A Boy Who Almost Made it and The Girl Who Loved him


He'd been very small when he came to Knockturn Alley's grimy brick streets. The world was so big and fierce then and he was just a little thing who had clung to his mother's knees in fear of getting left behind somewhere in it. Of course, as all little boys did, he trusted his mother implicitly. Despite the way she gave an occasional slap to his bum and even his face when he was bad or annoying, Greg had never expected what happened to happen.

Walking the dingy streets of Knockturn Alley, Greg had gripped his mother's cloak especially tight that day as they moved quickly around the people, stands and puddles that dotted the area.

"Mummy?" he questioned when she lead them into an alleyway.

She wretched him away from her and crouched down. Her eyes, a tough bronze color, were framed by wings of black as she made Greg keep her stare. "I'm leaving you here," she said.

His tiny heart picking up speed, he'd tried to throw himself at her. "NO!"

Greg's mum slapped him.

"Shut up!" she hissed. "Your no good father went and joined that stupid Muggle army and now he's dead! I don't have the money to keep you and no good wizard is going to want me if I have you!"

Crying uncomprehending little boy tears, Greg had stood stunned and sucking in air as his mum stood up and walked away. It wasn't until well after his mum had gone that it really sank in that she wasn't just punishing him or being nasty as she was some days. Running out into the street then, he'd screamed, "Mummy! Mummy! Where are you, Mummy?"

A lot of people just ignored him and, for a while, he was just left to wander and sniffle as he looked for her. Greg didn't find her that day, but a man dressed in a high-collared coat with quick-moving eyes had come to him and asked, "Where's your mother, lad?"

Looking up at him, Greg shook his head.

"Are you lost?"

Wiping the snot from his face with the back of his sleeve, he'd told the man, "Mummy left me here."

A light came to the man's eyes then as he maneuvered Greg into taking his hand. "Well," he tittered. "Isn't that too bad for her?" Smiling at him, the man reached into his pocket and handed down a sugar quill to Greg. "You know, I think you are a very fine lad! How would you like to come home with me?"

"Okay," Greg answered, somewhat relieved that he wasn't going to be alone anymore, but mostly sad because it wasn't Mummy he was going home with.

Pointing to a room above one of the many shops, the man in the high-collar said, "I live right there."

Greg hadn't cared and simply allowed the man to lead him up the stairs to his home where he was then fed a decent dinner of potatoes and meat before things went bad.

Really bad.

-v-v-v-

It took Greg almost a month and a half before he figured out how to get out of the man's apartment. And even after he was free, Greg had to hide in the alleyways out of fear of the high-collared man finding him if he were to go out in the open of Knockturn's Alley.

That was the first time he almost starved to death.

The next time he almost starved, he was just turned thirteen. He'd been beaten up and caught stealing several times in the last month and even venturing out in daylight caused store keepers to go on guard and for drunks and other, not so drunk men, to go at him looking for a fight. He supposed that was mostly his fault, though. Greg had hit a bit of a growth spurt and was clumsy with his new limbs and so stealing was now more difficult. And because he was bigger, men took him as a threat.

They, for whatever reason, felt his lean build and dirty face were threatening and often tried to beat him up – that is, when they weren't propositioning him for sex. And when Greg refused to put his mouth on their cocks or give them his backside they got belligerent and beat him up for rejecting him. One time, when he hadn't been quick enough to get away, a wizard had still gotten what he wanted.

Greg hadn't felt like crying so much since he'd been four.

But all of that struggling was about to end that one beautiful day.

Starving in a back alley among tomcats and rats, Greg had been attempting to sleep the better part of the day away tucked behind some rubbish bins when he heard a bit of a struggle. Greg knew better than to draw attention to himself, but the last of his curiosity drew him to look out and see what was happening. A big man was looming over a–

He broke out in a cold sweat of sheer panic.

That kid. That was him seven or eight years ago. Shaking with fear and a slowly bubbling rage, Greg slipped out from behind the trash and came up behind the big man and little boy. Watching for all of five seconds, he swung a fist at the wizard and stunned him long enough to drag the little boy to his feet.

With very big eyes, the little kid lead them out of the alleyway and around Knockturn until they reached a couple of girls playing gobstones. One of the girls, who Greg felt must be the oldest of the two, looked at them when she heard their ragged breathing.

Bright eyes wide with surprise, she'd cried, "Where'd you come from?"

Greg, thoroughly embarrassed to have such a nice – clean – girl looking at him without disdain, only shrugged and offered his best smile. What could he say? That he saved the little kid shaking beside him from certain molestation?

"He saved me," the boy beside him said. "He's going to come eat lunch with me upstairs."

Greg was so shocked he didn't object as they started toward what he now knew was the little boy's home. The other girl, who had a nice oval face and dainty features that made him think she was by far the most attractive of them all, yelled with a surprisingly deep voice, "Mumma's not going to let a stranger in the apartment!"

Mumma. These kids were related, Greg realized with stupid clarity. Of course they were! Looking between the three, it was easy to tell from not just their ears and sharp bodies, but the confidant way in which they spoke to one another that they were siblings. Suddenly, Greg felt he should leave. He didn't belong among such good children–

"She will too!" the little boy argued and before he could do anything, Greg was dragged up the stairs of the building in front of them and into a little apartment filled with the smell of cooking cabbage and a baby babbling just to the left of the door. Tugging on his hand, the little boy pointed at a chair.

"You sit there," he said and, even though he knew he shouldn't, Greg did.

The little kid then moved on to hug his mum around the thighs.

Nervous, Greg watched in silence as the boy told his mum, "I brought home the big boy who rescued me for lunch today."

She spun around like a toy top then. Eyes enormous, she let loose a terrified scream. Greg almost bolted, but the pounding of feet was on the stairs outside the apartment's door and before he knew what was happening, the little kid had wrapped himself around Greg and was yelling all sorts of things as his mum screeched again and his sister hovered beside their enraged father.

Eventually, things calmed down enough for the little boy to tell the story of how Greg got him away from the pedophile. The kid – Earl –did a spectacular job of making him sound like he was that guy, Jesus, he'd heard about at story time as a very little boy with his mother in the sharp pews of a place called "church". By the end of the tale, his parents were offering a place in their home for Greg and when he looked to see what their daughters thought, the second youngest was coloring with admiration and she was oh so pretty that Greg accepted.

He'd keep this boy, Earl, safe from now on and protect the girls too, if they ever needed him. It was the least he could do for this family who were going to give him food, a bed, and a place to wash without asking for anything in return.

-v-v-v-

Greg blended into the family quite easily, there had been an older son before him, he learned. And without him, things had gone off kilter. With Greg's presence, things were better and Earl's papa even showed his appreciation to him one day by patting him on the back as he walked into the apartment on a rainy afternoon.

"Good boy," he'd told Greg upon seeing how he was keeping all the other children occupied with a story from a book he was learning to read – thanks to Talia's, Earl's mum, lessons.

Greg smiled. It was a great feeling, knowing you were appreciated. He told himself he would cherish it forever and ever – that was he would until the dementors sucked it dry of all the warmth and it was just another picture movie to watch play in his mind.


There had been more to Greg's sentence to Azkaban than him simply using a crucio spell, as awful as that was. Ellen knew this all the way to the very deepest corners of her heart that had never been purged of the love she held for her husband. In fact, if she so wished it, Ellen could feel that it had begun long before Greg murdered their Emanuel's killer. Much longer.

Sometimes… Sometimes Ellen felt if she put her finger to a fogged mirror and thought back far enough, she could draw a timeline of the moments she knew her love wouldn't make it. She could find an exact pinpoint second among a jargon of dots on a dewy mirror. This, of course, wasn't true. It couldn't be. Because as so many women and men could attest to, love blinds you. It covers those sense that should tell you that there was something wrong, the ones that call you to flee and fight and give up.

Ellen, nearly from the moment her little brother brought Greg home to them, she loved him. Loved him with a fire-intensity and ocean-depth. Quite unlike how she could not pin-point the breath in space and time where Ellen knew Greg would fail, she could recall and say exactly when it was that she fell for him completely and fully.

It had been a mildly cold day. The kind that left your skin chilled when you went inside and fingers warm within your gloves or mittens when out in the brisk air. Tatyanna had been two months gone and Boris with her. Earl was upstairs with their mother as he was sick with some head cold that required him to lay quietly in his bed and sleep. Ellen and Greg had just finished giving the morning scraps to the stray cats outside the apartment when he looked at her.

"Wanna make a run to the bookstore?" he asked her.

She knew what that meant. Greg wanted to go steal a book to read. Maybe he'd sell it after he was done, or keep it if he liked it well enough. Nodding her head, Ellen had agreed. "Can we pick up a storybook this time?"

Giving her one of those full smiles that showed how his teeth stuck out too long and overlapped one another, he shrugged. "Why not?" Greg said.

Walking away from the little patch of brick and mortar she knew for the better part of her memory as home, they entered the nearby bookstore, Moribunds's, and began to browse.

After a while, she found one that was full of tales of princes and wicked stepmothers and presented it to Greg. Putting a finger to his lip then, Greg slipped it beneath his shirt and handed Ellen a handful of knuts and said, "Buy a quill!"

Following his direction, Ellen went and took a moment to browse the meager selection by the front counter before going to old man Moribund to buy the item. He's an angry-faced chap with a nose skewed to the left and Ellen tries to get him to look at her with a pretty smile.

"How are you today sir?"

He grunted.

She heard the creak of Greg walking and so made an attempt to get Mister Moribunds to look away from the door. "Oh dear! Your window!"

His head swerved, but he was not fooled long enough and saw Greg at his shop door with his oddly flat and bulging stomach. When he looked back at her, Ellen knew Greg needed help. So, she screamed.

The old man jumped and looked to her, but she whizzed past the counter then and after Greg. He was going so fast, but she caught up to his heels and stayed there until they were on the stairs that lead to their family's apartment.

Panting and chortling, the two had to lean in close several times to keep themselves balanced on their feet. Eyes twinkling and smile so large, Greg patted her back and said, "Great work, Ellen!"

She smiled at him with a red blush on her cheeks and thought how nice it'd be if he told her that again (and it was in that moment that Ellen realized her heart was no longer hers and hers alone).

-v-v-v-

Things progressed faster and faster after that day, Greg trusted her so much more than he did anyone else and began to let her into his little "business". A black market act that had begun with him selling cauldrons and potions ingredients, along with a few other things Ellen suggested, to others for cheap. One day, however, after a "customer" talked with Greg for nearly an hour in their little hide-away alley they began to import and sell muggle drugs.

Once, Ellen, twelve and a half and oh so curious, tried one of the drugs called "opium". Greg had found her when she didn't come back from the deal she'd been sent to broker and had picked her off the street and given her a good shake and slap for her trouble.

"You don't fuck with that stuff!" he roared at her. "Stupid bitch! Told ya and I told ya! Don't use the merch!

She had taken the hard hand and wrapped herself around the arm it was attached to. "I just wanted to try it," she whimpered. "Don't hate me Greg! I love y-you!"

He went from angry-tense to slack to terrified-tense before he brought her close and embraced her. "I love you too, 'kay Ellen? I don't hate ya. I just… That stuff's not safe. It's fine if somebody else wants to ruin their life, but not you. "

After a bit more crying and Greg whispering promises of eternal love, they started to snog. It was more than just the fleeting kisses they shared outside her family's apartment and the occasional lip-sucking, nipping stuff they did when Earl and Irene were sleeping in their beds in the middle of the night. This was desperate and aching. Like they'd never said 'I love you' before to anyone (which might have been the case for Greg, Ellen would muse later in life). A little more than ten minutes later, Greg had her skirt hiked up around her hips and was pressing against her and it felt so hot and all Ellen knew was she wanted Greg to. never. stop.

She lost her virginity that afternoon. Standing up and pressed into a brick wall of an alleyway like a whore as Greg moaned, "Ellen, Ellen, Ellen!" into her neck.

It wasn't glamorous, it made her sound dirty and loose, but it had been with Greg. Her love and husband. How many other girls could say they lost their innocence to their first and only love? Not nearly as many as one would think, she was sure.

-v-v-v-

The next two years passed in pleasantly enough. Most of the time, Ellen was happy. When she wasn't, Greg always found a way to make her so again. Greg himself continued to expand his work, inducting a few urchin boys to be his message runners for clients and a couple more to learn the business of selling. Those boys were his favorite. They were wily, but unfailingly loyal to her love. Their eyes shone with gratitude when he spoke to them and she wondered what her Greg did to earn such adoration from those tough, wizened youths. But when he held her during the night, kissed the back of her neck and breathed, "Ellen, Ellen, Ellen," as he came to a climax while they made love, she thought she knew why. He knew how to make you feel as if you were special. As if you were the only one in the world for him.

Shortly after Ellen turned fourteen, Greg struck out on his own and bought a homey, one-room apartment. She'd been sad to see him leave her family, but when he invited her over for lunch (and more) she'd adored the fact they finally had a place that was all their own.

When she stared up at the water-stained ceiling, Ellen settled happily in her love's arms and felt at peace. She wouldn't mind spending more time here in the coming years.

"You alright, love?" Greg asked in a sleepy snuffle as she twined her fingers in his chest hair.

Smiling, she'd plopped a kiss on his cheek and answered, "Never better."

If only she'd known how short that perfect time would be. If only.


Ellen came to him one day crying. Greg had left his boys to chatter amongst themselves to go see what was wrong. Wrapping an around around her and bringing her close, he asked, "What's wrong, Ellen?"

Clutching his shoulders, Ellen looked up, face swollen and aching as she cried, "He kicked me out! My father kicked me out!"

Gaping, Greg tried to understand how the man who'd taken him and overlooked his (many) indiscretions could throw out his own daughter. Kissing both her cheeks, he swayed with her as she calmed down and, eventually, asked, "Why?"

More tears came to her eyes, but so did a smile. She took one of his hands and placed it on her belly. At first, Greg didn't know what she was doing, but then he knew. He got it. His girl was pregnant, and with his baby!

Lifting her off her feet to spin her around, Greg called with true jubilation in the grim street of Knockturn Alley, "My girl's gonna have a baby! A baby!"

His boys from behind began to hoot and holler for him and Ellen. Greg could almost imagine they'd planned this. That they'd wanted the baby she was going to have. Putting her back down on the ground, he cupped her cheek and whispered, "You run on to my place, okay?"

"But–"

He shushed her with a soft kiss. "No, Ellen, my home's your home now. And…" he put his hand back on her sweater-clad stomach. "I don't want you or the baby runnin' around out here on your own, alright?"

"What about you, Greg?" his beautiful girl asked him in an anxious way. "What are you going to do?"

Looking back to his grinning boys, he took Ellen by the hand and answered "I'm gonna finish up work and see if I can't talk to your mum about everythin', yeah?"

"Okay." And, with that, she turned to start toward his flat. Her shoulders slumped forward and she began to glancing furtively over her back from time to time, like she was afraid Greg would disappear. He had no plans to, though, he loved her more than anything else he'd known in life and he would be there for her all the way through.

Turning back to his boys, he tipped his head and said, "Let's get business done quick today, understand lads?"

"Of course, Greg," one of the cheekier ones agreed with a dimpled smirk. "We all know you just want to do some more snoggin' with your girl!"

They didn't know how wrong they were, or course, but he appreciated how happy they were for him and so he took the cheeky one under his arm and gave him a noogie. Despite everything, Greg could hardly recall a happier moment in his life.

-v-v-v-

After work, he went and visited his adoptive family only to find Earl on the steps leading up to the apartment with his younger sister at his side. Ruffling the two's hair he gave them each a knut and said, "Let me up to see your mum, yeah?"

The pair scooted aside and Earl grabbed Greg's pant leg. "Where's my sister?" he asked.

"At my place," he told the boy.

This settled the child and he looked away to the shop their papa worked at. "He'll be home in thirty minutes."

"I won't be long," Greg promised as he ascended the stairs.

Up there, he found Talia crying over laundry as she hung it up on the line out the back window. Scuffing his boots, he called "Hey."

She twirled around. "Where's my daughter?" she hissed.

"At my place," Greg answered.

The woman gave a breathless laugh and hugged him.

"Oh my love, you are a good boy!" she exclaimed.

Patting her back, he let her go and said, "You gotta convince him to let Ellen home, she wants to be here. Not at my place."

Nodding vigorously, Talia gave him one of her patent crooked grins and kissed both his cheeks. "Of course, my dear boy," she replied. "It might take a bit of wrangling, but if you can keep an eye on her until the end of the week, she'll have a place here again."

"I will," Greg promised with true earnestness. "I will keep her as happy as I can till then."

Tears streamed down her age-weathered face, but the relief took the edge away from her jaw. "Thank you, Greg," Talia whispered.

"She's my girl, it's only right."

And with that, Greg returned to Ellen. He found her laid out in bed, curled around her middle and not interested in talking. He let her be for the evening and even slept on the couch to give her all the space she needed.

In the morning, she thanked him by making his favorite for breakfast, porridge and eggs. The week moved quickly after that and when Ellen returned to her family, Greg was already wishing her back.

-v-v-v-

When the baby came five months later, Greg was there holding Ellen's hand all the way through it, even as the midwife glared over his girl's knees at him. Ellen's labor was surprisingly quick and within three hours of going into it, there son came squalling into the world. After the the willowy woman plopped the baby in his girl's arms, Greg had squeezed close to look into their baby's face.

"He's beautiful," Ellen cooed.

Swallowing back a lump of emotion, Greg had glowed with all the pride of a father as he took one of the infant's tiny hands. "That he is."

Wearing a smile of her own, Ellen had met his gaze and asked, "What are we to name him?"

"Devlin," Talia answered from her daughter's other side. "He looks just like one."

Playing with his son's hands, he toyed with the name on his tongue. "Devlin. Dev-lin. Dev. I like it, what about you, love?"

"It's excellent," Ellen agreed with a wider smile. "My little Dev," she whispered to their baby as she kissed his forehead. "You'll be something, won't you?"

After Devlin was born, life moved so quick that Greg felt he was only catching snatches of it as it passed him by. A handful here, a pinch there. One day Devlin was all they had, the next it was Emmanuel and Devlin, Devlin and Emmanuel.

The two were so opposite, Devlin a cheery boy with a deep interest in going fast and a head for numbers on his shoulders that boded well for the Hogwarts education his aunt Tatyana had promised him. Emmanuel was a stubborn one, wearing a frown more often than not and quite happy even with his lame foot to go about wandering Knockturn with only his crutch to defend himself.

Emmanuel gave them ulcers and Devlin cured them. The two were of different poles, but despite their differences, they shared a bond Greg had never imagined possible. Devlin adored his younger brother and always took his opinion into great consideration. Emmanuel was only ever at peace when his brother sat with him in the evenings to read stories to him from the storybook Greg and Ellen had stolen all those years ago.

Somehow, life seemed just shy of excellent even on the forgotten street of Knockturn Alley. Or, it was, until that one day.


Drying her hands after dishes, Ellen went out on the balcony to see if she couldn't catch an eye-full of her Emmanuel. He'd promised not to go out brawling this afternoon, but he hadn't come in from his smoke and…

She looked down. On the stoop she saw her son spread eagle with blood around his head. Screaming so loud she was sure all the world heard her, Ellen ran back through her apartment and down the stairs to her baby's side. Picking him up, she cradled him to her breast as she once had when he was little bigger than her arm and wailed, "My son! My Emmanuel! Help! Help!"

It was too late. He was dead and his soul halfway to the other side.

-v-v-v-

They held a wake the next evening and all her family and her husband's men (several years passed boys now) came through to pay their respects. Ellen stared at the casket with her son's remains with desolate heartache, her husband no where to be found, and only her living son there for support, but needing more comfort than she.

"My brother, my brother," he whimpered. "That's him lying dead."

She brought her Devlin close and kissed his forehead as she had when he was born. "Hush, my love," she soothed.

He was not soothed and cried all the night.

As the guests trickled out, Ellen stood alone accepting the last of their condolences. Once they were all gone, she turned her back and breathed a sigh of weary relief. Now she could cry too. A tapping at the door caught her attention as she put the kettle on for a cup of tea. Going to it, she opened the door to find a boy of nine or ten looking up at her in a guilty way.

"Yes?" she demanded, emotions frayed and uninterested in niceties.

Tiny chest heaving, he spewed, "I-I-I-I-knowwhokilledyourson."

"What?" Ellen frowned. "Who?"

Wiping at his nose, the boy said, "H-He's one of t-t-t-t-the big boys. One of t-t-t-t-he bigguns who h-hits the littler ones t-t-to steal t-t-t-the money we get from beggin'."

"Come in!" she urged then, Greg would want to talk to this boy when he finally returned. This good, brave little urchin, she thought a bit more fondly as he scuttled over the threshold and into her family's modest flat. Leading the child to the couch, she sat him down and said, "I'm going to make some tea, will you have a cuppa while we wait for my husband to come home?"

"Y-Yes," he said, bashfully looking to his hands.

Ellen smiled.

-v-v-v-

Greg hadn't come home that night. Nor did he the next morning. But he was at the burial of their Emmanuel, and Ellen was relieved for that. It meant she still had a husband. He then came home with her and Devlin, which was when he met the urchin, Mickey.

Mickey, all nervous energy and stutter, managed to tell the story of how he saw their son murdered on their front stoop by another urchin of fifteen or so years old.

Face turning darker and darker with every stammered word from Mickey's lips, by the end, Greg was stalking the length of their apartment and at the conclusion of Mickey's tale, he left. Ellen attempted to run after him, but for the first time in years, he slapped her and told her, "Go home, Ellen."

Very much hurt, she did so and sat down on the couch beside young Mickey. She let him attempt to sooth her with a quiet whisper of, "I-I-It'll be alright M-Missus."

She took the little boy's hand and prayed he was right. After a while, her Devlin came out of his room and sat down with them. He even promised the same as little Mickey.

"It'll be okay, Mum."


Greg had thought he'd done a pretty damn good job of hiding the urchin's body after he finished killing him. He'd even kept the mess to a minimum. Walking away from the back-alleyway he used to pawn drugs in, he felt good. Like everything was fair again. His son may be dead, but so was his killer. He went home and saw his wife, living son, and the urchin on the couch.

Going over with a wide smile, he hugged his family and then ruffled the small urchin's hair.

Looking the child in the face, he said, "I got a place for you to stay."

"Where sir?" the boy questioned.

Urging the boy up, he lead him to Emmanuel's room. "That's gonna be your room for now on, got it?"

Eyes so wide, Mickey had only been able to stammer, "T-t-t-thank you!"

"'S the least I can do, Mick," he replied and left it at that.

A week and a half later, he, Ellen, his nephews, Alex and Earl, and Mickey were eating their first dinner together since Devlin returned to Hogwarts when a couple of aurors popped into existence in their kitchen.

"We are here for Greg Whitehorn," one said.

Ellen screamed. And threw herself on Greg. "You can't have my husband!" she shrieked at the two.

Eyes cold and unforgiving, one ripped his wife from Greg.

"Hey!" he roared at the man. "That's my wife you're tossing about!"

The other auror, a young lady with thick brows, remarked in a calm voice, "If you don't put up a fight no one will get hurt."

"I ain't putting up no fight!" Greg spat as he approached the duo.

Wobbling on unsteady feet, Ellen begged, "What's he done that's so bad you've come? What's he done? What's he done that a million other men here haven't?"

Face stoic, the young lady explained, "He used a crucio on a young lad and then murdered him. He has to pay for it."

"No…" Ellen sobbed. "No!"

And as she cried, the two aurors finished their business, Greg only getting to say a quick, "Love you" before they disapparated.

-v-v-v-

Just over a week later, Greg was sentenced to Azkaban and Ellen essentially became a widow. She would raise her son and this urchin child they picked off the streets all on her own and she hated her husband for it.

But she loved him for it too. He'd avenged their Emmanuel in a way that the aurors never would have.

And so, the two grew old separate and one day, in the early morning, a persistent cold killed Greg in his prison cell. Later that same day, Ellen received news of her husband's death and sat down only to have a heart attack and die in her favorite rocking chair.

A few hours later, Mickey came in with a toddler-girl in his arms and called, "Mum?"

When there was no return call, he put the girl down to play with the cat lounging in the sun not far away from the door and wandered to the back room where he found her in her chair. Dead.

"Aw Mum," Mickey whispered as he knelt next to her and took the letter from her hands and read it. He shook his head and, with tears in his eyes, whispered, "You two really did love each other, huh?"

She said nothing (as she was many hours dead), but he liked to imagine that somewhere, on the other side, she was embracing her long lost husband and preparing to enjoy the rest of eternity there with him.


What do you think of Greg's story and Ellen and Greg's love story? Was it interesting? Believable?

Now, this story was inspired by a want to see more of Greg's back story from my friend The Dark One Rising. I did my best to fill in his background as well as explain how he and Ellen came to be a couple as well as the disintegration of their family.

Somehow, I feel I should make a tale for Boris and Tatyanna too as neither got much screen time in this one. What do you think?

To those of you who don't know, these are the same characters I used in my fic A Child who Lived in Knockturn Alley. Which makes this a companion to that fic. I highly suggest you check that one out to get a fuller view of Ellen's family.

Thank you very much for reading and pretty please review!

EDITED: 4/4/16