Chapter 13: Alone
Hermione could never recall feeling so warm and content.
She released a lazy hum as the rhythmic falls of a masculine
chest lulled her back to that wonderful purgatory between sleep and reality. A
tasty smell of peppermint and sinful Slytherin tickled her nose, and she
blinked away the remains of a blissful dream as she remembered where she was.
Judging by the heavy breaths toying with her hair, Draco was
very much ignorant to the world, but his arms must have snaked round her during
the night, and she couldn't help but push her body a little more into his. He felt
so good wrapped around her like this, and she wanted to absorb as much as she
could before the inevitable denial and arguments came. Frowning with that
thought, she realised it was probably best she leave before he stirred, if only
to save them both the embarrassment and hassle.
Unsure why, but unable to resist, she craned her neck to
plant a lingering kiss against his jaw line, before carefully removing herself
from his hold.
The absence of his touch left her feeling neglected and
cold, and as an afterthought, she pulled down one of Draco's blankets to cover
him. With a final sad look, she turned to leave, oblivious to the set of grey
eyes slowly opening behind her.
Draco brought his fingertips to where her lips had been, and
stared at her back as she left him alone. A random idea stole his brain, and he
silently eased himself up, just managing to the catch the door before it closed
behind her. He poked his head through the gap and strained his hearing ability
to successfully catch her password.
Lutra, lutra?
He had no idea what it meant, nor did he care; he just felt
satisfied that things could be a little fairer now. If she was so bloody eager
to wander into his room whenever she liked, now he could do the same. He told
himself it was purely for tactical purposes, but as he raised his fingers again
to his Granger-grazed jaw, he couldn't help but wonder if there were darker
motives to his prying actions.
.
.
After a light lunch and a trip to the library, Hermione had
returned to her room to find Hedwig pecking at her window.
Hermione read the letter again, and her smile widened. The
envelope had been addressed solely to her, so she hadn't tracked down Ginny
this time. After weeks of nothing but disappointment and fuel to her
ever-growing pessimism; finally there was a light in the darkness. The note was
scrawled in Ron's familiar and clumsy handwriting, but the words were bold and
clear across the parchment.
We found it. It's destroyed.
Searching for the others.
I miss you.
R&H
There was no question about what 'it' was. They had found
the locket. Her curiosity about the details would have to wait; she knew it was
far too risky for Harry and Ron to provide her with too much information. But
for the moment, she didn't care, they were one step closer to defeating
Voldemort and ending this War.
I miss you.
Her broad grin creased into a sad frown as a spell of guilt
hit her hard. Visions of her recent…activities with Draco waltzed across her
conscious, and she realised, with a cringe, that she hadn't once considered how
her behaviour would affect her friendships with the boys, specifically Ron. The
details of her relationship with him were complicated to say the least, and she
guessed she should blame them both for never having a civilised conversation
about the subject.
While she didn't regret losing her virginity to her best
friend, it had been made perfectly clear to her that that was all she and Ron
ever would be. Friends. There had never been any passion between them; just
crushes and curiosity that had now been, for her, sated. She loved him dearly,
but she wanted that lust that she'd heard so much about; that burning throb
inside your soul that made you crave someone's touch.
And that someone just wasn't Ron.
But Draco…
Draco had this…intensity with everything that he did, and it
made something behind her navel tingle. The sensation was new and foreign to
her, and she had no idea if she could call it lust or simply intrigue, but it
was different and exciting. It encouraged her to interact and watch him, and in
the safe solitude of her showers or her room, sometimes she couldn't help but
imagine…
She shook her head to chase away the risqué thoughts and
reminded herself that she had just received some promising news.
Priorities, Hermione...
.
.
After two days of awkward glances and an obvious reluctance
to address the night spent in forbidden arms, Hermione was beginning to realise
she quite missed Draco's company. She was still struggling to really identify
what she truly felt for her Slytherin housemate, but she had done her best to
ignore her curiosity, and instead focus on her Horcrux research. But she
couldn't deny her interest in him, nor could she really figure out why she
desired to spend time with him when all they seemed to do was fight.
Perhaps it was because she could see him slowly dropping his
defences, or possibly because the arguments reminded her that she had some fire
still thundering in her bones. Hell, maybe she just enjoyed the spasmodic
little flutters that crowded her gut whenever they were close…
It was Tuesday, meaning she would be leaving in two days to
visit Tonks, and she needed to tell Draco. Smothering her anxiety and steeling
her courage, she slipped out of her room, urged on by the winds slashing the
night, and tapped lightly against his door.
"Why do you bother knocking?" Draco's voice called
from inside. "You will come in whether I say you can, or not."
She found a little smile toying with her mouth as she used
her wand to unlock his door, and she licked her dry lips before padding her
bare feet over his threshold. He was sitting on his bed; shoulders hunched over
and elbows resting against his crossed legs, while one of her books lay
discarded near his feet.
"What do you want, Granger?" he asked, barely
offering her a sideways glance.
"I wanted to talk to you about something-
"And you decided that three in the morning was the best
time to bring it up?"
"I've been busy," she lied, carefully easing
herself down to sit at the foot of his bed. "And we're both up, so I
figured-
"Spit it out then," he said tiredly. "I
actually planned on getting some sleep tonight."
"Okay," she sighed, hesitating as she tried to
select her words. "On Thursday, I shall be staying in Hogsmeade for a
couple of days-
"What?" he blurted. His head snapped up at her
words, and a violent sense of dread seized his chest. The thought of her
leaving him alone in this sanity-starving hole made him feel sick to his
stomach, and an itchy shiver clawed its way up his spine. "What the hell do
you mean you'll be leaving for a couple days?"
"Well, I'm visiting someone," she explained,
nervously tucking a an unruly curl behind her ear. "I will leave you
enough food and-
"Are you going with that Corner prick?" he hissed
quietly, fixing her with a fierce glare. "Romantic fuck-fest for the Heads
at The Three Broomsticks?"
Hermione flinched. "No, that's not-
"I suppose I should be grateful that you're not denting
the headboard in your own room," he continued viciously. "And if you
have to slag it around-
"Draco, stop it!" she barked with offence and the
shadows of tears scratching at her eyes. "I'm meeting a female friend for
Godric's sake! Why do you always have to do that?"
His mouth clapped shut as he willed his stormy thoughts to
simmer, and he wondered why he'd found his rant necessary. He considered the
possibility that she was bluffing to save face, but he doubted Granger was
capable of lying; and in a world rife with deception, he found her honesty
rather refreshing.
"I'm sorry."
The words were rushed and tumbled past his lips before he
could stop them, but for a brief moment, he thought the charming softening of
her features might be worth his error. The way she looked at him then, like he
was worth something more than the pitiful mess he felt, made that incessant
craving to touch her tickle his fingertips.
"I'm sorry that I won't be here for a couple of
days," she said before he could retract his comment, and he found himself
weaving his fingers to keep his hands busy. "I will arrange some way for
you to contact me if there's anything you need-
"I am perfectly capable of surviving two days by myself,"
he scoffed quickly, but the idea of her not being around to chase away the
boredom made his soul ache. "It's a bloody shame you don't fuck off more
often."
"Maybe-
"You have been a lot more…cheerful recently," he
commented suddenly, giving her suspicious stare. "It's annoying."
Hermione frowned and wondered if her reaction to Ron's
letter had been a bit more obvious that she'd thought. "What makes you
think I'm happier?"
"It's written all over your face," he said with a
roll of his smoky eyes. "And if I'm guessing right, this friend that you
are meeting is one of your Order lot. Would I be right in assuming that your
side is doing well, and that is to blame for your good mood?"
"You know I can't discus that with you-
"Why not?" he countered. "I'm hardly going to
walk out the front door and spill all your secrets to the manwho wants me
dead."
Hermione exhaled wearily and swivelled her body to face him.
"I just don't think we should talk about it-
"I'm sure everyone else is talking about it," he
muttered thoughtfully. "Why should we be any different?"
"Because we are different, Draco," she told him,
somewhat sadly. "We are-
"On different sides," he finished for her, bowing
his head to hide his eyes.
Hermione tilted her head, confused about the trace of
melancholy in his tone. He looked troubled tonight, as though a horde of
questions were streaming across his brain and he had no idea which one to
answer first. She could see the muscles of his face were strained in an attempt
to keep whatever was brewing in his head hidden from her, perhaps even from
himself. That rare bearing of vulnerability was there again; in the subtle
twitch of his lips or the anxious flicks of fingers, and she wondered when she
had learned to read him so well.
"Different sides," she repeated in a solemn tone.
"You still consider yourself one of them, Draco?"
That was the question…
He swallowed away the clot of angst in his throat and bit
down hard on his tongue. It was the question he'd been asking himself since he
had been forced to run from Voldemort; for how could he truly be part of a side
whose leader wanted him rotting in a shallow grave? The question had grown
louder and dominant since Granger had started to invade his senses. Everything
was monumentally fucked up, and she seemed to be the only steady and, dare he
think it, good aspect of his pathetic pseudo-life as a prisoner. He may detest
the way he reacted to her and yearned for her company, but there was no denying
her presence soothed his fractured soul.
Salazar, forgive me for that.
But he couldn't help it. She was the first and only person
to make him challenge the beliefs that had been engraved into his skull. How
could he realistically follow the psychopathic ideals of that creature when
he'd put a price on his head? How could he really believe that Muggle-borns
were inferior when Granger was the brightest witch to stumble into Hogwarts for
decades? How could he…How could he pretend that those prejudices still made
sense, no matter how bad he wanted them to?
"Don't you?" he asked her absently, removing his
bare arm from under the blanket to display his Mark. "Doesn't this make me
one of them?"
Hermione frowned at the ugly and twisted blemish on his
snowy skin and was surprised to find that it didn't bother her anymore; not on
him anyway. Perhaps it was the slightly softer edge to his voice tonight, or
the defeated slump of his shoulders, but she felt like pushing the boundaries
with her struggling companion. She shuffled a little closer and carefully
reached out to stroke her fingers across his still-healing flesh, and felt
encouraged when he didn't immediately snatch his arm away from her.
"That Mark doesn't define you," she said gently,
catching his confused eyes purposefully. "The same way my blood does not
define me. You define who you are, Draco; your actions and your thoughts-
"And if I don't know who I am?" he questioned, his
voice quivering slightly. "What if I am…lost?"
A scary bout of affection soared in her chest. "Then
just do what feels right," she urged eagerly. "And the rest will
follow."
Draco's brow creased and his distant stare fell to her
calming fingers, still softly teasing the sensitive scar on his forearm. Just
when Hermione thought he was beginning to absorb her words, he snorted and
pulled away from her too-tempting caresses.
"You Gryffindors are so quick to seek the good in
people; to assume people can change," he scorned with questionable mirth.
"Some people are beyond change, Granger-
"Not you," she protested quickly. "Not you,
Draco."
Doubt flickered in his ashy glare, but she could see he was
determined to resist her tonight. "You should go," he told her,
nodding his head towards the door.
She contemplated telling him that she wanted to stay; to
surrender some of her pride and admit that she felt safe with him, and that she'd
never slept better in her life than when she had been locked in his arms. But
the prospect of him laughing in her face and rejecting her made the cold
scratch across her skin, and she decided not to push her luck. Leaving his bed,
she headed out of his room, but paused in the doorframe.
"They're just labels, you know," she mumbled,
keeping her back to him so he wouldn't see the first tear roll down her cheek.
"Slytherin, Gryffindor. Pureblood and Mudblood. They don't dictate how we
should live our lives."
Behind her, Draco fought hard to ignore the quickening thuds
against his ribcage. As she disappeared, he glanced down at his Mark again, and
could still feel the lingering tingles from her touch. He felt so alone at that
moment; almost aware that the flimsy remains of his stubborn prejudices were
starting to shatter and crumble under the weight of her words. He knew that her
absence, even if it was only for a couple of days, would do damaging things to
his muddled brain.
As if to confirm that he had finally yielded to the somewhat
blissful beginnings of madness, he waited an hour before he crept soundlessly
out of his room, and found himself outside of her door. He toyed with the
thought of murmuring her password and slipping inside, but he had no idea what
he intended to do.
You pathetic twat…
.
.
"Michael and I agreed on the eleventh of December for
the Christmas ball," Hermione explained. "I know it's a little
earlier than usual, but you mentioned that you might have some problems with
the transportation for some students this year."
"Yes, that's true," McGonagall nodded. "I've
decided it's wise to send small groups of students home for the Christmas
holidays over a week or so, just in case. I'm not sure using the Hogwarts
Express is a good idea either, but there are alternatives. The eleventh works
well."
Hermione sighed and rubbed her eyes. "Do we have to
continue with this charade, Professor?" she asked wearily. "It seems
silly to have a ball when we are at War-
"You know I want to keep spirits up," the
headmistress said evenly. "Hogwarts is acting as a haven for now, and I
would like the students to feel safe here-
"But they-
"The eleventh is fine," the older witch hushed
her. "Classes will finish on the tenth, and that provides myself and the
other professors with two weeks to ensure everyone gets home safely. Are you
staying here, Miss Granger?"
"Yes," she replied a little sadly. "I've told
my parents that I'm staying at the Burrow. They still don't really know much
about what's going on, and I'd like to keep it that way."
McGonagall creased her brow. "Have you given any more
thought to that memory charm you discussed with me?"
"It's a last resort," Hermione told her professor
quickly. "I don't want to use it unless I absolutely have to."
"Well, let's just hope that things don't come to
that," she sighed. "On a more positive note, I've heard from
Nymphadora, and she is expecting you when you are ready."
Hermione's stressed features instantly brightened with that
information. "I can't wait to see her," she confessed. "Do you
need anything else from me? Or can I-
"You are more than welcome to go now," McGonagall
offered with a warm expression. "Would you like me to get Professor
Slughorn to escort you?"
"I'll be fine," she assured quickly, rising from
her seat. "I need to head back to my dorm first anyway."
"Very well," the headmistress nodded. "I
shall see you in Transfiguration tomorrow then. And I expect you to be at the
Christmas ball, Hermione."
Great.
"Okay," she nodded reluctantly. "I'll see you
tomorrow, Professor."
.
.
Hermione anxiously drummed her fingernails against the wall
next to Draco's door. She had been lingering in the same spot for close to five
minutes now, wondering why she was so concerned about her parting words to her
blond guest. Since their reasonably intense conversation, she had kept her
distance, deciding that she had once again probably surrendered too much of her
hope to him. But he had been so human…practically bleeding a level of
vulnerability that had left her with trusting heart-flutters and a whole new
batch of emotions that she didn't understand.
What if I am…lost?
She could have cried for that comment. His customary
arrogance had momentarily melted away to show her that perhaps all of her
efforts hadn't been in vain. Maybe she had nourished that seed of doubt in his
mind enough that it was finally starting to blossom…Or maybe she was getting
ahead of herself. His flash of decency had diminished so quickly, she was
beginning to wonder if it had happened at all.
"Is there a bloody reason you're loitering outside my
room?" his voice disrupted her thoughts, muffled through the tick wooden
door.
Taking a deep breath, she pushed it open and found him, once
again, casually sitting on his bed with one of her books in his lap.
"Sorry," she mumbled. "Am I interrupting you, or-
"Yes, because I have so much on my plate," he said
snidely, rolling his eyes. "What do you want, Granger?"
"I'm leaving for Hogsmeade now," she told him.
"I have prepared enough food for you to last the two days-
"Sod off then," Draco spat coldly. "What were
you expecting, Granger? A fucking farewell party?"
"I wasn't expecting you to be so angry," she
murmured, taking some steps towards him. "And I certainly don't know why
you're angry."
Neither did he.
"I'm not angry," he defended quickly. "I just
don't understand why you found it necessary to barge in here again and bore me
with your shit again. You told me you were leaving the other day."
"Yes, but I-
"Are you done?" he snapped. "I might have sod
all to do, but I'd rather do it without you here."
Hermione sighed and turned to rummage in her charmed bag, in
which she had stored all of the belongings she would need for her stay with
Tonks. After a couple of shakes, she removed a small snow-globe containing a
miniature replica of Hogwarts Castle inside, surrounded by fake snow. Draco
arched an eyebrow as she rested the little object in her lap and stroked the
glass thoughtfully before she caught his eyes.
"I've charmed this," she said slowly. "If you
shake it five times, it will set off an alarm on my clock. I've extended the
wards too, so if you try to leave, that'll also set the alarm off."
He shouldn't have really been impressed with Granger's
magical abilities, but once again he found himself with an unwelcome sense of
admiration for her. He scowled away any semblance of respect that could have
betrayed him, and released a haughty scoff.
"I don't need-
"It's just a precaution," she stopped him.
"In case you fall and break you leg, or something-
"Wishful thinking there, Granger?" he said with an
easy smirk. "You haven't lined the dorm with traps, have you?"
Hermione's lips twitched into an almost-smile, and she edged
forward to place the snow-globe next to Draco on the bed. The flash of humour
that had suited his features so well faded away as he eyed her dainty item with
distaste and pushed it away from him, and Hermione wanted very much at that
moment to touch him. The temptation had hit her so quickly and suddenly that
she flinched, clenching her hands into tight fists in an effort to ignore the
tightening of her stomach.
"You know, Draco," she mumbled uneasily, frowning
when her voice hitched. "I could make other arrangements. If you don't
want me to go, you only have to say."
Don't go…
"If you have no more pointless toys in your little bag
of tricks," Draco growled. "Then I see no reason for you to still be
here, Granger."
She was certain he could see the disappointment behind her
lashes, but it quickly turned into irritation. "Fine," she said
brusquely. "If you insist on being so bloody cold all the time-
"I wasn't expecting you to be so angry," he
repeated her earlier words condescendingly. "Was there something else you
wanted, Granger?"
"No," she huffed, swiftly rising from the bed.
"I just don't understand why you have to be such a bastard all the time-
"Hey!" he shouted, standing up and grabbing her
wrist. "What the hell were you expecting, Granger? Some gratitude for this
poxy ornament when you're leaving me alone in this sodding prison-
"I am learning to expect nothing from you!" she
fired back, bringing her face close to his. "Just when I think you might
have a shred of decency in you, you go right back to being a selfish
prick!"
"What the hell are you talking-
"The other day," Hermione reminded him in a
quieter voice. "When we were talking about sides-
"You read too much into things," he growled
defensively. "Did you ever think that maybe this place is just screwing
with my head a little-
"Not as much you'd like to think," she retorted,
swallowing when she realised how close they were. "Why do you have to put
on an act when I am the only person who sees you?"
He parted his lips but hesitated to say anything. There was
something familiar in her golden eyes that reminded him of the day she had
kissed him in her allergy-stricken haze. It was there between her anxious
blinks; a spark of courage amongst a storm of nerves, and he felt her lean into
him. He clenched his eyes shut and debated allowing it to happen; tempted to
just to drop all his defences, and let her do whatever she wanted. This was his
only opportunity to get a final dose of her; that forbidden fix, before she
left him alone with his demons. They had grazed lips before, so what difference
would one more taste make?
But when her warm breath ghosted across his chin, it dragged
Draco back to reality, and he hastily shoved her away before she could touch
him. He sneered viciously at her as she stumbled, but the venom in his features
was forced and practised; simply a mask to cover how disorientated he felt.
Granger, on the other hand, had no time to hide her humiliation and surprise;
her movements jerky and her eyes misted with hurt. Draco was a heartbeat away
from screaming at her to leave, but she whirled around and fled before he could
even draw in a breath.
The slam of the door ricocheted around his lonely room like
the clap of the Wizengamot's hammer. Thus was his sentence; two days with only
his shadow for company and wondering what he would do without her presence to
chase away the damning solitude.
He should have let her kiss him…
.
.
The cold air made her tear-sodden eyes sting.
Hermione's walk to Hogsmeade was a rushed one; plagued with
the realisation that she was beginning to feel things for Draco that were far
from normal.
The first time she had kissed him, she had been woozy and dazed;
acting on a commanding impulse that had been too much for logic to repress. But
her attempt to catch another taste just moments ago had been different. She had
wanted to lean in and test her luck. It had been a conscious decision, that had
resulted in her feeling rejected and completely mortified. The thoughts in her
brain were muddled and mangled into a catastrophic mess, and she had no idea
where to even begin dealing with them.
As The Three Broomsticks came into view, she sleeved away
the evidence of her cries and tried to gather her composure. At least the
excitement of seeing Tonks would drown some of her questions about Draco, and
she managed a half-hearted smile as she entered the familiar inn. A few of the
usual punters were scattered around, but she barely noticed them as she caught
Madam Rosmerta's wise eyes. The older witch offered Hermione a knowing nod and
discreetly passed her a key across the bar, and she wasted no time in rushing
to see her friend.
"There she is!" Tonks beamed as Hermione barged
into the room. "I thought you might have lost your way."
"It's so good to see you," she gushed, rushing in
for a hug, but faltering when she spotted the slight swell of Tonks' stomach.
"Oh, Tonks! You're starting to show!"
"Meet the bump," she said with playful grin.
"And I'm warning you now that I am going through the craving stage, so if
you see me huddled in the corner clutching a marmite and jam sandwich, just
ignore me."
Hermione smiled, but couldn't quite manage the laugh that
would have normally come so naturally with Tonks' humour. An image of her
encounter with Draco, when his lips had been barely a breath away, danced
across her lids and left her mouth dry and her heart heavy.
"Are you okay, Hermione?" Tonks asked. "You
look a bit troubled."
"I'm fine," she lied quickly. "I just miss
Harry and Ron."
"Of course you do," she nodded sympathetically,
giving the younger witch a warm smile. "But at least you have some friends
here who you can talk to. How are things at Hogwarts?"
Hermione couldn't help but flinch.
Complicated…
.
.
Draco scowled into the darkness.
It was late, and the glow of the moon didn't reach the
windowless living room where the silence was ringing in his ears; a loud
reminder that she wasn't here. Her scent was starting to fade, the dorm felt
eerily hollow, and all he had done for the last several hours was stare at the
fucking snow-globe.
All he had to do was rattle the ugly little thing, and she
would return, and he could steal a taste of her, as he should have done before
she'd left.
He lunged at the magical ornament and hurled it at the wall
with a loud roar ripping his windpipe. He watched it shatter before he turned
on his heel and marched towards Granger's room with elevated breaths. Mumbling
her password, he instantly calmed as he greedily inhaled the air in the room.
Definitively Granger.
He studied his surroundings critically, expecting to find a
huge collection of personal belongings, but except for a few photographs, the
predicable red bedding, and an impressive collection of books, it was similar
to his own room.
Draco eyed the photographs sourly, lingering on particular
one of Granger with those feckless pricks she considered good company. He
slapped all the frames down so he wouldn't have to look them and settled
himself on her bed, absently running his fingertips over her covers. His lids
felt heavy and he leaned back; lulled by how strong her scent was amongst her
pillows and blankets. If he slept here, surrounded by soothing whispers of her
presence, who would know?
"Sod it."
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