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#fred wesaley fanfiction
plant-flwrs · 4 years
Note
I love your writing! Can you do a reader x fred where the reader’s whole family (like siblings) is slytherin except her and she’s in gryffindor and you can do whatever with it thank you!
rivalries as old as time // fred weasley
masterlist!
a/n: omg i’ve never written mean!george this was kind of scary hehe. n e way, hope u like it! thanks for ur request!
summary: Fred and George are usually united on everything, but Fred’s crush on Draco Malfoy’s sister is definitely something they disagree on.
(5k)
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You had never liked red, and as you fidgeted with your red tie for the fifth time, you felt an elbow to your side.
“Stop,” Fred Weasley whispered from beside you, sending a scowl your way, “It’s distracting.”
“Distracting from what? You have no intention of taking notes,” you said, looking at both his and your blank parchments in front of you.
“Distracting from my daydreams,” he said easily, leaning forward on his desk to rest his forearms against the wood, “I need to focus on them, they’re just getting good.”
“What’re they about?” you asked, hoping to sound rude. Fred looked at you in the corner of his eye, and he was regrettably forced to admit that your signature Malfoy smirk was insanely attractive.
“Oh you know,” Fred said, copying your actions to lean back in his chair, “ the usual. Trolls and Gremlins.”
The both of you slouched in your chairs, arms crossed, ignoring the awfully boring lecture Professor Binns was giving.
You rolled your eyes, annoyed by Fred. Your gaze drifted across the room, trying to find something entertaining for your crystal gray eyes to focus on.
Fred, meanwhile, was internally slapping himself. Trolls and Gremlins? That was so stupid!
He watched your blonde hair fall from where it was loosely tucked into a headband, and you brought a mindless finger to put the hair back. He watched your simple movements, entranced by you.
You and Fred didn’t get along. You are a Malfoy, and he’s a Weasley. But still, somehow, you both always found yourselves thinking of the other.
History of Magic was his favorite class, because of you.
You and Draco had crossed paths on the way to lunch, and he walked briskly over to you, dismissing some of his Slytherin friends. You paid no mind to their scowls and figured they felt so angry because Gryffindor was playing Slytherin next week on the pitch.
“Has mum sent an owl to you this week?” Draco asked, craning his neck a little to look at you. His growth spurt hadn’t struck him yet.
“Oh!” you said, beginning to dig through your bag, “Sorry, forgot about it.”
You pulled a small parcel from your bag, handing it to your brother. The two of you were nearing the Great Hall, where you would have to split and go your separate ways.
“What is it?” you asked, feeling an obligation to be nosy in your little brother’s business.
“Some ink,” Draco said lazily, tucking the package into his own bag, “it’s my lucky ink.”
“Why? Is it enchanted?” you asked, and then lowered your voice, “Is that how you get such high marks?”
Draco smiled at your compliment and shook his head no.
“No, I get those because I study,” he said flatly, a dig at the fact that you excelled more on the Quidditch pitch than the academics.
You jokingly narrowed your eyes at him, and just before he walked to the Slytherin table, you reached out and ruffled his gelled hair. His joking stature quickly turned serious, and you broke into a jog to get to the Gryffindor table and away from Draco. You watched him attempt to smooth back his hair, chuckling as you slid down on the bench, a few seats away from Fred and George.
Fred was hunched over a poorly drawn drawing that George pointed to continuously while he talked.
“If we took that one corridor, there's that curtain that leads here,” George said, moving his finger to the right, “and then we can easily get back in time!”
You didn’t bother to ask, knowing George wouldn’t tell you. As much as you and Fred would get into little arguments, George had it out for you. Despite being his housemate, it was a known fact that you were the target of his pranks. Last year, he had snuck into the girl's Quidditch changing rooms and stole your clothes. You had to beg Fred from where he stood on the outside of the tent to make his brother give his clothes back, and when that didn’t work, you waved your wand and said “Accio clothes”. George had never run so fast up a hill, and he still couldn’t escape your wrath.
You pulled a sandwich from the tray in front of you.
“Malfoy,” Oliver Wood said, catching your attention.
“Yeah?” you said, taking a large bite of your sandwich.
“Did you look over that play I sent you?” Oliver asked, referring to the crumpled note he had tossed at the back of your head during Charms.
“Yeah,” you said, chewing and fishing in your bag for the note.
You pulled it out and saw Fred looking towards you. You looked at him before returning to Oliver. You unfolded the paper and Oliver hunched over it as George had done down the table.
Oliver’s hands were all over the simple drawing, his words getting lost in your boredom. You loved Quidditch, but god, could Oliver be boring.
“What are you two talking about?” both of your heads snapped up to see Fred forcing himself between the two first years that sat across you.
Oliver handed him the paper, pointing at all the meanings of the symbols.
“This,” he finally said, catching his breath, “is how we’re gonna beat Slytherin next week.”
Your weeknights were spent with Oliver, both of you ranting on about strategies while also trying to get done some homework. You occupied a wooden table that was usually used for chess, but the board was moved over to the coffee table where Ron and Harry played.
Fred watched, nearly pouting, from his spot on the couch. He watched the way your light eyes would brighten at the words Oliver said to you, and how you would blush every time he offered you a compliment on your playing.
“Ready for practice tonight?” Fred said, sliding up next to you as you waited outside of Binns’ classroom.
“Yeah,” you said absentmindedly, picking at your nails.
“George and I won’t take it easy on you,” Fred said, his veiled attempt at sounding threatening failing.
“Oh, Fred,” you said, faking a shake in your voice, “you don’t mean that.”
Fred rolled his eyes at your teasing, following after you as you walked to your shared desk.
Both of you came down the Gryffindor stairs at the same time, dressed in your practice jerseys and equipment in hand.
You glanced at him and caught his eyes looking you up and down. You chuckled to yourself, and his face flushed red.
You walked through the portrait hole with Oliver, and Fred watched you as he waited for George.
The two of them twisted and tossed their beater bats from hand to hand as they were perched on their brooms. You and Alicia faced off near the ground, hovering stoically. It was no competition, you were a better flyer than Alicia. She nearly had you matched in the power of her arm, but you still had the upper hand.
Fred bit his lip as you extended yourself to reach for the Quaffle. Your legs were the only thing keeping you on the broom, but you didn’t pay any mind to the unsteadiness. The only thing you thought of was the play Oliver had ingrained in your mind the past week. You repeated his critiques in your head and made sure to fix your grip on the Quaffle.
Alicia trailed after you, and you dove under Angelina to avoid her grasp. They were both trailing after you now. Alicia was nearly taken off her broom by a Bludger, and risking a glance upwards, you saw Fred’s triumphant smile. It was lucky that Fred was on your team for this practice because George had a nasty habit of failing to block Bludgers from hitting you.
Nearing near the goal post, you easily wound your arm back and sent the Quaffle right past Oliver. He slapped his gloved hands on his broom and sent you a proud smile.
The practice continued, and you weren’t hit with a Bludger the whole time, no matter how many George sent at you. Fred was always there to send them off, and send you a wink after he did it. You won the practice scrimmage, but Alicia put up a good fight.
“We have this,” Alicia said, beaming at you as she shed her heavy robes in the changing room.
“If we don’t I think Oliver’ll have an aneurism,” you joked, pulling on a loose t-shirt.
Angelina chuckled, and Alicia continued to beam.
“Really lucky Fred saved you from all those Bludgers,” Katie Bell teased from behind you.
“George has got it out for me,” you said nonchalantly, shrugging your shoulders.
“Yeah, but, Fred sure kept you safe,” she continued to hint, but it went over your head.
“Well yeah, we can’t have an injury two days before the match,” you said, closing your locker and shuffling the combination.
Alicia rolled her eyes, and Angelina laughed.
“Yeah, that’s why,” Katie said, giving up.
You walked up the path to the castle and saw a clan of black robes walking down the path. You saw blond hair that matched yours peaking from one of them.
“Draco!” you called to your brother, breaking into a jog to reach him.
“Hey,” he said, breaking off from his Slytherin teammates.
“Are you guys ready for the match?” you asked excitedly.
Draco huffed out a defeated sigh, crossing his arms.
“No,” he admitted, glancing over his shoulder to make sure his housemates couldn’t hear him, “we bloody suck.”
You fought the cheeky smile that crept onto your face.
“Oh, that’s rotten, Draco,” you said, beginning to walk back down the hill with him, “I’m sure you’ll play your best.”
“I’ll try,” he said, beginning to shoo you off, “go do your homework.”
You rolled your eyes at your brother and waved him off, setting back up the castle.
The day of matches was always nerving, but it was even worse when it was against Slytherin. It felt like everyone in the school wanted you, needed you, to beat them.
You and Oliver sat shoulder to shoulder, both trying to get the other to eat something for breakfast. You both claimed to be too nervous, and then the other would say “that’s ridiculous, you have to eat!”.
Walking to the pitch, Harry Potter trailed behind all of you. You watched the twins stop to reach him, each wrapping a comforting and brotherly arm around his shoulders. You smiled to yourself, slipping into the changing room with the rest of the girls.
The crowd was roaring. It had never been this loud. Various chants sounded off, and you soon realized that someone in the Slytherin crowd learned a charm to louden their voice. Hateful words about Harry spouted from the green stands, and boos countered the Slytherin statements from the blue, yellow, and red bannered stands.
Taking the field, you hovered in front of Adrian Pucey as you had hovered in front of Alicia. Alicia was much nicer to look at, you thought, and she was a better player.
Pucey was barely moving before you soared off with the Quaffle tucked under your arm. You avoided the Slytherin chasers easily, twisting and ducking on your broom with the Quaffle on you like it was a third arm attached to your body. Cheers sounded off as you faked out Marcus Flint and Adrian Pucey, making them dive into each other and nearly sending them off their brooms.
You looked back, seeing Alicia wide open behind you. You glanced forward, the Slytherin keeper braced for your shot. You slowed, allowing Alicia to come to your side. You made a seamless pass to her that the keeper hadn’t noticed, and while he looked at you, Alicia came from the left and scored. You met her to high five, your arms outstretched.
Fred dove to you, following a very determined Bludger. His bat was nearly touching it, nearly about to send it off its path towards you. He was just about to reach it when you dove. Fred and the Bludger soared past you, and the Bludger redirected itself. Doing a loop, and seeing that you were no longer there, it went for the next best thing. Alicia barely had time to brace herself before the Bludger knocked her shoulder out of its socket. The painful injury only caused a short interruption, but she had some choice words for Fred and George for failing to hit the Bludger sooner.
After that one incident, the game continued in the same fashion. You and Alicia flew circles around the lacking Slytherin Chasers, and Oliver blocked nearly everything they sent at him.
The cheers from the crowd stayed consistent for the entire match. There was never a silent moment from any house. A renowned gasp fell across the crowd, though, as Draco changed direction quickly. He turned the end of his broom straight up, and with an outstretched hand, Harry was breathing down Draco’s neck. You watched your brother, his blond hair flying off his face, his long arms reaching out into the sky. You didn’t feel bad for rooting for Draco, because even if he caught it, you were so ahead it wouldn’t have mattered.
Draco’s pale fingers eventually did wrap around the snitch, and without thinking, he let go of his broom in the haste of catching the little thing. He began to fall from the sky, and you watched as his legs and arms flailed around him. His broom fell faster than he did, and you flew to him. You were pulling your wand from your boot when someone had beat you to it. Draco hung suspended in mid-air, his body limp. He raised his head, and you saw his ghostly cheeks flushed pink. He looked around, patting his body to check if he was still alive. When he realized he was, he raised his hand into the sky, showing the golden snitch. The green section roared with laughter, but Lee Jordan’s voice halted them.
“Just a reminder! The Gryffindor team still wins!”
Cheers from every other section sounded off, and you felt a pang of guilt in your heart. You could be a Slytherin, you should be a Slytherin, and here you were apart of one of the houses that cheered for your brother's losses.
You flew to Draco, watching as he tucked the snitch into his robe pocket. You hovered, and he climbed onto the back of your broom. You looked around to see who had saved him, only to see Fred’s smug smile above you. George hovered next to his brother, scowling at Fred. You watched Fred tuck his wand back into his robes, giving you a shy wave. You smiled back at him, a silent thanks for the help.
You flew Draco to the ground, where he collected his broom.
“You were great, Dray,” you said, clapping him on the back, “really.”
“We lost,” he spat at you, cringing from your touch.
“Yeah but that’s not your fault.” you consoled him, watching his face soften, “You did your job, you caught the snitch.”
Draco nodded at you, offering you an appreciative smile. You wrapped an arm around his shoulder and squeezed briefly, then sending him off to his sulking Slytherin team captain.
Oliver was already running towards you, arms outstretched.
“Y/n!” he called, and you smiled widely at him.
“You were amazing, Wood,” you called to him, letting him envelop you in a hug.
He pulled you over to the huddle of your teammates, and they were all beaming.
“Wasn’t Potter this time, was it?” Lee Jordan called from his place in the spectator box, “Y/n Malfoy, the best Chaser Gryffindor’s got!”
You blushed wildly at Lee’s exaggerated praise, ducking your head as your teammates all cheered for you.
Fred and George came tumbling from the sky, landing ungracefully on the ground.
“Think this calls for a party?” Fred asked, and everyone’s cheers increased.
The common room was transformed into an even more red and gold haven. Maybe red was growing on you.
You were standing at the center of a huddle, everyone’s glasses raised. Oliver had just made a quite longwinded speech, to which you cut off with:
“Let’s drink to that!”
Cheers came from everyone around you, and you brought your firewhisky to your lips.
“I still don’t get why you did that,” George shouted at his brother, his words slightly slurred. George never could handle his liquor.
“It was her brother, mate!” Fred shouted back.
“He’s a Malfoy! And so is she! Freaks, the lot of them!” George yelled, and the statement trailed over the crowd and to your ears.
You turned to look at the twins, meeting George’s disgusted face.
You pushed through the crowd and put yourself between the brothers, bringing your face to George’s.
“What’s your problem?” you shouted, and he cringed away from the loud noise.
“You!” he shouted back, and you could smell the alcohol on his breath.
“You’re a prick,” you said to him, sounding poisonous, “a drunk prick.”
George scoffed and brought a hand to your shoulder. He shoved you away, and you tumbled into Fred. Fred’s arms were around you before you could lunge at George as if he read your mind.
“Let me go!” you shouted to Fred, thrashing against him. George stood in front of you, taunting you. He waved his drink around, his drunken expression full of arrogance.
“I can’t!” Fred called out to you, then to George, “George, stop!”
George rolled his eyes and tossed back the rest of his drink. He stumbled off to somewhere else, leaving you in Fred’s grasp.
He felt your heavy breathing against his chest, your warm arms in his hands.
“You alright?” Fred spoke into your ear, his mouth moving against your hair.
“Yeah, I’m fine, you can let me go,” you said, wiggling from his grasp.
Fred hadn’t wanted to let you go, but he figured it would be odd if he kept you pulled against him.
“He didn’t mean that,” Fred started, but you waved him off.
“Yes he did,” you said. starting to walk away.
Fred reached out for you, pulling you back.
“I’m sorry,” Fred said, his eyes searching yours.
“Stop, Fred,” you said, pulling your arm from his hand again, “None of you Weasley’s have liked me since the day I was sorted into Gryffindor. It didn’t even matter who I was.”
Fred’s eyebrows furrowed at your statement, but he couldn’t find it in himself to feel anything but sympathy as he looked at your hurt expression.
“That’s not true, Y/n,” he started, but you turned again. He didn’t stop you that time.
Your mood was ruined. You filled your cup with more firewhisky, but at the bottom of each glass, all you could see was George’s disgusted face.
You had never done anything to the Weasleys, but that never stopped the redheads, or their friends, from sending you glares any time they saw you. You felt torn, torn by the unnaturalness of you being in Gryffindor, being away from your brother. You were torn by the fact that you felt weren’t even wanted by Gryffindor. No matter what you did, it was never right.
You remembered watching Draco get sorted, his baby-faced wonder as he sat on the stool with his legs crossed at the ankles. You had hoped, you had even prayed, that Draco would be sorted into Gryffindor. When that house was called out, though, the table of green erupted, and you watched your brother be swept off by your rivaling house.
George would never understand this, he would never see you as anything but a Malfoy, a pure-blood supremacist. You weren’t what your family was, you didn’t care about blood status, but no one cared.
Your anger seethed, watching George having fun, dancing with Angelina. Your grip on your cup tightened, and you wanted more than anything to go up to him and throw what was left of your drink into his face. You started over to him.
Fred intercepted you, having been watching you intently the whole night.
“You don’t want to do this,” Fred said, trying to calm you down as he blocked your path to his brother, “wait ‘till morning, then you can scream at him all you want.”
You could only shake your head, trying to move pasted Fred. You didn’t want to do this in the morning, you wanted to do this now, while the warm anger moved through your blood as fast as the whiskey did.
Fred’s hands gripped your upper arms, holding you in place.
“Let me go, Fred,” you mumbled, teeth gritted.
“I can’t, Y/n,” he said, searching for your eyes like he was begging you to look at him.
“He can’t always get away with it,” you whispered, feeling your anger turn into sadness. You had refused to cry about George or anything he said in your first year, but it seemed that now was your breaking point.
“He won’t, I promise,” Fred whispered back, trying to sound reassuring. He found it hard, his heart hurting at the sight of you so upset.
“He always does!” you exclaimed, your voice breaking. Your eyes were still dry, but the pounding in your chest felt like a heart attack.
“Well, he won’t this time,” Fred replied, bringing his face to yours so you had no choice but to look at him, “I’ll make sure of it.”
You met his eyes, and he saw the hopeful glint in them. He offered you a kind smile, his lips stretched across his face. You nodded at him, relaxing in his grasp. You didn’t try to move from it, and you didn’t want to. You felt safe in Fred’s arms.
“Oi!” George called from behind Fred.
Fred turned, putting you behind his back and himself between you and George. You pushed and pulled, trying to get in front of him and to George, but he was too strong.
“Fred, when are you going to get over this?” George asked his brother, downing the last of his dark drink.
“Shut up, George,” Fred warned, trying to push you and him away from George.
“I’ve told you a million times, mate,” George started, “Malfoys and Weasleys don’t belong together.”
Fred was on top of George in seconds. He was wrestling him to the ground and putting him in a headlock.
You put a hand over your mouth, watching as they fought. You replayed George’s words, “Malfoys and Weasleys don’t belong together”. Was this simple brotherly teasing, or did Fred have feelings for you?
Katie and Alicia found you in the crowd, and you hadn’t even realized what you were doing as they pulled you off of Fred and George. You had grabbed Fred’s shoulders, trying to pull him off his brother, but they thrashed against your grip.
Alicia and Katie were guiding you up the girl's dormitory stairs, pushing you towards the bathroom as your face became green with nausea. Katie held your hair, rubbing your back as you emptied your breakfast and what looked to be an entire bottle of firewhisky.
You groaned, moving to rest your back on the wall in front of the toilet. Katie flushed the vomit, closed the lid, and sat in front of you.
“Are you alright?” she asked, her kind voice inviting you to tell her all about your insecurities and worries.
Alicia came in right at the part of you feeling guilty for not being Slytherin, and Angelina stumbled into the dorms at your conclusion of what George said about Weasleys and Malfoys.
The girls consoled you, assuring you that you had every right to be in Gryffindor and that George was just a prick.
“What’d you think he meant by that?” Katie said, testing your reaction, in reference to what George said.
“I dunno,” you grumbled, moving yourself to lay down on the ground. Alicia moved, grabbing your shoulder and making you stay upright.
“Could it mean Fred,” Alicia spoke like a kindergarten teacher, and your drunken self giggled as she spoke, “likes you?”
You gasped, your head falling back to hit the wall.
“No way,” you mumbled, and when Katie started giggling next to you, you did too.
When Fred finally made his way up the girl's stairs, bypassing the detouring charms, he heard loud and manic giggles coming from your dorm. He opened the door but found the beds empty. The door to the bathroom was open, and the sound came from there.
“Hello?” he said, rasping his knuckles on the door frame.
The four girls on the ground, all looked up at him with bright smiles, all saying at the same time: “Fred!”
Fred’s eyes went to yours immediately. He smiled as his name fell from your drunken lips, admiring the twinkle in your silver eyes.
“Are you alright?” he asked, moving to crouch in front of you.
The other girls got the hint, and filed out of the bathroom, all mumbling something of good luck to you.
“Yeah,” you replied, still smiling.
Your eyes focused on his face, and you saw a nasty cut on his lip. It bled a little to the corner of his mouth and down his jaw, stopping just above his shirt collar.
Your smile dropped, and you brought a hand to his jaw, “Are you alright? You’re bleeding, Fred.”
He brought a hand to his lip, and when he pulled it away he saw blood. You pushed yourself to your feet, wobbling a little as you stood. You got a wad of toilet paper and wet it a little in the sink. You put your hands on Fred’s shoulders, telling him to be still.
He closed his eyes as you dragged the paper over his jaw and dabbed at his lip. Once you got the blood off, you got a dry piece of toilet paper and ran it back over his jaw again. He suppressed the groans he wanted to release, forcing his hands not to reach out and grab your waist. Once the trail of blood was gone, you used a finger to tilt his face up. You ran your fingers over where the blood had been, making sure you got it all. Fred’s mouth opened a little at the touch, and he sighed heavily. You let his face drop back to yours, and looked at him. His mouth still had some blood in the corner. You wet the pad of your thumb with your tongue and cupped Fred’s face. You brought your thumb to the corner of his mouth and swiped your finger across his lip. This time Fred wasn’t able to suppress the moan that came from his chest. Your hand still rested on his shoulder, and your hand still held his jaw.
“Did George do this?” you asked, fearful of his response.
“Must have,” Fred whispered back to you.
“I’m sorry,” you said, dropping your hands from Fred and turning your back to him, “I shouldn’t have gone over to him.”
“Hey,” Fred said, wrapping a hand on your waist and pulling you into him, “George deserved that. You should see the shiner I gave him.”
“I can’t let you fight your brother like that,” you whispered, putting a hand on his chest and feeling his beating heart, “you two don’t fight like that.”
“I don’t care. I’ll fight him every day until he gives you a chance,” Fred replied, bringing a hand from your waist to the back of your neck.
When he began to pull your face closer to his, you pulled back a little, still in his embrace.
“I can’t kiss you,” you said, a teasing smile on your face.
“Why not?” he pouted.
“I just threw up, it’s gross.”
Fred dug in his pocket for a second and pulled out a tin. It was one in the packaging of one of his products, but he assured you they had yet to be charmed to make people’s tongues swell.
“I don’t know,” you dragged, twisting the small mint in your fingers.
“Why would I prank you right now? You have no idea how much I want to kiss you,” he took the mint form your hand and put it in your mouth for you.
He was right, it was just a regular mint. The taste of vomit was gone, and after you chewed it, Fred barely wasted a second before he pulled you into him.
He kissed you hard, despite having a busted lip. When you ran your tongue over it, he winced, and you pulled back.
“Oh, I’m sorry,” you said, bringing your hand up to it and touching his lip. His hand grabbed yours, and he placed gentle kisses to each of your fingertips. His hand moved to your palm, to your wrist, and up your arm. His mouth ran over your shoulder, which he pulled your shirt back from, and up your neck. His lips finally connected with yours again, and you let out a pleased moan.
Fred pushed you against the counter of the sink, and you wrapped your hands in his hair. The feeling of nausea hit you very quickly, and you pulled away from Fred. You doubled over, trying to will yourself from throwing up.
“Oh god,” you started, and Fred rushed to your side, “I’m gonna throw up again.”
“What? Was it the mint? Are you alright?” Fred protested as you pushed him on his back out of the bathroom, closing the door and locking it behind him.
You threw open the toilet seat and emptied what was left in your stomach. Flushing, you closed the lid and sat on it. You pulled your wand from your waistband and unlocked the door. Fred came in hesitantly, and when he saw you were fine, he lifted you off the toilet by the hand.
“Come on,” he said, guiding you out of the dorm.
“I don’t wanna go back to the party,” you mumbled, pulling his arm closer to you as you held onto it.
“You’ve been up there for ages, the party’s long over,” Fred assured, pulling you down the stairs.
Cups littered the ground, and abandoned streamers hung from the ceiling. A banner Dean Thomas had made hung lopsided on one side of the room.
Fred pulled you to the couch, bringing a blanket over you.
“Do you want anything?” he asked, and you laughed at his nurturing actions.
You were about to say no, but the rumbling of your stomach convinced you otherwise. You had emptied everything you had eaten, and you were hungry.
Fred snuck to the kitchens easily, making the same trek he made nearly every other night. He brought you back some sandwiches, but when he slipped through the portrait hole, he found you asleep on the couch.
Your breathing was even, and your mouth hung open a little. You curled into the couch, tucking your legs up to your chest.
He put the sandwiches on the table next to you and moved your body to the left. He curled up next to you, pulling the blanket over the both of you. He spooned you, tucking his face into the crook of your neck. He wrapped his arm around your waist, and your hand found his under the blanket.
For the first time, you felt at home in the Gryffindor common room.
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