him turn in for the night.
You glued yourself to his side the second he slid into bed. The responsibility of initiating skinship usually was on him, so, the change of pace was heavily appreciated.
He wrapped an arm around you and pressed a kiss to your head in unspoken gratitude.
You fought your nature to fall asleep first, just to stay up with him, but your resolve crumbled after your third yawn. You drifted off. Your arms didn't budge, and he was relishing the closeness for what it was.
Though, his mind wouldn't stop turning.
He never heard his parents' story, but he knew his mother had been a half-blood. He wanted to know how they met, if his mother's patronus ever changed, if his father had fashioned something from muggle magic to impress her.
So many questions that would remain unanswered forever.
He reached for his wand when insomnia had stolen enough hours of sleep from him. In the darkness, he whispered the enchantment.
His patronus burst forth, silvery and glorious... and not alone. Contrary to his previous casts, he summoned not just one crane, but two.
The pair of them remained quiet, for your sake. They perched on the armoire opposite of the bed and preened one another. He was entranced by their obvious affections, only breaking from focus when you shuffled in his arms.
The patronuses faded away, and you blinked into the darkness.
"What are you up to?" Your voice was heavy with drowse. Anthony fought the urge to pinch your cheek.
"Nothing, sweetheart." He glided a hand over your eyes, coaxing, "Go back to sleep."
You grumbled. "I saw something, you liar."
"Just a trick of the light."
You eyed him with sleepy uncertainty before your head went limp against his shoulder once more. "We'll come back to this," you swore.
Anthony pacified you by rubbing your back. "You bet, sweetheart. Now get your beauty sleep. I can't always be the prettier one."
He didn't have to tell you twice.
Not long after, his own eyes began to droop with the twin cranes still swimming in his mind.
The last time the sky had been this alive was the night Anthony had stolen you away to the Astronomy Tower. It felt like a lifetime ago.
You barely even noticed the extra luminescence of the moon or Anthony, who had been waiting for some form of acknowledgement all day.
Grunts were your definition of olive branches, and he wasn't having it. He stole the page from your hands and raised it above his head.
Your response was snap. "Anthony... I don't have time to dawdle."
"Why are you so worked up?"
You flailed your arms, gesturing wildly to the hulking stack of papers on your desk. "The warden at St. Mungo's wants to speak to me, personally. I need to be ready."
He read your scrawl on the paper, quickly giving up on trying to understand what it all meant.
What you dove into was far beyond the field of study in Hogwarts. Madame Pomfrey clearly took her role as your mentor seriously. You were advancing quickly.
"My girl," he said with a laugh. "You're the only witch who can commit a twelve-foot scroll to heart in the span of two hours. You'll be fine."
He loosened his grip on the paper as you leapt up to snatch it back from him, sitting back down on your chair with your lips pursed. Stress lines forming where your smile lines were supposed to. He hated seeing you so... consumed.
He wondered if you'd been hiding that face behind the four walls of your bedroom before things had changed between you, back when medals were currency in your home rather than achievements.
"This is a once in a lifetime opportunity... and it's being handed to me. I have to put my best foot forward." Your hold on the page turned sentimental. "I can't mess it up, Anthony."
He set his hands on your shoulders, and you surrendered to his touch. He took it as a good sign and cleared himself to kiss the top of your head.
"You are the best at what you do," he assured. "No one can compare. I'm not just saying that. You genuinely scare people with how much you know." He spun your chair to face him, tilting your chin to see you. "My dearest vexation... You've got this, and I've got you."
Your shoulders dropped with the intensity of your sigh. "I don't know what to do... I might forget something I'm supposed to know."
"You could never." He scrutinised your work desk before he made the decision. "What you need is a break. Dance with me?"
He drew you up by both hands, guiding one of your hands to rest on his shoulder. When your eyes drifted back to your stack of papers, he killed the lights so you wouldn't be able to see them.
You laxed as soon as the room plunged into the dark. That left you, Anthony, and the glow of the moon and streetlights.
Anthony returned his hand to yours and hummed a sentimental tune to lead the dance.
You leaned into the music, resting your head against his shoulder. He, in turn, rested his cheek against your head.
"This reminds me of our first dance," you mumbled.
"How could I forget?"
You concealed a smile in his shirt. "A lovely dance on the balcony after you kissed me senseless."
"It takes two to tango, sweetheart." He pulled closer, basking in the yelp you let out. "And my hair didn't stand a chance in your hands."
"In my defence, the tousled look suits you." You had the cheek to peck the juncture between his shoulder and neck. "Like the princes I used to read about."
"Charming."
"Don't be salty, captain. You'll always be my favourite." You rubbed his shoulder as a gesture of peace.
"As I should be."
You chuckled. "You're smirking. I feel it."
"You can't even see me."
"Don't have to," you chirped. "I know you."
"I've never met a woman so cumbersome."
Your head jerked back. Even in the limited lighting, he could see the scowl on your face. "You know other women?"
He couldn't hold back a grin. "Merlin, you are so jealous." He pressed a kiss to your temple, a gesture of truce. "You're my only and only vexation, spitfire. Everyone and everything pales in comparison."
You opened your mouth with the intent of giving a smart answer, but he shot you down before you even said it.
"Don't bring the moon into this."
You sealed your lips into a smile. Your worries slipped away, and you relished the few minutes you stole for a moonlight waltz with your lover.
In the two years you'd lived together, he'd picked up on your ticks. And you, his.
When you lightly bump your forehead against his cheek, Anthony knew it was your way of demanding a kiss. He never denied you one.
You learned to wear loose shirts to sleep because Anthony liked to slip his hand up your bare back and feel the up-and-down motions of your breathing as you slept.
He never forgot to bring home a little keepsake from work for you, accompanied by a single flower you got to add to a growing bouquet in the living room.
Anthony often got colds in the winter seasons, but he retains his reverent hate for the smell of Vix. So, you made your own impromptu mint remedy with lemongrass and ginger. To him, it was so much better.
Last but not least, a new chess board found home in the receiving room. The pieces only move when you and Anthony arrive home from your respective statutes of work.
Gist is, you had a routine, and you knew what to do for every boyfriend-shaped hurdle life had in store for you.
Imagine the panic that hit you the second your enchanted ring started to warm and shake.
The day was dark and ruthless. Rain pelting down like cats and dogs. Electricity had gone out as well.
You were wary to answer the door, since you were home alone, but you did so anyway because your ring had only grown more restless.
Your heart ceased in your chest as you took in the sight of Anthony. He couldn't even hold himself up. Lucy and James were doing that for him.
You choked on nothing. "Merlin..."
You reached out. Like a moth to a flame, Anthony gravitated to you. Falling into your arms and sighing into your shoulder like your presence alone could suture the injuries that marred his figure from head to toe.
"We took him to St. Mungo's," Lucy elaborated, clutching her own side. She was less beat, but she was still slouched in pain.
James had taken over when she wheezed for breath. "He fought every medi-witch that approached. Said he just wanted to come home and see you."
"You twat," you scolded in a whisper. It took most of your energy to keep Anthony upright. You schooled your expression, offering a mustered smile to his companions. "Thank you for bringing him home. See yourselves to St. Mungo's. I'll cover your tab when my shift rolls by."
James hooked his arm around a limping Lucy, offering you a grateful smile before producing his wand and apparating in the guise of the rain.
Anthony was tracking blood and mud wherever he walked. It was useless trying to get farther than the living room. You'd rather have a tarnished sofa than a bloodless boyfriend.
"What happened, Anthony?" Your tone was firm, but quiet—careful of a headache that could be blooming behind his ears.
You tore off his coat to get to the scratches on his arms. Repairing him one injury at a time. Even if the injuries were gone, his skin was still drenched in his own sweat and blood. It was a mess, and you'd be damned than leave him looking so trodden.
You accioed a basin of water and a handful of washcloths to your side. Swiping away grime as you healed him.
Only when you began to unbutton his shirt did he find his voice.
"We're moving a bit too fast, sweetheart. Where's your decorum?"
Your gaze held bite. He chuckled like his smile would save him.
"Where's your mind? You've been unresponsive for five minutes! I thought you were stewing in the after-effects of a psychological curse—" You drowned a blood-stained cloth in the basin of water, watching scarlet swirl into the clear water before moving back to his shirt. "—and I'd have to give you a permanent room at the ward, and then break the news to Jess—"
"I'm fine—"
"But I'm not!"
You sat back on your calves, taken aback by your own tone. The backs of your fists pressed into your eyes, forcing your tears back in before returning to assessing his wounds.
He was quiet as you examined the deeper gashes slashed across his torso. Your hands swiped at your cheeks before your lips moved, muttering cures and charms that stitched him up like new.
You wiped the blood away, but you wrung the cloth like you still saw blood. On the fabric, on your hands, on his skin.
Your voice was devoid of life as you asked, "May I see your back?"
He winced as he sat forward. At least the pain wasn't as unbearable as earlier. He saw some herbs swirling in the basin, so it was safe to assume you'd taken extra precautions to make things as painless for him as possible. His heart wrenched as you repaired him and dirtied the water with even more blood.
"I didn't mean things to get messy," Anthony told you slowly. He felt your hand pause on his back, then continue with more careful intent. "The suspect had an accomplice we didn't account for. Had us outnumbered... and they had a spell book full of vulgar spells. Nasty ones."
"So, you took the brunt of them?"
He chanced a smirk. "You know me too well."
"You're reckless."
"I couldn't let my subordinates get hurt," he rasped, sucking in a breath when you purposely pressed down on an open wound.
You magicked it away and cleaned the blood, but you refused to meet his eyes the whole time.
Finally, the insistent shaking of the linked rings faded. It calmed your pulse by a fraction, but nothing could cease the trembling of your hands.
Anthony took the liberty to take them in his, your matching rings clinking against one another.
"I'm here... I'm okay."
You hung your head, forehead meeting your twined hands. "I almost lost you... I couldn't find your pulse right away, and there was so much blood—all I could see was red. Anthony—"
"Shh." He closed the space, flattening himself against your side and drawing you into his chest so you could feel the familiar thrum of his heart. "We're okay. I'm so sorry, sweetheart... I didn't mean to scare you."
You sniffed, hiding your face in his neck. "Why didn't you accept help from St. Mungo's? They have blood banks to replenish what you lost, I can't do much about that here."
He held you tighter, rubbing your arm as he racked his mind. "I thought it was too late for me... I just wanted to see you. I wanted to come home."
You hit his chest once, seething as you sobbed. Your tears wet his shoulder, but he didn't stop you. He took your rage until you went boneless in his arms—clinging to him like it would calm the racing of your heart.
Eventually, you picked yourself up to gather another cloth to wipe away the bloodstains on his face. Hands still shaking but determined to restore him to full health.
As low as it was, he still heard you. "I love you, you know that? It's impossible for me to remember a time where you weren't around."
He searched your eyes, finding nothing but morose truth in them. It was the first time you'd said those three words to him. Explicitly, without sarcastic connotation.
He caught your wrist, lowering your hands so he could look at you. "I know... and I love you, too. I'm sorry."
"Then why put your neck out like that? You promised me a ring, Anthony Lockwood. You gave me your word. You can't do that if you're gone."
"I'd never forget," he promised, kissing apologies across your palms and wrists. "How could I when it comes to you?"
"Then tell me why you put yourself in so much danger— in so much pain."
He licked his chapped lips. Your eyes pleaded for explanation, and he'd be cruel not to suffice you with an answer.
Reluctantly, he retrieved the box in his pocket. It was the only thing untouched by blood. Your eyes snagged on it immediately.
Anthony chuckled, nervous, before popping the case open. Inside sat an ornate ring, embellished with your birthstones put together. An eagle held yours in its talons, and a snake held his in its mouth. Your identities intertwined.
Whatever words you wanted to get out died in your throat, mouth hinging but never uttering a word.
Anthony tried his best not to stutter. "They tried to take it from me... I didn't let them. You can imagine that they weren't happy with being deprived of such a beaut."
You sunk into yourself. "You almost died... to save a ring."
"Your ring," he said carefully. "If you still want to have me as your husband, of course."
"I have half a mind to say 'no'." You laughed bitterly, swiping at your cheeks. "Merlin, Anthony... You have terrible timing when it comes to presenting things like this."
"A lot of realisations happen when you walk the line with Death."
He readjusted his hold on the box, refusing to let go of your hand. You admired the craftsmanship of the ring before you leaned on his shoulder.
"Promise me you'll never do that again. I'd rather have a husband than some hunk of metal."
He let out a breath of relief, hugging you to him as you smiled into his shoulder. "Rude. I learned how to craft a ring just for you."
"You crafted this?"
He felt the world hold its breath as he slid the ring onto your finger. A perfect fit for his perfect match. He kissed your knuckle to further cement the notion.
"From scratch," he boasted. "I made a killing from the pen business. I used the money to take some lessons from a smith in Hatton Garden."
"I cannot believe you..."
"You didn't believe me when I said I cleaned your desks before you'd arrive to class."
"That's different," you said promptly. "You almost got yourself killed to preserve a ring."
"That ring brings me one step closer to marrying you," he tutted. He even leaned down to steal a kiss. "It was worth it."
"I would have brought you back from the dead just to strangle you if you did die on our new sofa."
"Good thing I didn't."
You cracked a smile. "Good thing you didn't," you agreed. "But I'm not forgiving you so easily. You gave me a scare, Mr. Lockwood. I hope you know that you're not allowed to hug me tonight."
"I thought near-death would warrant me extra hugs."
"I can give you everything else, just not hugs."
"How cruel..."
You waved your hand dismissively. "Take it or leave it. What do you want while you're not allowed to hug me?"
Anthony wanted a lot of things. The cheesy dynamics in the books you read, the happily ever after where the couple ends up married and in love with a kid or two. He wants your kids to look like him but act like you, so you two wouldn't spend half the time greying from stress. He wanted to be part of your story forevermore.
But holding your hand would do for now.
He tangled your fingers together and kissed your knuckles. "This is enough for me."
Disbelief was written all over your face. "Really? I thought you'd be more combative."
"We have all the time in the world, sweetheart. We can live in the moment."
"I can only hope you don't jump into some other death-defying scheme again. I'll be all grey before you."
"I think you'd look like the snarkiest grandmother ever."
"Thank you, my love."
His brows furrowed. "My love?"
"What's with that reaction?" Your arms crossed. "Fine. I won't call you that."
"No! I was playing. Say it again, please."
"You lost your chance, snake boy." You shook his hand off, standing from the couch.
You didn't get far. Anthony latched to your waist, smiling into your shirt. "I pledge to never approach a renowned criminal ever again. Just say it again. Please, Sweetheart? Spitfire? My dearest vexation? M'lady?"
You didn't even get close to picking up the basin before Anthony snatched it from you.
"When I get back," he said sternly. "I want to hear you say 'my love' again. Even just a whisper. Thank you."
If you were subject to his clownery for the rest of your life, it wasn't that bad of a price to pay. He was thoughtful when he used his brain.
Every Slytherin boy needed their Ravenclaw girl to keep their ambitions from getting them into trouble, after all.
It wasn't long 'till Lockwood crashed back into your arms. Spinning you in the air like he hadn't been on the verge of death minutes prior. His eyes were wide with expectation, and you didn't want to torture the boy for too long. Not after the lengths he went to to keep your ring safe.
You exaggerated the sweetness in your tone as you said, "My love."
Anthony was more than ready to hear those words for the rest of his life.
Neither of you noticed the pair of cranes that soared past the window, announcing the end of the rain and welcoming the beginnings of a wonderful season.
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BONUS ANGST ➺ If I didn't include Jessica, Anthony would be able to see Thestrals. You would do some absurd things to distract him when you pass the carriages—even when you were rivals.
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⚜ PART 1 | SERIES MASTERLIST
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SWEETHEARTS ➺ @kiyasoup @toddandersondupe @locknco @onecojg @avdiobliss @mentallyillsodapop @mitskiswift99 @mischivana @bella-rose29 @wordsarelife
NOTE ➺ expecto patronus was the title because the initial idea was they always protect each other :>
i like to think mitski's 'my love mine all mine' was the song they danced to. so romantic~ i'm just baffled that i was able to write so many words XD all this was once just brain barf, crazy. it was a rollercoaster, but i hope you enjoyed 💙
as always, leave your thoughts in the comments or reblogs, i love hearing feedback <3
love always 💙 until next time, my dearest vexations 😘
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⌠ @novelizt 2023 ⌡
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ourgoddessathena · 5 months
Text
EXPECTO PATRONUM I ☁︎ ANTHONY LOCKWOOD
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⚜ PART 2 | SERIES MASTERLIST
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GENRE ➺ HOGWARTS AU [slytherin! lockwood x fem! ravenclaw! reader]. rivals to lovers (and a dash of 'everyone knows but them'). fluff and angst.
WC ➺ 13.7k
SYNOPSIS ➺ after a six year rivalry with lockwood, your patronus suddenly matches his when it didn't before.
DISCLAIMER ➺ reader is implied to be shorter than lockwood. appearance of harry potter next gen characters and a few ocs. lockwood calls reader 'sweetheart' and 'my dearest vexation'. prefect! lockwood. (i also headcanon him being a cunning-flirt, so lockwood might read slightly ooc.)
WARNINGS ➺ strained family dynamics (for reader), love potions (misuse of magic), dragons on the loose, wizard duels, and a lot of unpolished dialogue.
NOTES ➺ it's been a long time coming. i hope this finds you when you need it 💙 happy nanowrimo !!
this was originally a one-shot that got split in two. please read part two after this to see their happily ever after 💙
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For every Gryffindor came a Slytherin waiting to trouble them. You thought you were in the clear after you'd been sorted into Ravenclaw four years ago. So, you questioned how you had the misfortune of being vexed by a serpent such as Anthony Lockwood.
He boasted the status of being the sole muggle-born Slythern in your year, as well as a colossal thorn in your side. He made it routine to test you. You knew his M.O. well enough to recognize the sound of his footsteps before he even reached you.
"We're learning advanced protective charms in Defence today," he announced like you didn't speed through the syllabus already.
You didn't have to look at him to know he was sporting that lilted smile of his. If you were in a bitter mood, you might have even slung a hex at him.
Luckily for him, you just wanted to get through the day. You quickened your steps. He followed like a parasite.
He even had the gall to bend at the knees to be at eye-level with you, the right side of his mouth curved higher than his left. "Come on, sweetheart. Not even a nod of acknowledgement?"
"If it will get you to leave me be..."
You granted his request and even offered a stiff nod, hoping that would suffice.
You hoped too much because all he did was grin and return to his regularly scheduled goading by matching your stride.
"Away with you," you shooed.
You threw your arm out, aiming for his shoulder. He caught your hand before it even made contact—giving your knuckle a quick tap just to aggravate you.
"I know that trick, sweetheart." He unfurled fingers from yours, slow and deliberate. "Let me walk you, at least. I am a gentleman. Oh– Don't make that face. I really am!"
"If you are such a gentleman, you'd pay attention to my request and leave."
"Suddenly, I'm a barbarian." He shot you a wink that made you wish the floor would swallow you whole. "I could do much worse, you know. Have you heard of oobleck—the stuff muggles are raving about? Bet you'd have a jolly time finding out how to get a non-Newtonian fluid out of your hair."
He feigned a yawn, dropping an arm over your shoulders and giving your arm a subtle squeeze to drive home the fact that he had no intentions of letting you go.
"Arse," was your gracious response.
"Oh, don't be like that. If you are going to play that game, I do have a divine rump. So do you," he said without missing a beat. He played a fool to your slack jaw and widened eyes. "And would you look at that! We've arrived to your classroom. That wasn't so bad, was it?"
If only looks could kill.
Your systems stalled when he dipped his head and planted an ever-cheeky kiss on your temple.
It was futile to throw out a fist to dent that pretty face of his, because he caught your hand before you could even land a hit.
"Cheeky," Lockwood crooned. He tapped your nose before letting you go. You made a show of flicking off the invisible mites he gave you. "Nice try though, sweetheart."
"You—" When you tried to stomp on his foot, he veered out of the way, finessed as a Chesire.
At that point, you knew you were fighting a losing battle. You lifted your chin and crossed the threshold into Potions, ignoring the exorbitant waves and kissy faces he made at you.
Your classmates levelled you with looks of intrigue but you ignored them, too.
Of course, Lockwood had to have the last word. "Remember not to mix up your asphodel and lavender. Wouldn't want another smokey incident, would we? You basically handed me that perfect score."
You tried not to shrivel when a ripple of giggles disrupted the stillness of the classroom.
You threw a nasty look over your shoulder and turned sour when he left, his laugh echoing down the hall. You estimated that he'd be a few minutes late to his class, even if he had to run to make it. Poor chap.
Finally, you were rid of him, but the newly realised smell in the room replaced his slot as your morning vexation. The smell of old parchment, clipped grass, and (much to your bereavement) the Lockwood Stench viscerally assaulted your senses.
You blanched, falling into your seat. "Heavens, did he leave his perfume in here? It smells awful."
As if seeing his face wasn't bad enough, he managed to be the subject of your irritation even if he was absent from the room.
James Potter II, your seatmate and friend, laughed. Eyes crinkling like he knew something you didn't. "He, meaning Anthony Lockwood?"
Your lip curled at the name. Even while preoccupied by your review notes, the smell clouded you. Your attempts to wave away the stench only made it stronger.
It wasn't the worst smell in the wizarding world but you'd rather go through the only class you don't share with him without the incessant thought of him. A huff left you as you came to peace with the fact that your nose would lose its sense eventually.
James's most devious grin stretched across his face. "That's Amortentia over there."
Your breath caught. He jutted a finger at the cauldron that sat at the end of your two-seater desk.
Surely enough, the brew had a pearlescent sheen with curls of peach smoke spiralling into the air, infecting the room with its fragrance. Now that you'd been made aware, your ribs felt too right for your lungs.
Your laugh came out stiff. You coughed, hoping it sutured the cracks in your façade. "I was mistaken then. I only smell the Quidditch Pitch."
James hummed, unconvinced.
Time passed slower when you were dying to forget the incident at Potions. Your eyes kept jumping to your watch before the middle of the day had even passed.
Classes had come and gone, and a certainly foul smell clung to the walls of this classroom—as was always the case for Defence Against the Dark Arts. For a moment, you missed smelling the amortentia, then jolted at what other thing that implied.
You knew class started when your peers fell silent, listening attentively on tipped toes. It was every man for himself on days the tables and chairs were pushed to the side of the room.
"On this fine day, we are covering a very tricky, but very utilised charm." The Professor circled the room, inspecting posture and wand grip as she passed.
For a moment, her eyes fell on you, and you stiffened under her gaze. Her lip quirked, like she found comfort in scaring you.
You were made aware that she was a rival of your grandmother's, back in their heyday. You surmised that because she couldn't get one up on your grandmother, she transposed her efforts onto the next best thing: You, and she wasn't afraid to show it.
Her heels clicked, grating your ears as she went on to terrorise a few more unfortunate souls in the way. The vast majority were daft to her impartiality.
She went on a lecture about the charm's importance in the Battle at Hogwarts. You were about to doze off when she slapped her wand against her palm. "Now that the lot of you are in your fourth year, I feel that it is important to know how to cast it in light of grave circumstances."
She waved her wand and muttered a few words before a silvery line jumped from her wand, spinning in the air and illuminating the room before taking on the shape of a rabbit.
The silvery manifestation hopped along with great speed, passing you briskly and making you stumble.
A hand caught your arm before you hit the floor. You were quick to retrieve yourself when you realised that it was Lockwood. You tuned out his mild laugh as you turned away without thanks.
The patronus then skidded to a halt at James's side, speaking in the Professor's voice. "I expect you to know this, Mr. Potter."
It dispersed and a vicious applause shook the room. Even you found yourself wide-eyed in exhilaration. Fighting the fact that the professor was rude, the patronus charm was something you'd been dying to learn way back when.
In the midst of the celebration, your eyes caught Lockwood's, only to find him already staring. There was a pinching sensation in your gut. It forced you to look away. You missed his smile completely.
The Professor ordered the class to break into pairs. Lockwood glued himself to your side before you could blink. He was shooing people away before you could even shoo him away.
"She's got a nasty temper, that one. Wouldn't want her patronus to lunge at you."
"I will have it bite your head off," you murmured, watching a nice Hufflepuff back away. Thus, leaving you alone with the bane of your existence.
"You're too nice for that," Lockwood replied, tapping your side with a half-smile.
"You just said I have a temper."
"With me, yes. But I can handle you."
You had a lot to say about that. The Professor spoke before you could.
"Now," Professor mused. Her voice bounced off the walls in higher vibration. "Using the instructions in your books, attempt to cast your patronus. Remember! The lighter the memory, the more efficient the patronus."
A chorus of turning pages echoed. You and Lockwood withdrew your wands, already knowing which spell to use.
His lips quirked. "Did some advanced reading, did you?"
"You know me so well."
You shook in anticipation, but, after shortly regarding your partner, you refrained from looking too eager.
"Dunderheads first," you urged with false cheer.
The insult flew over Lockwood's head. "Gladly. I like to think my patronus would be a lion."
You couldn't help but snort. "I assume yours would be a housecat with a lot of overgrown hair."
"That would be you."
You had an inkling that he found joy in watching you frown.
After a long while and a generous amount of griping, his wand moved, and he muttered, "Expecto patronum."
A silvery burst of light exploded from his wand. Wisps spun in the air before the dust settled, revealing a crane. It stretched, showcasing several inches of its incandescent neck and wingspan before Lockwood waved his wand once more. The motion sent it in a circle around the room.
It was so majestic, you couldn't pry your eyes away. Other students stared in envy as the crane weaved past other patronuses, nipping at them playfully before soaring back to you.
Wait, not to you... At you.
You found your feet, ready to duck before the silvery bird crashed into you, but it never did. It dispersed before it even touched a hair on your head.
It was an explosion of silver sand. It brushed your cheek with unexpected warmth. The cold seeped into your robes as the darkness veiled you.
"Shame." Lockwood clicked his tongue. "Thought I could freak you out a bit. I couldn't hold it for too long, though."
"Truly a shame," you simpered.
Professor's applause rang out from the other side of the room. Likely for Lockwood's expert execution or his taunting you. Mayhaps both.
"Good work, Mr. Lockwood! Keep practising and your patronus could glide over the Atlantic one day."
"Hear that?" He brightened at the compliment, standing taller as he leaned toward you. "It's your turn, dunderhead."
The number of hexes you could have used . . . You didn't need them. You needed happy thoughts to conjure up a patronus. It was hard enough standing in the same room as Lockwood and Professor Loathes-Your-Guts.
Your inspirations were of holidays and golden scores; your parents' approval; Lockwood falling on his face during Quidditch (your lips twitched at the memory); and the muggle fantasy novels you hid in your room.
A warm feeling shot down your arm, heartening you to mutter the enchantment. The feeling wrapped around your body like a blanket, and when you opened your eyes, your own patronus stared back at you.
It stood metres above the rest, towering over students and patronuses alike. Wisps of silver waved to and fro its body. The only apt description for it was 'colossal'.
"Is that a giraffe?" Lockwood muttered.
"No, It's a pelican." You smiled at his frown. "Of course, it's a giraffe, Lockwood."
You'd never seen one so pretty.
It glowed so bright that Lockwood looked blue in its light. He spared you a look of resignation.
You win.
A swell of pride came to the surface before the patronus wilted away. The space it stood turned black.
Hollers rung out, shaking the bricked walls. A new wave of excitement seized the room. You didn't even glance at the Professor but you could feel her heated gaze on the back of your head. That was victory enough.
Three years following that day, you're harrowed by the thought of leaving this place behind. Hogwarts felt like home, more so than the one you shared with your parents.
It was difficult to imagine life without the sky above the dining tables or the constant presence of Prefects scolding lower years.
Soon, your rivalry with Lockwood would fade to the black, too. As far as you knew, the fool was gunning to be an auror. Becoming one yourself wasn't a path you were inclined to take.
You passed the hourglasses of House Points and watched as more trickled into Slytherin's glass, and you felt nothing. The fact that you came to peace with having less points should have been concerning. Your mother would scorn you if she ever caught you thinking that way.
Not wanting to linger, you turned for the dining hall.
You didn't flinch when a weight fell over your shoulders and Lockwood's pretty face invaded your periphery. You should have known he couldn't leave you alone for too long.
"Lockwood."
He grinned. "My dearest vexation."
Your nose scrunched, irritation injected with the smallest feeling of familiarity. "Don't call me that."
"Copy that," He smiled, dragging you closer by the arm around your shoulders. "sweetheart."
It was a lost cause to correct the priss.
"I thought you would've matured by now. Disappointing, really."
"I could be mature, or I could point out the fact that we have fifty points above Ravenclaw."
"I don't mind."
He stalled, and you stopped with him. You didn't really have a choice when he had you under his wing.
He searched your eyes, bewildered. Unsettled, even. "What's on with you?"
You tried to shrug him off but he held fast, fingers practically melded to your arm. "I'm fine, thank you very much. I just don't see the point of upholding this... this–" What was this? You didn't finish the thought before swaying the conversation elsewhere. "We're graduating this year. Might as well set an example for the first-years."
"Our squabbles make it fun for them." On the brink of being offended, he insisted, "They have plenty of examples as is. Kat Godwin sucks the life out of everything, George is best friends with Moaning Myrtle, and Lucy is off talking to the illusive Gray Lady."
You groaned. "That isn't the point."
You made an attempt to shove him, but he caught your hand.
"You have got to start thinking of better ways to express yourself other than hitting or shoving. You should know I always see it coming."
"I can express myself just fine," you respired, yanking your hand away. "But do go ahead. Indulge me. What, pray tell, does that make us?"
Lockwood flourished his free hand as he spoke. "We are 'the arch rivals who makes their problem everyone's problem'. The lower years adore it!"
"Do they?"
In time for your asking, a group of second-years waved at Lockwood, and then to you. He waved back whilst you offered them a terse smile.
One of the girls elbowed her friend. As whispery as her tone was, everyone still heard her. "See? Told you they suit each other."
"They are a couple. Of course, they do," the friend replied.
"Not a couple," you corrected swiftly.
They scurried faster. Before they left the hall, one yelled out, "Just kiss already!"
Despite his matching flush, Lockwood turned to you with a cheeky grin. "You heard them. Let us kiss." He advanced, lips puckered.
You blocked the way with your palm, spreading your fingers until you could push his head back by his forehead. "Yeah– No."
You pried yourself free from his grip to sit with your friends. He didn't fight it, but you weren't surprised that he shouted after you. "But I was right! We have to give the audience what they want!"
"Mr. Lockwood!" Professor McGonagall stood to reprimand him.
You turned away to hide a laugh.
The day was lovely. The previous day's rain left a dewy haze in its wake. It was chilly but not cold, and the sun and clouds looked remarkably friendly that morning.
Even then, you didn't know what it was. Your stomach churned for a reason unseen. In the stillness, you could hear a pin drop. You could hear yourself think for once.
Not long after the nagging feeling arrived, you came to the horrific conclusion that Lockwood's absence felt off-putting. You were walking to potions class alone, for the first time in years.
There was no Anthony Lockwood galloping behind you, throwing his arm around you and messing up your hair when you shrug him off. There was no warning as to what your class would be covering that day or a passive-aggressive jab about the most recent Quidditch match.
And, bizarrely, you missed the chaos. You shuddered as the thought struck you.
You held your books tighter and quickened your pace to get to class. When you arrived at Potions, Lockwood-less, your classmates stood to verify the emptiness of the doorway for themselves. Even they were puzzled.
James cocked a brow as you sat and laid out your items without a noise. "Where's lover boy?"
"Using his brain and finally leaving me alone," you responded, wincing at the hint of exasperation in your tone. You didn't mean to sound so dejected, and you definitely didn't intend to slam your things on your desk either. There's a lot of things you didn't intend to do today and 'mentioning Lockwood' was now at the top of that list.
"Mhm," James leaned back in his seat, eyeing you warily. "You don't look too happy."
"I stayed up late doing that essay about counter-potions," you reasoned, having a hard time getting the words out.
James looked pained when you mentioned it. Seconds later, you stifled a laugh when he admitted to forgetting all about that assignment.
Contrary to what you'd promised yourself, Lockwood remained in the back of your mind the entire period.
When had Anthony Lockwood ever been interested in Oriana Cai?
That's the first question that popped into your head as you watched him kneel before her with a bouquet of the reddest roses you'd ever seen.
The display was so unexpected, it knocked the air out of your lungs. Your jaw fell slack. James had to pick it up off the ground before you came back to your senses.
In that time, Oriana squealed and clapped, throwing herself forward and strangling the bane-of-your-existence in a hug he enjoyed a little too much. The flowers ended up discarded on the floor.
You had more sense than to gawk. Your chest constricted when Lockwood didn't even acknowledge you as you passed. You shook off the feeling along with the sense of dread you felt from earlier.
His affairs were none of your business, yet, you found yourself thinking about it when you didn't intend to. It's a stake to the heart that his scheduled banter and crude comments were put on hold for whatever that was.
Lockwood had forsaken his seat across from you in favour of sitting with Oriana and her clique. They laughed all through lunch break, his teeth on display, stuck in an unmoving smile.
He looks like a clown, you thought as you skewered a floret of broccoli onto your fork.
You glanced at the professors' table to see if they'd caught onto Lockwood's bizarre behaviour, but they were daft to it.
To any normal person, Lockwood was being a silly boy with a crush. To you, it was abnormal.
Lockwood didn't have the balls to be that forward. How could you say that without sounding obsessed with him?
"If you stare any longer, you might actually burn a hole through his head." James nudged your side and you returned it with a harder shove. "Woah! Cool down, smarty pants. I'm on your side here. I'm just saying, glaring daggers at him won't do much."
"He's being odd," you whispered petulantly.
"I know!" James set his elbow on the table. "What are you going to do about it?"
"Me? Why would I do anything?"
Your eyes landed on Lockwood again. You sucked your teeth before looking away.
James snapped his fingers, forcing you to look up as he pointed an accusatory finger at you. "That. That's why you would do something."
"I don't meddle in Lockwood's affairs. He can do whatever he wants," you said tersely. "If he's so immersed in his romantic life, I might as well get ahead and score more points for my house."
"It bothers you, doesn't it?"
"No." Another unfortunate vegetable faced the wrath of your fork. James flinched. "It doesn't bother me in the slightest."
"If you need me to help, just give me a bell." James vacated his seat, gave your shoulder a firm pat, then went off to check on his cousins, praying none of them caught whatever Lockwood's got.
You stewed in your own thoughts before you gave into temptation and looked at Lockwood for the last time. For lunch, at least.
He blinked rapidly, like there were stars stuck in his eyes. The distorted look on his face dissipated when Oriana popped a wad of gum into his mouth. He chewed and chewed until the colour returned to his face. Redder than before.
You tried to shovel your conspiracies down with your lunch. You even chewed slower to put your focus elsewhere, but you couldn't shake off the dread that roiled in the recess of your mind.
"I can extend my essay by three paragraphs," you said to Lockwood in the library, attempting to coax him out of his stupor. "I'd beat your record."
"Yeah." He sighed, daydreaming. He hadn't written anything in his scroll. His competitive spirit died somewhere between his confession and now.
You slid into the seat across from him and waved in his face. He looked right through you, staring at the wall. When you followed his gaze, your expression fell flat.
He wasn't staring at the wall, he was staring at Oriana Cai, again. She wiggled her fingers at him, giggling behind her hand.
The moment she saw you, she didn't even attempt to hide her disdain. Suddenly, the library felt colder than before. For the first time in forever, you couldn't find the right words to explain it.
You watched Lockwood's change of behaviour with a scrutinising eye. You managed to pick up on a few things that changed.
First, he was infatuated with Oriana Cai. You caught them snogging the other day and you had to hold your breath to keep your lunch down. So much for decorum.
Second, he'd lost all interest in everything other than his girlfriend. He hadn't mentioned Quidditch in the past week, and he didn't have a modicum of concern for his plummeting scores. It was a scenario you never thought possible.
Lastly, Lockwood had a newly acquired addiction to bubblegum. Not just any type of gum. It was Bombarda of Flavour: Berry Kiss.
With a bit of research, you discovered that BOF was a brand run by Oriana's family. Any sane person would assume that Lockwood was an avid fan of his girlfriend's family business, but you were everything but sane.
When you presented the facts to James, he continued to chew on his liquorice. "And? Where is this going?"
"The sweets are infused with Amortentia," you concluded.
James stopped, stared at his liquorice with distrust, then threw it into a bin. "How can you be so sure?"
"Cai's family runs a gum business. Lockwood's been acting weird since he started chewing the gum Cai brought him. It can't be simple coincidence."
"So, not only are you accusing Cai of spiking gum with amortentia, but her family of being an accessory to misuse of magic as well?"
"They've got to be aware of what she's doing, at least! And they're not stopping her, are they? They're just as guilty," you said fervently.
"Fine," James relented. "How are we going to prove that and save your guy?"
"He's not my guy."
"Sure."
You cleared your throat before sitting down. "We need to steal from the potions classroom."
"You are... insane."
There was a bated silence that followed. You raised your brows at him.
He cracked a smile. "I'm in."
Potters had a speciality for breaking rules. You came to that conclusion after James, Albus (James's younger brother), and Scorpius Malfoy managed to steal the ingredients you needed without being caught. They looked quite proud of themselves too.
You wasted no time laying out your theory scrolls and recipe book.
"What's she doing?" Albus asked.
"Saving Lockwood," James answered as-a-matter-of-factly.
"I knew something was wrong with him," Scorpius rasped. "Knew something was up with them too."
You silenced him and ordered James to escort the boys back to their dorm. They didn't go without a fight, but James was experienced enough to wrangle them away.
"Lockwood—"
He passed you without a second glance.
Your heart flatlined, but you fought against the feeling and recalled why you were there. You steeled your resolve.
With shining eyes and pulled shoulders, you pivoted and captured his arm. The indifference in his eyes was an arrow passing straight through you.
You had to swallow the lump in your throat to find your voice. "Could you try this for me?"
There was no readily available remedy for amortentia, leaving one with the mere hope that its effects diminish over time. The problem was that Oriana Cai had a continuous supply of bewitching gums intentionally keeping him under her enchantment.
You used all your potions knowledge to concoct a solution that would—cross your fingers—work. It was blended into a scrumptious looking cookie thanks to the expertise of culinary enthusiast, George Karim.
You were worried that he wouldn't even give it a try, but he took the package from your hands.
"Thanks."
He walked away without a second thought. It tore your heart in two, but he accepted the cookie! You raised your arms in triumph, stopping short when he tossed the cookie and its cute wrapper out of the nearest window.
Your excitement plummeted along with it.
You took a chapter out of Lockwood's book and persevered. He no longer competed with you to answer the professors' questions, but you took every chance to goad him into a debate. All for naught. He barely did anything anymore.
You tried to cure him several more times with the same anti-Amortentia solution. Three times to be exact: ice cream, soup, and—your most desperate attempt yet—gum.
In the end, he'd throw them all away.
All he would put in his mouth was anything Cai spoon-fed him. It made you want to throttle him.
Lockwood was a capable wizard, and the witch had reduced him to something short of being a man-baby.
On your worst days, you'd reluctantly admitted to missing the banter. Even his annoying grin; the one that rose higher on the right side. The same one that had eluded you since the beginning of term.
The seasons changed. Oriana Cai still had Anthony Lockwood under her thumb.
You melted into the velvet blue couch, sighing to the starlit window of Ravenclaw turret. Even the sheer beauty of the common rooms did little to console you.
You draped your arm over your eyes. "Who knew things were this boring without that pest?"
James, who wasn't even supposed to be allowed into the tower, grasped his chest. "Ouch. What of the rest of us?"
"Rowena!" shouted George. You jumped when he slammed his book shut. "I thought your raving about your books was bad enough. Just tell him you miss him already,"
He was done with you sneaking James in to concoct whatever else you were thinking up. He had lost the plot. At that point, even he was versed in anti-amortentia theory.
"She doesn't miss him," James sighed, bored. "apparently."
"I don't," you said promptly. "Karim, you should be more concerned. Your friend is being spelled into being a muppet."
"I am concerned," George retorted hotly. "But I am so sick of staying up 'till Merlin knows when to find out what you're going to spin into a dish next. I can't even study in peace!"
"We're not that bad, are we?" Looking for backup, you propped your chin over the back of the couch, shooting your most precious smile at your youngsters, Lorcan and Lysander Scamander.
Lorcan shook his head, and Lysander nodded his.
"It's a draw," James chuckled.
Frustration poured from George. "Can you please just find somewhere else to scheme? I want to study and not hear 'Lockwood' every bloody second."
"Fine." You hugged your pile of recipe pages to your chest. "We'll go somewhere we're appreciated."
"Oh, please. Don't go too far. The end of the world doesn't actually exist," George nipped.
James snorted, amused.
You closed the door behind you, finally giving Ravenclaw Tower some much deserved silence.
Another crumpled up piece of paper rolled on the rim of the bin before unceremoniously falling out.
You knew your onions, but this was getting tedious. After wasting hours relishing in the staleness of your coffee and the soreness of your fingers, you were just about ready to throw in the towel.
James had left you a bit ago, something about helping Lucy with setting up the flying lesson for the first-years.
They were probably done with it by then and you were still there, trying to brainstorm a method that would knock some sense back into the tosser you called a rival.
About a metre of wasted scroll and dried ink were the results of your efforts. Even then, you didn't reach a plausible solution to your problem.
When you succumbed to your headache and glanced at the clock, the lateness kickstarted your bloodstream. When you stood, you swayed from the dark spots that danced in your vision.
You didn't allow yourself to stay in a haze for too long. You had already missed two and a half classes by the time you broke out of your reverie.
The halls were all empty. You were bound to be in trouble.
You were a punctual student, an excellent student. You were miffed that all it took for you to slip was the absence of a boy. Pathetic. Then again... The boy was what made winning fun.
Your brisk walk quickened to a jog, dreading the inevitability of explaining your tardiness.
"Sweetheart?"
You paused, opening your ears.
Silence.
You scoffed and picked up your stride. Then you heard him again, saying your name. It was odd — odd enough for you to realise that it wasn't a figment of your imagination.
His voice was a trap and you submitted to it too easily. You spun back around to trace the voice and stopped short of the bend. Anyone would have stalled at the rare sight of Oriana Cai angry, her nails sinking into Lockwood's cheeks.
Bile rose to your throat.
Lockwood's back was pushed flush against the wall, he was fervently shaking his head like he was shaking the daze out of his system.
"Quiet!" she commanded him. "Darling, I'm only doing this for us."
His hand closed around her wrist but whatever the potion had done to him left him fatigued. "No, my—" He licked his bottom lip, correcting himself. "She's—"
"Not here! How many times am I going to tell you?"
To your relief, she retracted her nails from him. Your heart started back up when she produced a pack of gum.
"You're better off with me, Ant. I love you, not her. She's nothing but a bitter wench who didn't realise what she had until someone took it from her. See how she only looks for you when we're together? She's selfish!"
"You don't understand," he tried to slap the gum from her hand but she was more sober than he was. For the first time in a long time, the right side of his mouth tipped up. It wounded you. "She needs me. She just won't admit it."
Oriana didn't take it well. Her face bursted in shades of red. Her beautiful features twisted into a grizzly scowl. "None of her!"
"Expelliarmus!"
Your hand quivered as you casted, but your magic did what it was meant to. The gum flew from her hand.
Her glowering face turned to you with killer intent.
"You!" She flew at you. Her billowing robes a thing plucked from your worst nightmares.
Your hand flicked instinctively. "Expecto patronum!"
She shrieked. Your silvery protector crashing against her face.
None of you saw what form it took, but the burst of silver straight into her eyes stunned her long enough for you to run around her and take Lockwood by the arm. His hands quivered; less from adrenaline, more from pure exhaustion. You could almost feel his pulse under your palm.
You coaxed him to muster his strength. "Come on, you barbarian. We need to get help."
The chuckle he let out was pathetic, but it's familiar enough to make you crack a smile. There's your Lockwood after all. He wasn't all gone.
"Knew you'd save me," he rasped. You held him tighter when he stumbled. He held on with what strength he could muster. "You always do."
Not the time to disarm you with a statement like that. An angry stupefy soared overhead, quickly followed by what you assumed was the cruciatus curse. You grunted when an angry zap nicked your side.
You held onto Lockwood and he held onto you, both clattering down the longest steps of your lives. An inspired, deranged girl at your heels.
"Give me my boyfriend back!" She shrieked, casting a fury of spells at you. The echo of the halls amplified her bellows. "He's mine! I earned him!"
He tripped on a lifted tile, leaning on you as you rushed for the landing.
Your heartbeat made it's way to your ears. Every breath felt forced. You pushed ahead, dragging Lockwood's weight down every winding twist in the moving steps.
A very explosive bombarda forced you to stagger back and reconsider your escape route. Only, there was no escape route. The changing stairwells had you and Lockwood trapped on a landing.
Oriana descended like an angel made from her own delusions.
Your lungs struggled to take in air with an unbearable stitch in your aide. Lockwood collapsed to his knees, drained of energy. As his eyes fought to stay open, he clung to your hand like it was his lifeline.
You shifted to hide his crumpled form from Cai.
"You've had your chance, Scarecrow." Cai laughed, on the brink of tears. In her eyes, she was as innocent as a girl who simply had something swiped from her. "He was at your knees for years! Why can't you let him be happy with me? Give him to me, please..."
Your jaw tensed. The lick of anger in your chest stoked to a fire the longer she spoke.
"He's not an object," you managed without spitting flames. "He can feel what he wants, when he wants. If he wishes to walk away from me after all this... I wouldn't blame him. But casting a spell on him? That's not love, Cai. It isn't love. You're trapping him."
Cai's nose flared. "What a saint! Sorry, should I let him grieve something he never had with you? You're blind to not see it. You ruined him! This is the only way. I can help him if you just let me—"
Something moved in your periphery. A mop of black hair, the best wingman in Hogwarts.
You were on the verge of a smile, feeling your adrenaline decrescendo. "Your family, they know what you're doing?"
She grinned. "My family supports my decisions. Contrary to yours, I hear. They agree that you're a heartless witch, and a dose of amortentia should fix him for me."
Your breath hitched. Lockwood clenched your hand, bringing you back.
"For your information," your lip twitched. "I'm an Eagle, not a Scarecrow. Get your house representatives right."
You collapsed the moment a barrier surged around her, her screaming muffled by the incantations.
James came down the steps in stride with Professor Flitwick.
"Not 'your guy', huh?" James taunted, crouching beside you. You offered him a tight-lipped smile.
Professor Flitwick fortified his barrier before he addressed you. "Splendid patronus. You're the first to project your voice and have it travel as far as it did. I expected no less from our ace student. As for Ms. Cai..." He looked at her with pinched brows.. He wasn't sure what to do, really. There had never been a situation that drastic before. "She will be penalised accordingly."
The weight on your shoulders lifted, but a new one came just as quick. You straightened your back to support Lockwood's limp weight.
The warmth of his breath fanned your neck, a feeling that made your stomach churn for all the wrong reasons. He still smelt like the berry-flavoured gum that got him into this mess in the first place.
The same mess that had made you miss a few classes for the first time in six years.
With the last of your energy, you raised a trembling hand. "Professor?"
"Yes?"
"Are we considered tardy?"
He pushed his glasses higher up his nose before replying. "That should be the least of your troubles, you." Professor Flitwick turned to your friend. "James Potter?"
James saluted. "I've got them, prof."
"Please refrain from calling me 'prof', Mr Potter."
"Yes, prof."
Madame Pomfrey had a lot to say about the unforthcoming mess that was Lockwood, post-Amortentia.
For the better part of the appointment, Madame Pomfrey concluded that Lockwood wasn't severely altered by the prolonged exposure to love potion. For the worse part, he was advised to sit out of anything too physically demanding until he felt like himself again.
"But how can I feel like myself without Quidditch?" he agonised, as if you beheld all the answers.
You were forced to hear it, seeing as you were roommates until Madame Pomfrey declared you both stable enough to go free.
You buried yourself into the stiff pillows of the medical ward. "A week of rest and observation isn't as bad as the months you were bewitched, honestly."
"Pray, how can it be worse?"
You lifted your head. "Ever read out a lengthy love poem in the middle of the dining hall?"
"No..."
Your lips tipped up. "Yes."
He shut his eyes and splayed his hand over his head, trying to wash out the visualisation of actually doing that for all of Hogwarts to see.
"End me," he rasped.
"If you insist," your smile stretched. "You recited one for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Every. Single. Day."
He slapped another hand over his face. "Oh... what have I done to deserve this?"
"Caught the eye of a loony, apparently. It was horrid. I felt sorry for you."
"Don't patronise me."
You jerked a finger at him. "I earned the right. I got a nasty laceration in my side for you. Unwillingly, might I add."
His arms fell away, honeyed eyes set on you. "Please, if you were unwilling, you wouldn't have tried so hard to save me."
"If I left you for dead, I would be a monster."
"A very pretty one," he chimed.
"So you can still pull that drivel out of your arse. Good to know we didn't lose you."
"Say what you will." He crossed his arms behind his head, smiling like a jester. "I know you have a place for me in that shrivelled, darkened heart of yours."
"My heart isn't shrivelled or darkened," you said defiantly.
He quirked a brow, smirking. "You correct that but not the fact that I have a place in it?"
"You—" You opted to chuck your emptied juice carton at him.
In classic Lockwood fashion, he caught the carton in his hand and waved it triumphantly. "Try again, sweetheart. I know your habits like I know the back of my hand."
You raised a not-so-friendly finger and slid your curtain to hide yourself from his view. Still, you heard his laughter, loud and alive.
You weren't aware of how much you'd missed it until you caught yourself smiling.
Anthony Lockwood was the kind of child who would climb up the slide. Not because it was fun, but because he liked the thrill of breaking the rules.
Some things never changed, because he had convinced you to accompany him on a night fly while Madame Pomfrey was off collecting herbs from the green house.
You had flown through the worst weather while playing Quidditch, but it struck you that you'd never been out this late. Not one-on-one with Lockwood, at least.
It was a terrible, unsafe idea, but he had a way with words. He made it seem like a once in a lifetime opportunity. You weren't sure whether that was true, since he did use his prefect status to sneak into places he wasn't allowed into.
You knew that turning around was crossed off your list the moment he broke into the closet and extracted your broom for you.
"I have a hard time believing you've never done this before," you whispered as you took in the sight of the Quidditch Pitch, void of life and light.
It was a haunting sight, but Lockwood had been right about it being a once in a lifetime scene. The moon was the only guiding light, drowning everything in a seductive mauve colour. It brought out the beauty of sparse light and silhouettes, you almost believed you stepped into one of your fantasy novels.
He flashed his teeth at you before he vaulted over the partition and traipsed across the grass. His trusty broom already levitating by his side. "I've never done this with you before, if that's what you're asking."
It wasn't, but you didn't want to know who else would join Lockwood in his idiocy.
You followed suit and mounted your broom, allowing yourself to rise several metres to feel the bite of the nocturnal chill.
"It's an amazing feeling, isn't it?" Lockwood shouted, his two feet still on the ground.
"I'm not going to admit that I enjoy breaking the rules," you responded, flying modest circles while taking in the scene.
While the wind whistled in your ears and tousled your hair, he wheeled a box out of storage and flipped the latches.
You squinted, trying to see what he was doing but his back was covering the contents of the box.
"What's that?"
A golden streak of light veered away from him. Even as the breeze bellowed in your ear, you could hear its tinkling wings.
The Snitch.
"Can't have fun without a challenge," Lockwood said. His boisterous laughter echoed in your ears as he hopped onto his broom and zoomed up, up, and up, already chasing the golden menace.
He passed you, his robes grazing your elbow. You didn't think twice. You gave chase, following the direction you had seen the Snitch blitz to.
Lockwood's curls fought against velocity. You were almost tempted to comment on it before you saw a glimmer in the corner of your eye.
You and Lockwood swerved at the same time. Waves of black, blue, and green flagged through darkness as you bent forward, urging your trusty broom to overtake Lockwood's. You were closing in on the Snitch, stretching your hand to reach for it.
It's buzzing crescendoed in your ears, forcing your blood to pump as Lockwood did the same.
Oh, so close.
The Snitch brushed your fingertips before it zagged. Spinning in the air before rushing right at you.
You bent your body, narrowly missing a Snitch to the nose. The same couldn't be said for Lockwood.
You heard the thump of the collision before you saw him clutching his mouth. It was futile for you to hold in a laugh.
"You alright?"
His glare only made you laugh harder.
"Ouch," he hissed, taking his hand away from his mouth.
You snorted after seeing the damage.
Luckily, nothing was broken, but there was a faint pink smudge across his bottom lip and cheek.
You raised a brow. "You wear lipstick?"
"It's lip balm," he said haughtily, wiping away the smudge. "Is there something wrong with that?"
"No," You held a laugh long enough to reach across to wipe the smidge he couldn't quite swipe away. He stiffened at your touch. You did your best to hold in a reaction of your own. "I just didn't expect you to be a lip balm sort of guy."
"Do I look like a lipstick guy?" he inquired, regaining himself. "Thank you for thinking so, but you can keep your pigmented cosmetics to yourself. They look better on you anyway."
"Complimenting me now? You're sure your noggin's alright, chap?"
"Don't 'chap' me, sweetheart. It makes me feel old."
"I thought you liked the seniority," you taunted. "'Being in seventh-year means the youngest look up to us' and all. Your words, not mine."
"You're a real ray of sunshine, aren't you?"
You gasped, clutching your chest. "How can you say that when the moon is out?"
"Oh, bother." He bristled. "You've shown greater concern for the moon's feelings than you have mine for the past six years. You wound me."
"That's because the moon listens. You never do," you pointed out.
"I do," he replied. "Only for things that matter."
"So, the camel-llama debate didn't matter?"
He ran a hand through his hair. "You're still on that?"
"I always will be. What muggle can't tell those animals apart? You should be ashamed."
"We were eleven!"
"Old enough for you to have admitted defeat, but no! You kept getting them wrong and saying you were right." He pinched his nose as you went on. "Then you started bothering me because you couldn't admit defeat. Now look at us. Six years later and I'm still right."
His eyes met yours, creased with an impending smile. "When we passed the hourglasses, Slytherin was ten points above Ravenclaw."
"You prat—"
Your head was thrown sideways as a flit of gold smashed into you. Your lip pulsed. Luckily, you had the mind to stretch your hand and catch the golden bugger.
The Snitch fought in your grip. Eventually, its wings tucked in. Then, a bated silence. Only for a moment. Lockwood snorted as you massage your jaw.
You gave him a nasty glare. "Not a word."
"I wasn't going to say anything," he lied. "Except, your lipstick smeared."
"Rowena..."
"Here, let me."
He sported a boyish grin as he reached across, mirroring your actions from earlier. You swatted him away and he simply laughed in response.
With your feet on the grass, you were glad to be done with your excursion; More relieved that he let you take the win.
You're not sure a bleeding lip was worth it though, but, at least, it was over.
After packing up the Snitch and putting away your brooms (plus making it seem like you two had never been there at all), you started the walk back up to the castle's medical ward.
Somewhere on the cobblestone path, Lockwood had drawn a curious notebook and quill from his robes. "So," he flipped to a page that had been sectioned into two, scored by stick lines. "What have I missed while I was bewitched?"
You eyed the notebook. "Is that... a tally?"
"Yes," he replied. "Now, what did I miss? I had one up on you before my memories went hazy."
"Just start a new one," you urged him.
Thinking of what you achieved while he was out of it was in the same league as winning a race against a slug. There was no fulfilment.
"C'mon," Lockwood cajoled, stepping closer to you. "I've been tallying since fourth year."
You raised a brow. "Fourth year?"
"The class on the Patronus charm inspired me," he replied. "Since we're always butting heads, having a tally made it feel official."
"How do I know you haven't picked your wins and excluded mine?"
"Have you no faith in me?"
"Do you want a real answer?"
He pursed his lips, earning a laugh from you.
"I respect you, you know. Even if you are the way you are," he told you, turning the notebook to show you the tally.
The first column was his score. The second one beheld 'vexation' instead of your name. The scores were neck-and-neck, save for the singular tick on his side that put him in the lead.
He quickly drew one more stick under your column, putting you two at a draw once more. "I'll count this impromptu Quidditch match, on the condition that you won't tell a soul that it was me who snuck out first."
"You must be dedicated," you chortled. "Just count from here on out. I haven't done much, honestly."
He quirked a brow, speaking slowly. "Are you sure?"
"Yes. Why are you talking like that?"
"Nothing. I'm just surprised." He closed the notebook and pocketed it with his quill. "You're usually more competitive."
"That's when I don’t spend an afternoon running for my life, Lockwood."
"You make a fair point."
You were making your way into the thresh of the castle now. The torches warmed the air, thawing the chill as you flounced forth.
There was a peace in the silence and a sweetness in the solitude. You felt Lockwood's hand brush yours and found that you enjoyed it more than you thought. Not that you would say anything about it.
You're not sure whether he caught on to the lilt of your lips before he threw his arm over your shoulders, just like old times.
This time, it felt different. The heat he let off was a juxtaposition to the bite of the night, and you found yourself melting into him even more.
You would have been fine in the quiet, but Lockwood had never been friends with it.
"George told me you were scheming to cure me. How were you planning to do that exactly?"
He kicked a pebble out of your way. You withheld the urge to smile.
"It was an amplified version of a regular love potion reversal. Same one we did research work on last year."
"What did you change?"
"Thrice the dose of rosemary and dried salamander. I also added a touch of pig tongue."
"Wouldn't doubling the wormroot do the same thing?"
"No," you scoffed. "That would expel the fragrance, but it wouldn't counteract the effects of the love potion."
"Doesn't the dried salamander do that?"
"Rosemary thins out the viscosity of the love potion and the dried salamander washes down the magic that messes with your thought process."
He smiled but there was no commitment in it. "Apologies, I'm no love potion whiz."
"Next thing you know, you'll be telling me crushed jasmine will cure insanity."
"I get it, sweetheart. That doesn't explain the pig tongue."
"I was hoping the horrid taste would wake you up from your delusions."
"I think it would have worked."
"It would have," you boasted, "if you had any sense in you to try."
He chuckled, apologising in smiles. Lockwood closed the distance by ruffling your hair. You waved him away, but that did little to stop him.
"You got the higher mark on that research paper," he recalled.
"I did." You glowed with pride. "As is always the case for Potions, and Transfiguration, and Charms—"
"What are you planning to do when we're done with Hogwarts?"
His expression turned dire, like he had been agonising over when to ask the fated question. It might have been a trick of the light, but his eyes glazed.
You considered his question for a moment. "I'm expanding into healing magic." Just envisioning how far your knowledge could go brought a smile to your face. "I'm good at the cardinal subjects for healing. I enjoy them enough to see myself heading in that direction."
"That's serious," he said, genuinely taken by your answer. "You have to be recommended by a professor to take on a role at a hospital or ward, don't you?"
You tried to keep your smile humble. "I already have a recommendation."
He tilted his head so you could see the surprise on his face. "Really? Who?"
"Madame Pomfrey. I'll be her apprentice next year. Hopefully, I'll move to St. Mungo's in a few years."
"Funny," he jested, bumping your hip with his. "What would she say to the bludgers you've batted at me?"
"Your insults about me are tantamount to nothing in her eyes. She adores me."
"Because you're a kiss-up?"
You stopped, jabbing a finger at his chest. "Because I have wit."
His lips lilted into that smile you knew so well. The right of his mouth rose higher than the left, short of turning into a smirk. "You have a lot more than wit, sweetheart."
Your heart did unspeakable things. For a heart-stalling moment, you forgot to say something back.
You looked at him, he looked at you. He was closer than you'd thought. Lockwood was unfairly dashing in torch light. Windswept hair, sweat on his brow, and everything.
He seemed to drift closer and closer, but it's you who inched forward. The lesser the distance, the more honest you felt.
His eyes dipped to your lips and—
A shriek, high and shrill, broke the spell. Both you and Lockwood leapt apart. You dusted off your cloak and he rubbed his nape.
The shrieking voice returned. "Dragon!"
Dragon?
You lurched for the entrance. You couldn't see much in the mouth of the castle. Neither could Lockwood, but you felt it. The buzz before the chase, the stacking of adrenaline and the thrill of trouble creeping up on you.
Your eyes locked with his, and you knew you're thinking the same thing.
When the winds of a Romanian Longhorn flattened the trees and blew out the torches, it was the flag at the beginning of a race. You and Lockwood were running for it.
You found that sprinting in the dark was akin to swimming upstream. You'd tripped over several roots and rocks, and you still haven't found which pocket you hid your wand in. It was a humbling experience, being in the throes of losing something with extension charms in your robes.
After furiously tapping himself down, Lockwood found his. He flicked his wand and yelled into the air, "Accio Brooms!"
"Why didn't we do that earlier?"
Lockwood flashed a smile. "We have an excuse to destroy the storage room door now."
You were on the verge of yelling. "How would we explain why we're out here?"
"Don't think too hard, you'll hurt yourself." He made another gesture with his wand before a glow illuminated from the tip of it — lighting up the path. "We'll cross that bridge when we get there, sweetheart. We have a dragon to catch."
As the Lumos rose in intensity, the path turned treacherous. The cobbled walkway was turning into pointed stones and angry branches. The trees began to move, contorting into all sorts of grotesque shapes and snares.
Lockwood had taken the lead, taking the brunt of their greedy clutches. You had to grab the back of his robe to make sure he didn't get snatched away by the foliage.
You would have buckled at the wooden stakes that bent toward you if your brooms hadn't snapped through their grappling, snapping inferior splinters before you found your grip.
The uptake was sharp, desperate to get away from the furious trees. You clung to your broom and swallowed down the urge to retch.
Lockwood, who had levelled beside you, looked fine. You would have thrown a rock at him if you weren't turning green.
He set a hand on your back, rubbing slow circles as he surveyed the area. You appreciated the gesture.
"It's heading for the Quidditch Pitch. If we get there fast enough, we can trap it there. Easier to manage in a controlled area."
"It's a dragon, Lockwood. It would burn the place down." You straighten up ever so slightly. "On top of that, it's a Romanian Longhorn."
"I know. Endangered species. We'll have to be cautious. She could turn us into a kebab." His lips tilted into a smile. "I wager we can tame her in less than an hour."
You exhaled the last of your nausea. A grin forming on your face. "Think half."
"Ambitious, aren't we?"
You flew forward, seeing the whiskers of fire curling in the distance. "Scared, serpent boy?"
There were flames in his eyes as he sped ahead, robes soaring behind him. "Never!"
"You distract her. I stun her," Lockwood prompted as soon as the Quidditch Pitch came into view.
Metres above you, the Longhorn huffed plumes of smoke down on you. You tried to be quiet, but you did have qualms with Lockwood's plan.
"You're the faster flyer, why am I the distraction?"
He pointed at his chest, like that was the answer. "I'm still recovering."
"That's rich!" You still haven't found your wand and the tosser was playing sick. "You dragged me out here to fly thirty minutes ago. Don't give me that."
"What? I can't hear you!" He veered further from you. "You're the most capable witch of our age. There is no one else I'd do this with!"
He was gone from sight before you could bump him off of his broom.
Then again, you'd rather die fighting than die a sitting duck. You angled your broom up, zooming into the beast's sight before it spotted Lockwood.
Its breath was sulphur against your skin, fighting the chill but lighting a spark of fear. Its pondering yellow eyes circled on you before its mouth creaked open.
"Lockwood, work quickly!"
In a dragon chase, one must remember three things: your size advantage, the dragon's breath hurt as much as its fire, and the dragon can and will play dirty.
You were an agile flyer, ducking whenever the strokes of its inner fire hurled for you, but even you had to exercise all of your flyer's knowledge to evade its claws. A swipe, a lick of flames, a swipe, another swipe — it was practically toying with you.
The only good thing that came with it playing with its food was the fact that you had lured it right where you wanted it.
The Quidditch Pitch was gargantuan compared to the juvenile specimen. You just hoped the place wouldn't go up in flames.
You hadn't seen Lockwood in a good minute, almost believing he'd shirked you, but then you glimpsed a flicker of serpent green in your periphery and ease up.
Before long, the dragon grew tired of the play and decided that she wanted to sink her teeth into something real.
You felt a nip at the end of your broom and zagged in the air. You steadied your mount before feeling your blood rush faster.
She was snapping at you. You chanced a glance and found the black in her eyes flattened to slits, hunger dancing in the embers of them.
"Lockwood!" you cried, narrowly dodging an eager claw. "Double time!"
"I found a soft spot! Give me a minute!"
"We don't have that much time," you surmised based on the increased momentum of the beast's strikes.
After a full turn-around to swing her tail at you, you dove. Nose aimed right down to the grass. You didn't even want to look back and see how close she was.
Gravity would be on her side but pulling up now could mean flying right into her furnace of a mouth. You didn't know which gruesome death was the lesser of two evils.
In the distance, you heard Lockwood. "Stupefy!"
The dragon nipped on your broom once more before you felt a tug on your robe. Your grip slipped, your broom flew in the opposite direction. Leaving you to crash and roll into the grass, ignoring the pain of carpet burn as you helped yourself onto your feet.
You didn't get far before your legs collapsed, your whole body weight crashing on your shoulder. You were never the type to go down without a fight. You kept kicking in a desperate attempt to escape the giant.
"Lockwood!"
"Wait for me!"
You felt its breath. Molten and fear-rushing, melting the hair on your legs as you watched your own reflection in its eye.
And then, its head hit the ground and its jaw lulled. Craning open but never snapping, just barely missing your foot as you pulled your limbs towards yourself.
The lines on Lockwood's face were deeper when you laid eyes on him. When he saw that you were alright, his expression flipped like a switch. A smile formed on his face, like you didn't almost lose your life.
He hopped off of his broom and approached.
"I didn't know you could look scared."
"I was almost a dragon's dinner," you spat.
You didn't fight him as he hooked his arms under yours and hauled you up. He kept an arm around you while the feeling returned to your legs.
He chuckled in a way that could make anyone believe he was faultless. "Sorry. It was a bother finding a soft spot. This big girl has pretty solid armour for a juvenile."
"That is the last time I ever follow your instructions. I knew getting mixed up with you was a death sentence."
"Yet," he chirped, brushing off the soot remains of the edges of your hood. "you're standing here, alive."
"I regret trusting you."
"No, you don't." He flourished a hand at the slumbering beast. "Just look at what putting your heads together did."
"It won't stay asleep forever," you whispered.
Just standing there, right at the alcove of its jaw, felt like standing on the tightrope of death. Suffice it to say, you wanted to be elsewhere.
You tasted the sweet, cool air as you replenished the oxygen in your lungs. Annoyance crept in as you realised that, despite your best efforts, you were still heaving. Adrenaline refusing to crest.
You tried to shove Lockwood but he had caught your arm. "Had to wait 'till the last minute, didn't you?" you nipped.
"I just told you, it's not easy to look for a chink in a dragon's scales. Be optimistic. I could have let her take your legs."
"You wouldn't."
"You're right, I wouldn't, but it's nice to imagine that I could be spiteful."
You snorted, trying not to flinch as the beast blinked its bleary eyes at you. "Let's put the big guy to sleep. Whoever takes care of him must be worried."
"She's a lady," Lockwood corrected.
You forced a smile. "My apologies, I didn't have the time to check in the midst of my near-delimbing."
"Easy mistake." He shrugged. "How about we tie up those loose ends?"
"We would've had it done by now if you stopped chattering."
"Last I checked, you were chattering back."
"You—"
The dragon blew out a warm breath, chilling you. You would've crumpled if Lockwood wasn't holding you up.
"Never you mind," you rectified. "You know the Sleeping Trance Charm, don't you?"
He balanced you on one arm, his hold snaking around your waist. With his free hand, he raised his wand at the dragon. "How to Pacify A Dragon 101. Of course, I do."
"Semi-circle motions," you reminded as the giant gold eyes blinked at you.
"I know that already, sweetheart. You know," Lockwood trailed off. His eyes landed on you. You ignore it for the sake of your already racing heart. "We make a pretty good team."
You allowed yourself a smile. "When you're not being insufferable."
"You always think I'm insufferable."
"So, you are self-aware."
"Oh, shut up." He didn't sound like he meant it.
The world must have been pitted against you, because the drowse in the dragon's eyes disappeared before Lockwood could even mutter the spell.
Its jaws widened, and Lockwood pulled you back just before they snapped. Half a foot from taking a chunk out of you and Lockwood.
"That's not good," Lockwood grunted. He accioed his broom closer. By how hard he was pulling you, you assumed he was trying to get you to clamber on as well.
That would be dooming the two of you. Being a singular target was like turning yourselves into a barbeque.
You pushed him away, catching the panic in his eyes for a moment.
You threw your arms out, signalling him away. "Go!"
Lockwood stalled, hand on his broom. "But—"
"Go!"
He mounted reluctantly. Taking off to grab the Longhorn's attention while you were squabbling for your broom.
When you found it, your worst fears were confirmed. The world really did want you dead.
Your broom was snapped clean in two after colliding with the base of the highest hoop. Mourning your trusted companion wasn't an option, because the dragon had spotted you. Its neck craned, rearing like a snake before it struck.
You tapped your pockets, desperate to find your wand. Not in that pocket, not in that one—
At long last, you fished it out of your most unused pocket. You pointed its end at the beast but a flash of green and silver disrupted your vision.
A tug on your arm and the feeling of rising winds brought you to the present. Lockwood had grabbed you and given you a seat on his broom, saving you from a very fiery end. The patch of grass you were standing on was charred to a crisp.
"Calm down, sweetheart. I can feel you shaking." His mouth was at your ear. You shrunk even more to hide from his view.
Your heart lurched as the Romanian Longhorn roared. You leaned closer to Lockwood, feeling the steady lub-dub through his shirt. It sang your anxieties to repose.
"We need a new plan," you told him, trying to keep your mind in one place. "I don't think she'll fall for another one of our two-person schemes."
"We're one broom down, so, how do you suggest we do that?"
You two watched as the Longhorn stretched its wings, kick starting your panic.
Lockwood leaned forward and tapped your leg. "Hold on tight."
Your hands on the broom fastened until your knuckles turned bloodless.
With renewed determination, he said, "We have to try the Sleeping Trance Charm again."
"While it's wide awake?"
"I'm sorry, would you like to ask her to sit and make it easier for us?"
You pinched his arm in response. The gesture was returned with Lockwood twisting his broom to have you two dangling upside down. One hand jutted out and grabbed Lockwood by the cloak.
"Lockwood, you prat!"
"Say sorry."
"You — Gah! Sorry!"
He smirked as he righted the broom.
Given a new perspective, you wheezed. "We have to do something before it burns down the whole pitch."
"We could summon the rest of the brooms," Lockwood suggested.
He flew higher as the Longhorn swiped for your legs.
"That would just make a mess. She can burn them. Then we'd have a bigger mess to clean up, plus a debt to whoever owns those brooms."
"Well..." Lockwood looked down at the dragon. "I could offer a special deal on pens to rack up enough pounds to pay it back."
"Pens?"
"A muggle writing device. Better and cleaner than ink and quill," he quipped. "I sell them to earn a few pounds. Don't give me that disapproving look, I gave you one for your birthday."
You reeled. "That's what it was? I didn't think 'pens' looked like that. They're supposed to be made of metal, no?"
"The archaic ones, yes. Now, there are plastic, ballpoint pens."
"Why are we talking about this? We can be turned into crispy bacon at any second now."
"Sweetheart, it's either we sacrifice the brooms or we turn into bacon, as you so nicely put it."
Your heart lurched. "My mother would kill me if we fell into debt, Lockwood. Thinking about it now, she'd behead me if she finds out about this mess."
He was genuinely perplexed by the fear that laced your voice. "I thought you were from a pureblood family."
"I am!" You trilled, sounding like you needed to prove something. "But things aren't that easy. Things are earned."
"They would understand. This is a life or death situation here!"
"No, I– Just– We can't."
"Okay..." He did his best to calm you down. It didn't help that he could practically feel the dragon's breath at this distance. "We ditch that idea. How's a firework charm?"
"Yes! Good idea."
You readied your wand. Only to stop short as silver-blue figures circled the dragon. It didn't take a genius to spot a patronus, a handful of them. You spotted a silvery cat crash into the dragon's side.
A non-corporeal patronus materialised at your side, speaking with the voice of Professor Flitwick. "Do your best not to use explosives. Her caregiver's orders."
More patronuses rose like shrouds of smoke and magic, disorienting the dragon in the midst of them. Some were fully manifested, some were faint — like they had been casted by a novice.
One look down confirmed your thoughts. Students and teachers alike were casting patronuses to keep you and Lockwood from turning into Dragon Dinner. Others were busy casting a large-scale protego to isolate the creature.
The Romanian Longhorn's only choice was to fly higher and higher. Lockwood followed, strategically hiding behind patronuses as they passed.
"You have your wand?" Lockwood inquired as the air began to thin. Breathing was a task you had to do consciously to stay awake.
"Of course, I do."
"This is our chance," he told you. He poised his wand.
You raised yours, too. "I'll cast a patronus to hide the glow of the Sleeping Trance Charm."
"Here's to hoping we keep all of our limbs."
He eased closer. You readied yourself, going through all of your best memories. You didn't go back to thoughts of your favourite books or your academics—No. Your mind kept circling back to your earlier moments with Lockwood: the sneaking out, the snitch, that moment at the threshold...
Blue sand trickled from the tip of your wand. Kicking up magic that twisted into the form of a crane. Your brows furrowed as you muttered the enchantment again, only for the patronus to stretch its wings and soar towards the dragon.
You threw a glance at Lockwood from over your shoulder. "I told you I would cast the patronus."
"You are," Lockwood quipped. He did a terrible job of hiding his smile, voice pressed like he was using the last of his air to say it. "That's your patronus."
"No, it's yours." Your tone lacked conviction, and substance — seeing as the crane did burst from your wand.
Lockwood chanced a glance at you, giving you a glimpse of that smirky smile that you'd recognize even in another life. "Have something you need to tell me, sweetheart?"
"Piss off," you said. You pulled his cheek forward, forcing him to face the winds of the dragon he was supposed to be charming. "Focus on what you have to do!"
"We'll get back to this."
He aimed at the dragon and muttered, "Dormitus."
Its eyes were locked on your patronus, following its path, unaware of its eyelids drooping and its waving wings slowing.
Slowly, the dragon began to lose altitude. Closer and closer to the ground as students and professors scuttled out of the way.
The winds dissipated as it laid its scaled head on the grass, finally quelled.
You expelled a breath you were holding in. Lockwood did the same, you felt his chest flush against your back as he laxed.
Lockwood landed a ways away and dismounted first, helping you off but never actually letting you go. Your connected hands dropped between you as you both took the time to calm your heartbeats.
A deranged laugh slipped from your lips. "If you weren't such a danger magnet, you'd have a promising future as an auror."
He looked at you, a confusing mix of disbelief and hope on his face. "You mean that?"
You shrugged with a lipped smile. Not even his habit of looking at the floor could hide his smile from you. You could see it clearly as the sun rose higher.
The moment of peace was interrupted by the furious shuffling of boots on grass. You raised your heads and spotted the unmistakable figures of Professor McGonagall, Professor Flitwick, and Hagrid.
"There you are." Lockwood said charmingly, casting a smile to match. "We were just about to come and ask what we should do about this—"
McGonagall called you both by name. Even you flinched at her vehemence.
"Why, I never!" She looked between you, clear aggravation carved into the lines of her face. "In all my years, I have never seen such a display of recklessness! You could have died. How could we ever explain that to your parents?"
You watched Lockwood's smile widen. A precursor to him saying, "Professor, with all due respect, my parents are dead."
Professor McGonagall was speechless, momentarily at a loss.
You took the chance to fill in the silence. "And I do believe Mr. Harry Potter has done worse."
Her eyes hardened as she wound her cloak tighter around herself. "I apologise for my earlier statement, Mr. Lockwood, but this kind of disobedience and endangerment cannot be tolerated. I expect you both to know where this is leading."
"Cleaning the toilets?" you two said in sync.
"Worse," Professor McGonagall looked quite proud of herself. "Detention."
You and Lockwood sobered.
"Professor, I'm a prefect," Lockwood reasoned. "And still in recovery."
"And I'm your best student," you chipped in. "Certainly, that means something."
McGonagall tipped her chin. "Then you'll be pleased to hear that the pair of you are the first to make it to detention with those accomplishments." Her tone turned frosty. "Friday evening. You know which room. Good day."
You were still reeling when Professor Flitwick motioned to his mouth. "You two should clean yourselves up, lest some misunderstand the smudges on your lips."
Hagrid flashed you two a friendly smile as you and Lockwood disconnected arms to swipe at your lips.
Detention didn't last too long. After a good three debates where you and Lockwood vaulted between being friends, being enemies, and being on the brink of committing murder, the kind, ghostly professor in charge let you free for his own sanity.
By the time you two returned to your regularly scheduled programming, Cai had been expelled and given a fancy room in St. Mungo's. Lockwood was properly compensated by the BOF company, and the pair of you received an additional fee to assure your silence. You gave your word, but one, James Potter, never made the pact. He reported the happenings to his father and promptly had the company shut down for misuse of magic.
Best wingman, indeed.
In the aurora of a half-realised friendship, you allowed Lockwood to keep his arm on your shoulder as a form of gratitude. He took every chance he got to practise his privilege.
He pulled you closer, practically nuzzling your hair. "You do appreciate me, after all."
"Barely," you replied.
The admission was enough to bring a smile to his face. If you got too soft, he'd assume you transformed into someone else entirely.
Lockwood, himself, had returned to his usual self; disputing you in class, outdoing your word counts, and (a recent development) stealing your quills to replace them with pens. How the professors didn't notice was beyond you.
You missed the banter and the thrill of the competition, but not the dingy smell of the DADA classroom. It was as pungent as always.
"Seventh years." The Professor's tone was different compared to the hundred lessons you've had before this. Dare you say she even sounded melancholic. There's a gaggle of students that laughed about it but she was more lenient, she said nothing to them. "This is your last year in Hogwarts and your last year under my tutelage. This year, we focus on practicality and efficiency. Using your knowledge against another witch or wizard."
She flicked her wand and the crowd parted, pulled in opposite directions by invisible hands.
Gasps rang out, friends clung closer to each other, and you grabbed Lockwood's sleeve when you were shoved aside. His arm dropped to support your weight by the small of your back.
You looked up and he was smiling down at you, the right side of his smile higher than the left. Familiar. Though, he was rather close.
You opened your mouth to complain, only to shudder at the sound of glass breaking. The chandelier above fell, and Professor proceeded to transfigure it into a glass cage of sorts.
She looked pleased with herself as the crystalline cage settled into a dome shape, resting both hands on her wand as she beamed at the parted crowd. "Today, we duel!"
You covered your ears at the sheer volume of your classmates' bellows. Several students looked forward to this day. They could finally let loose and cast spells like they were meant to. The girl to your right bit the end of her wand, looking a lot like a panther ready to lunge.
You grimaced and sent your prayers to Rowena Ravenclaw to save you from the hungry ones.
"Looking forward to it?" Lockwood asked, glueing himself to the spot next to you, chivalrously blocking you from the onslaught of moving bodies.
You could barely see him because the lights have been dimmed to bring all eyes to the duelling cage. You didn't know why you were even searching for his eyes in the first place.
"No," you finally answered. Your eyes landed on the cage, catching the faint veins of blue shift in and out of existence around it. Kind of like the webs of light at the surface of muggle pools. You would have missed them if you weren't squinting. "I aspire to be a healer. This is the type of thing I advise against."
He caught on to the magic, too. "Don't stress too much. The cage is enchanted to snuff out all malignant magic to avoid injury."
"How do you know?"
"That's a large-scale protego charm. Knowing the professor, she tweaked it to limit anyone who goes too far." He nudged your side. You heard the smirk in his tone. "Not bad for an aspiring auror, right?"
"Right," you agreed.
You didn't expect him to sputter. You shushed him when several heads turned your way.
"What was that?"
He patted down his robe, like it would help him collect himself. "That was surprise, sweetheart. I didn't expect you to agree with me."
"Are you suggesting that I'm unnegotiable?"
"No," he answered. "You simply... oppose me most of the time—all of the time."
"You're very easy to oppose. I just pick the choice that has a lower mortality rate. You always seem to be doing dangerous things, Mr. Lockwood."
"I'm Mr. Lockwood now, huh?" That smile again.
"Yes, you are."
"Could you call me that more often?"
His smile made you conscious. You crossed your arms over your chest, like that would protect you. "Why?"
"I like how it sounds," he replied. "I'd do just about anything to hear it again."
"Hm..." Your eyes drifted to the sparks of spells being swished back and forth. The cage turned into a mirrorball. "Win your match."
Lockwood drew himself up to full height, rolling his shoulders back with a confident grin. "Easy."
"Really? Easier than being love-spelled by a fangirl?"
Your stomach turned. That's how you knew you'd said something wrong. Your stance changed. You almost hit yourself for saying something so uncalled for.
He opened his mouth to defend himself but the Professor's voice cut through his.
"Anthony Lockwood and James Potter versus Daria Thomas-Finnigan and..." She dragged the silence on, smirking as she finally uttered your name. Professor Loathes-Your-Guts clearly, still, loathes your guts.
The room divided into two once more; those cheering for Slytherin and Gryffindor, and those cheering for Ravenclaw. The energy could rival that of a Quidditch match.
"May the best team win," was Lockwood's cold farewell. He was gruff and unjesting—a complete departure from his usual visage that it scared you. He had never been so forbidding to you, even as rivals.
He and James entered on the right wing, and you and Daria entered through the left. The circle under you lit up blue. The Professor's magic gripped you, encompassing your whole body.
Lockwood had been right. Professor kept strict tabs on everyone in the cage, and you regretted stepping in when you looked across the way.
Both Lockwood and James were ready to kill. It was an exaggeration, but you'd never seen either look so deathly competitive.
Daria's hand on your shoulder reeled you back to the present. She graced you with a smile. "Gryffindor might have good fighters but we've got something better." You were tempted to say 'female anatomy' but she spoke over your thoughts. "We've got brain."
You drew your shoulders up and gripped your wand fiercely. You faced forward as the Professor yelled, "Start."
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⚜ PART 2 | SERIES MASTERLIST
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SWEETHEARTS ➺ @kiyasoup @toddandersondupe @locknco @onecojg @avdiobliss @mentallyillsodapop @mitskiswift99 @mischivana @bella-rose29 @wordsarelife
⌠ @novelizt 2023 ⌡
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ourgoddessathena · 5 months
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HELLOOO THERE!! Can I request gojo dating reader because of a bet with suguru and falling for reader, reader doesn’t know and was hurt when they overheard they’re just a bet, angst to fluff pls 🫶🫶🫶
thank youuuu, hope your having a good day!!
˗ˏˋ꒰ 🍒 ꒱
𝐈𝐭 𝐦𝐞𝐚𝐧𝐭 𝐞𝐯𝐞𝐫𝐲𝐭𝐡𝐢𝐧𝐠
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A/N: u have no idea how much i LOVE this idea anon!!! 💗💗💗 i really hope i did it justice 😩
Wc ≈ 1.4k
Pairing: GOJO Satoru x f.reader
Summary: Suguru betted that Gojo could make anyone fall in love with him, even someone who was his complete opposite — like you.
Warnings; angst-to-fluff, angst contents — {self-loathing (Gojo), crying, heartbreak}, a little bit suggestive at the end, kissing/making out
♪ michelle
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It was nice while it lasted.
The handholding in public, the stolen cheek kisses, the pampering and spoiling, relishing in the jealous looks thrown your way when he fed you bites of his food in the cafeteria, bathing in Gojo Satoru's affection. A lot of people would have killed for your position, or even a glimpse into what it's like to date your college's biggest heart throb.
You two seemed to really like each other. It was like two mismatched puzzle pieces somehow fitting together — a fascinating connection was shared. No one would have put you and him together, not even Gojo.
The only reason he asked you out in the first place was...
"Suguru, that's such a nasty idea... I love your mind."
"Just don't actually fall in love with her. The whole idea of this bet is that you can prove any girl can fall in love with you, don't forget that."
Gojo had chuckled at this, it seemed so ridiculous.
Why would he actually fall in love with you? You weren't even his type. He never paid you a sparing glance, not at school, not at parties, not around town.
You weren't his type...
So why did his heart start panging excitedly a few months into your 'fake' relationship? Why did he swoon when you fell asleep laid on his chest in his dorm room? Why did he want to kiss you so badly every time he saw your face? Why did he jump like a cat whenever he got a text from you? Why did he kiss you like the world was ending?
And why did he cry when you found out the truth? He looked distraught when Suguru let the secret slip.
Why did Gojo Satoru, the strongest, beg on his knees for you to stay when you were about to walk away?
"Please! I'm so sorry! I know it was so wrong and fucked up — shit I regret it so much — I really like you! I swear to god, I swear on my life!"
You choked on your tears so badly that you could barely talk. "I can't believe you. This is such a fucking horrible th - thing to do to s - someone, Gojo."
He felt so hurt that you went back to calling him Gojo and not Satoru, like you used to when the two of you were just mild acquaintances.
"Don't go!" He almost yelled.
His arms wrapped around your midriff, he slid down like he was too weak to support himself — like his legs went limp. He slid down until he was clinging to your legs. He sobbed with such a genuine-looking crying face that you almost believed it. He wasn't play-crying like he does to get attention or persuade people, he was ugly-crying.
Gojo Satoru, the prettiest boy you ever knew, was an ugly-crier. A string of saliva glistened between his canines, his mouth hung open like a dramatic renaissance portrait of a distraught man. His eyes were pinched so tight that fat tears cascaded out the corners.
"Please don't go!"
⁕⁕⁕
Suguru found his best friend sat in the middle of the campus' main stairs. Desolate. One hand holding up his heavy head. Regretful. eyes closed.
"So it didn't go well?"
Satoru didn't raise his head, but he slowly opened his eyes and looked miserably at the floor. He watched a line of ants.
"It went as horribly wrong as you could imagine." he responded eventually.
Suguru came to sit next to him. "Are you really in love?" he asked him seriously.
"Of course I fucking am! — sorry..." Satoru snapped, then immediately mumbled an apology.
A long summer breeze went by.
"Try again." he suggested, "I'm sure she'll - "
"She fucking hates me."
There was a heavy silence after Satoru said that.
"If I were her, I'd hate me too." Satoru muttered.
Suguru went silent. He felt guilty, after all, he was the one that dared his best friend to do something as stupid as play with your heart.
Satoru watched the ants scurrying along. He felt as puny and weak as one right then. The realization of these feelings themselves are what urged him to abruptly stand up.
"I'm not giving up. I'm gonna explain to her that I really did fall in love — that I really do fucking like her so god damn much it's insane and stupid."
"That's the spirit — where are you going?" Suguru asked curiously as Satoru began heading over to the parking lot.
"I'm gonna go bring her flowers and... stuff..." he replied unsurely.
Will that really work? He wondered to himself.
"But it's gonna rain." Suguru said, "Heyyy, Satoru, listen don't just — ah, there he goes... idiot really fell in love when I warned him not to..." he muttered pitifully.
⁕⁕⁕
There was a knock at your apartment door.
You wrung it open to reveal a heartbroken Gojo Satoru, soaked-through with rain, standing in the downpour, panting while holding onto a bouquet of vividly red roses. You couldn't have witnessed a more dramatic scene in a movie.
His hair was completely flat with wetness. There were raindrops running down his cheeks and dripping off his chin.
On the walk to your apartment, Satoru had mentally written a speech for you.
It was definitely a well-rehearsed heartbroken boy's 'take me back' speech. Flawless and direct. Surely it would have sufficed.
But he didn't say even the first few words of his practiced speech when your door flew open.
All he did was break down crying and fall to his knees right in front of you, like some dramatic actor — except he wasn't acting, you could feel the realness of his regrets and miseries through each sob.
"Satoru..." you looked down at him pitifully. "Come inside, you're gonna get sick." you said tenderly.
For some reason, those very small words communicated more emotions than any form of 'I love you' ever could.
⁕⁕⁕
His pretty nose was slightly upturned. You noticed that when he first kissed you after your third date.
You noticed it again when you observed how red it had become from crying and sneezing.
Wrapping a blanket around him. Drying his hair. Fluffing it with your fingers. Making him some tea. Sitting him down on your bed. Putting on a movie. Letting him curl up into your arms — something he never did when you two were 'dating' because he was convinced he had to show off his dominance to win you over.
All of this together settled the air between you two. But it still didn't explain everything.
"Why'd you do something so dumb?" you asked him half-humorously.
He nibbled and chewed on his lip, eyes on the TV — not really, actually they were looking at your subtle reflection within it.
"I'm an asshole." he admitted.
"You don't say." you chuckled.
He felt bad, and uncurled his body and raised his face to look at you. Satoru never wore a serious expression in all the time you've known him, both as acquaintances and 'lovers' — except for now, which is how you know it's true.
"I wasn't supposed to fall in love with you. Suguru dared me because... well, because it seemed comical. We're opposites, no one would ever put us together right? But he and I thought that was a hilarious challenge. We wanted to see if I could catch you and make you fall in love with me, or something like that..."
He started mumbling his words and refused to look at you.
"Satoru."
"Yeah?"
He reared his head up at you.
"Did it mean something to you, the time we spent this summer?"
He didn't hesitate to respond, "It meant everything." he said.
"Well, then there we go." you said with a little smile.
"Am I being forgiven...?"
"Mhm."
He seemed taken aback and unsure. Was he really being forgiven? Were you reversing the script on him and pulling a trick on him now?
"Does this mean..." he mumbled quietly, "... that I'm allowed to kiss you right now?" he asked nervously, heart panging, eyes giving your lips a longing glance.
"You're such an idiot." you sighed, "Yeah of course it means you can kiss m — mmmf!"
You never managed the rest of your words out, they all got muffled on Satoru's lips. His hand came to cup your right cheek, fingers caressing your skin like you meant everything to him. He tilted his head into the kiss, broke apart for air, dove back in, kissed you feverishly fervently violently eagerly — with so much affection and thankfulness that you almost couldn't breathe due to being smothered.
"Sorry..." he panted after breaking the kiss, bottom lip glistening with saliva. "I'm sorry for breaking a heart as good as yours."
"Just don't do it again." you told him in a whisper.
The poor boy, two days without kissing was really too much for him. He went right back in and kissed you blue, until you gasped and subconsciously wrapped your legs around his slim waist and pulled him closer. His whole body felt hot and eager. You tasted so good, you looked so good, you loved him so good — he decided right there in the back of his mind that he'd marry you after graduation.
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ourgoddessathena · 6 months
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okay maybe i'm crazy but like... imagine a crossover au of detective Conan universe and haikyuu!! universe where y/n have two boyfriends: amuro tooru and oikawa tooru ((all of the characters are on legal age))
i would kill to have them both as my boyfriends fr
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ourgoddessathena · 6 months
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making this one binary. no ghost agnosticism allowed. but explain the nuances in the tags if you want.
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ourgoddessathena · 6 months
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i wanna made some Percy Jackson x reader so i made research for aphrodite's children ability and, man, they got some interesting powers
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ourgoddessathena · 6 months
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Lockwood and Co filming locations guide!!
it's finally here!! i finally finished writing my travel guide to the lockwood and co filming locations and i'm so excited to share it with you all!!
feel free to share and leave any comments/thoughts you have <33 (i also have a few harry potter guides too if anyones is interested!)
tagging a few people i think might like to read it <3 @wellgoslowly @losticaruss @neewtmas @impossibleclair @waitingforthesunrise
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