A
low, high-pitched sound trickled into the air…it grew louder,
louder, then, suddenly, as if someone had turned up the volume a
great number of dials higher, the screeching, pressing sound came to
a deafening halt. A bright, red train, disgorging violent amounts of
think gray smoke was parking at a cobble-stoned station, somewhere
far beyond space and time, still sprinkled with puddles from
yesterday's rain. The doors of the train flew open, spilling
yellow, artificial-looking light into the gloaming. Voices were
magnified, as well as masses of bangs, cracks, screeches, meows,
croaks, and grunts. And amidst the pandemonium, four boys stepped out
of the train.
The tallest, a thin, grinning boy with flyaway hair
of deepest black, a crooked nose, and hazel eyes stretched his arms
and spat onto the ground. "Blimey, it's good to be back here!"
he yawned, smiling and running a thin hand over his immutable
hair.
Another boy, not as tall and definitely more voluminous,
with reddish-brown hair and a plump face (and body) squealed, "Hey,
has any of you seen my copy of the Defense book? I just had it
in—"
And a third boy, this one with light, blond hair and a
tired face opened his bag and produced a thick, leather-bound book.
"Here you are, Peter, you left it in the compartment," he said,
in a hoarse voice.
"Thanks, Remus," said Peter gratefully.
The tall boy laughed loudly. "You'll be forgetting you damn
pants next, Wormtail, I swear."
Peter (or Wormtail) joined in
the laughing, loudly and vehemently.
The last boy, almost as tall
as the first, with a thin, haughty face stepped out, and shut the
door behind him. This boy had black hair too, but his was tame and
elegant, flapping over his eyes with a pompous grace.
"Took you
goddam long enough, Padfoot!" said the tall boy. "Spotted a girl
or something?"
Padfoot smiled. "Nah, just picking up a couple
of gratuities from the snack cart."
The boys laughed and
trooped up to a dark carriage amongst many that were filing up
rapidly with students. With some pushing, pulling, jerking, and
co-operation, four boys, four trunks, one mouse and three owl cages
fit comfortable inside it. As if being given a signal, the carriage
started to move, at full tilt towards the castle, which was now lit
by a million yellow windows. The moon was high up now, her reflection
in the lake distorted by a large amount of tiny boats, each bearing a
lantern, that were crossing its black surface. The boys did not see
this, however, they were busy talking and joking and guzzling down
the remainder of the sweets they had purchased on the ride (Peter
doing most of the latter).
"God, I hope they brought in some
new library books this year," said Remus. "Do you know, there
were only four books last year on lycanthropy? Four!"
"Yeah,
well, that's 'cause not every wizard's got themselves your
furry little problem, Moony," said the boy named Prongs, smiling
mischievously.
"True," said Remus, "but shouldn't people
also learn as much as they can about werewolves so they learn how to
distinguish them from actual wolves? Or else learn how to treat their
bites immediately? Shouldn't the wizarding society attempt to
create a more stable environment by education, which can only be
achieved by—"
"He's got you with his smart-ass mumbo jumbo
again!" laughed Padfoot, and he flung a small, red jelly bean
playfully at Prongs…it sunk into the unfathomable depths of his
hair.
"Right, okay, that wasn't funny!" said Prongs angrily,
running his fingers through his hair rather vigorously, trying to
shake the bean out, while all of his companions laughed wildly. He
gave up and merely laughed with them.
"With any luck, Evans
will notice it and pick it out," said Padfoot roguishly, stuffing
the bag into the back pocket of his jeans, which were now hidden
under black school robes, and he started on a Pepper Imp.
The boys
laughed, joked, talked, speculated on the return to Hogwarts. But
they did not know—they could not know—that the reason Padfoot had
been late was because he had indeed spotted someone...But he had only
seen a glimpse of her, and was prepared to forget all about it; it
wasn't as though she had anything special about her. But even he
could not know that there was something different about this girl.
And, without a doubt, this girl was the most special he would ever
encounter in his life. Things were going to change…he just did not
know it.
