Dudley Dursley had always been very proud of being normal, and so was his daughter, Daisy. What they didn't know was that they had very different ideas of what "normal" is.

On a beautiful summer day, it was her father's birthday, little Daisy was sitting in her room, reading, when Petunia came in. "Hello Sweetie!" Daisy's eyes lit up. "Hi granny!" Petunia too was delighted to see her little sunshine. "Mommy prepared some cake and lemonade in the garden, do you want to come, my dear?" Daisy nodded and levitated the book she was reading back to its proper place on the shelf. "Sure", the little girl was smiling and ready to go, but her grandmother sure was not. Petunia, pale from shock, sat down on Daisy's bed and told Daisy to sit down next to her. "What did you just do?" She asked, she could not believe what she just saw. Daisy blushed. "James showed me how to do that!" she said, apologetically. Petunia nodded. "I think it is time I tell you the truth about your cousin James, your uncle Harry, and his mother, my sister Lily." Daisy was curious. "So, you know that uncle Harry and aunt Ginny met at boarding school." Daisy nodded. "It is a boarding school for special children, the same one that James will be going to next year and the same one my sister used to go to. I was so jealous of her, I wrote a letter to the headmaster and begged him to accept me into his school. They teach the kids things like this little trick you learned from James, and much more. It is, a school for witches and wizards." Now Daisy could not believe that. "You mean - James, Uncle Harry, Aunt Ginny, Great-Aunt Lily, they can do magic?" Petunia smiled. "Yes, and you, my little sunshine, are a witch, too. Oh how happy I am for you that you can go to Hogwarts! It was my biggest wish when I was a child." The doorbell rings. "That must be uncle Harry!" Daisy said. "So let's go downstairs and, maybe, you can ask him about the wizarding world, honey?" Petunia suggested. "But don't let Daddy know what you can do just yet, okay? It is going to upset him and you don't want to upset him on is birthday, do you?" Daisy shook her head. "No, Granny. I am going to ask uncle Harry when Daddy is not around." "Good girl, now go!" Petunia said, smiling, and watched the little girl run down the stairs as she stared at the bookshelf in disbelief for a moment until she left the room as well.

To Petunia's surprise, Dudley was not upset at all the day Minerva McGonagall appeared at his door to deliver Daisy's acceptance letter to the Hogwarts school of witchcraft and wizardry. In fact, the day Dudley found out about his daughter's magic abilities, Petunia and Vernon were visiting, and from this day on, no Dursley said a single bad thing about wizards anymore.