Mister Puffy Puff
The telly clicked on at precisely four
o'clock in the afternoon as Dudley Dursley, four years old, began to watch his
favorite show: Mister Puffy Puff. The theme song began as Harry Potter,
also a little four year old, snuck in the living room to watch it.
"Mister Puffy Puff! Mister Puffy
Puff! The world is better because of Mister Puffy Puff! He's your best friend.
He's my best friend. He's the best friend for everyone. He's Mister Puffy Puff.
Mister Puffy Puff . . ." the
telly sang (as did Dudley and Harry) as an animation of Mister Puffy Puff
sliding down a giant water slide into a pool was aired.
Now Mister Puffy Puff is to British children
as Barney is to American children. The only difference is that Barney does not
sell marshmallows. Mister Puffy Puff is also not a dinosaur either. Mister
Puffy Puff is a marshmallow, or rather a marshmallow man who was put together
like a snowman.
There's a giant marshmallow at the bottom,
and his little legs come from under it. In the middle there's a skinnier
marshmallow with his little chubby arms sticking out of it. Then there's the
head of Mister Puffy Puff, the smallest marshmallow with his black eyes, a nose
full of sprinkles (the rainbow kind), and a mouth that was quite large. If one
said that Mister Puffy Puff had a big mouth, they might consider changing that
to "Mister Puffy Puff, overlord of children's programming in England, has
the largest mouth on any marshmallow, and for that matter on anything this side
of the Atlantic with the exception of Petunia Dursley." They would be very
much correct; but the thing about Petunia was definitely a hyperbole, while the
comment about Mister Puffy Puff was easily true.
"Hey, kids!" said Mister Puffy
Puff, waving his arm and jumping around. Mister Puffy Puff was one happy
marshmallow.
Harry and Dudley, each sitting on bean bags
waved to the telly and replied "Hey, Mister Puffy Puff!" in their
four year old voices. Every child (with the exception of the few, the proud,
the serious) in England always greeted Mister Puffy Puff when he said
"Hey!" Mister Puffy Puff (or the writers) knew this; and so Mister
Puffy Puff always greeted the children when the show began.
Mister Puffy Puff did not live in a very
realistic world. Of course, he wasn't real; but on the television show Mister
Puffy Puff had the surroundings children only thought of while trying to make
it past nap time awake. (Let's face it, not having your naps can cause
hallucinations. That's why little kids–as well as people over the age of
seventy-nine–take naps. Well, that's why they're supposed to take them . . .)
Sun, as is it was called, was a supporting
character; it always gave Mister Puffy Puff extra sunlight when he needed it,
or whenever Mister Puffy Puff wanted snow, Sun would make clouds appear and
disappear behind them while Mister Puffy Puff danced in the snow. Kids
make-believed they were playing in the snow with Mister Puffy Puff. Of course,
sometimes the snow would be marshmallow snow; and Mister Puffy Puff's old
marshmallow friends would return. They only appeared when it was marshmallow
snow. (Apparently they were his friends when he was growing up who had gotten
jobs as marshmallow snowballs. According to Mister Puffy Puff, you had to go to
school in a special place to be able to be a marshmallow snowball.)
The sky was almost always blue, and it never
rained . . . the only form of precipitation was snow. (And if you want to count
the marshmallow stuff, that as well.)
"Today is a special day," Mister
Puffy Puff said. Harry and Dudley waited in anticipation for why the day was so
special, though their small minds could not comprehend the fact that Mister
Puffy Puff always said that today was a special day.
"Today we have a special friend here!
His name is Mister Lifeguard."
Harry and Dudley clapped and cheered as a
buff, blonde, shirtless man in yellow swimming trunks stepped next to Mister
Puffy Puff. He looked more like a man in a suit than a real person, but let's
face it: no man is that big nor buff, and kids didn't care. It was all real to
them.
"Mister Lifeguard is going to teach us
how to play safe in the pool or on the beach. It's gonna be so much fun!"
Harry and Dudley cheered once more.
"And this is all going to happen right
after a word from my special friends," Mister Puffy Puff said as the first
commercial started.
The first commercial was a commercial for
Puffy Puff Marshmallows. Yes, Mister Puffy Puff has his own brand of
marshmallows. As one can guess, they are rather puffy; but not puffy enough.
On the back of every Puffy Puff Marshmallow
bag is a recipe to make the marshmallows even puffier. It's very hard to do. In
fact, there's a warning on the recipe: "If this does not work, do not be
disappointed. Go buy another bag and try again!" These words came out of a
bubble next to a picture of Mister Puffy Puff.
In reality, the recipe just plain does not
work. It's all a marketing ruse to get more marshmallows; and it works rather
well on the Dursleys, who want their Dudley to have everything he possibly can.
Dudley loved his parents, though he wasn't
the sharpest tool in the shed. He had a tendency to call his mother
"Daddy" and his father "Mummy." How one could get these
confused is hard to believe, though it may be contributed to Dudley accidentally
catching Vernon's late night television viewing when he was two years old . . .
things like that tended to stick out in a child's mind.
However, Vernon couldn't quite put his
finger on it. And his late night television viewing had ceased as well after
Petunia caught him watching Diaries of the Street 2: Jane's Story.
After a few more commercials (one a piece of
anti-American propaganda that showed a picture of Jimmy Carter and said
"Who else would elect a peanut farmer president?" before showing Reagan
and saying words that should not be spoken on children's television) Mister
Puffy Puff was back on the air.
"Welcome back, kids! I'm sure my
special friends were happy to show you some new things, and maybe remind you of
some old ones. But today Mister Lifeguard and myself are going to teach you
about pool safety." Mister Puffy Puff smiled and jumped with glee. Harry
and Dudley's eyes widened as Mister Puffy Puff and Mister Lifeguard began to
sing a song about how to put on your bathing suit.
"Harry Potter!" Petunia Dursley
yelled, "what are you doing watching that?!" Petunia Dursley was
Dudley's mum, a tall woman with a neck longer than you'd find in an African
tribe. (And it was all natural.) Her light brown hair was pulled back in a bun,
and she seemed to brighten up the room with her blue dress. The extra light,
however, was unwanted. Her face was a look of pure evil to Harry Potter, with
her teeth gritted while her eyes seemed like the could cut a whole through the
Boy-Who-Lived. Harry looked rather innocent and rather scared. Vernon Dursley,
even at his most supreme bouts of anger, had nothing on Petunia at her smallest
expression of anger.
"But it's good for me . . ." Harry
said. "It shows me how to be safe 'round the pool and all kinds of stuff."
"Lord knows you can't be safe as it is
in your cupboard. Go there right now!" Dudley watched in awe, and he
wondered how his parents could treat his cousin like that. Dudley sometimes
felt sorry for him; and despite his friendship with him, his parents were still
rather cruel to Harry Potter. "You don't wanna go hanging around with
white trash like that," Mummy (the female one) had told him. Harry left,
holding his tears to himself, as he wanted to continue watching Mister Puffy
Puff's show. But it was no time for argument. Harry left for his cupboard.
"Go back to the telly, sweetums . .
." Petunia said in her soft, gentle voice that she used for Dudley. She
left the room, and Dudley refocused his blue eyes on the telly.
"Don't smoke fags," Mister Puffy
Puff said.
* * *
Vernon Dursley was an extremely successful
man. He made his money in the workplace, sitting around and doing nothing, like
most successful men. There was the occasional office meeting; but high-ranked
officers like Vernon were guaranteed their salary (quite a few pounds) was a
lot more than the chaps in the mail room, who ironically did far more labor in
a day than Vernon Dursley had ever done in his association with the company.
He looked like an overgrown version of
Dudley, just he was bald and weighed a few more tons, though Dudley would be
catching up with him soon. While Dudley was growing his second chin, Vernon
somehow had been able to keep one. He had a pinstripe suit on, making him look
like a mobster from the American Chicago Mobs from the 1920s.
"Dudley!" Vernon Dursley yelled to
the four year old as he opened the cedar front door.
"Mummy!" Dudley replied.
Petunia, close behind the piglet, called,
"Yes, sweet–oh, you mean Daddy. Right, Dudley-Pooh?"
"Yeah, Mummy," Dudley said, stumbling
through his words for a moment.
Vernon Dursley stepped inside, nearly
throwing his expensive briefcase on the ground. "Gimme a hug, my future
business leader of the world." Vernon was kneeling down, his arms spread
open for Dudley to wrap himself inside against. Dudley instinctively knew what
to do, and his father squeezed his son, whose nose sat against Vernon's
mustache.
" 'Atta boy," Vernon said,
releasing his grip and returning to full standing position. Dudley ran away,
but not before slapping his mother's leg.
While other parents would scold at their
child doing such a thing, Petunia Dursley had a never-changing opinion of her
child, no matter what he did:
"He's so adorable."
* * *
Dudley Dursley's father was bent over
paperwork in his office, studying some kind of contract. "Shareholders'
meeting, construction guy . . ." he said to himself while jotting a note
down on his organizer.
"Daddy!" Dudley said, hugging his
father. He called me by my right name . . . gotta tell Petunia.
"Hello, son."
"Daddy, I got a question." Vernon
knew it'd be nothing deep, and it would require a simple answer that Dudley'd
partially understand.
"Daddy, what's a fag?"
* * *
Dudley had gone to sleep early last night,
and Harry'd been fed his rations: whatever was left from Dudley's share of the
food, but since Dudley hadn't had any food tonight due to his sleep the
Dursleys decided to give him some. They'd pick his tray up at morning, when
they delivered him breakfast. And due to his punishment, he was banned from all
other areas of the house besides the cupboard until 10:00 AM each morning.
And due to this punishment, it gave the
Dursleys a quiet dinner alone.
"I swear, Vernon, those two women just
won't shut up. They're in that house all afternoon, and it's just constant
noise. It's not the kind of noise our precious little Dudley should hear at
such an age. Two women doing such an act . . . atrocious, rude,
appalling–completely against God. Sometimes I just want to shoot those stupid
women; they're going to give themselves AIDS, I swear. They never shut up, not
even while Dudley watches Mister Puffy Puff. In fact, I'm sure they
smoke the Puffy Puff, if you know what I mean, honey." Vernon Dursley
nodded to his wife as he cut a piece of steak. It was overcooked, a piece of
rock.
"Honey, just go tell them to shut up.
Works every time, and you wonder why people 'round here are scared of
you." He managed to cut it in half, a jagged cut that would be dangerous
if it was glass. However, it was Petunia's steak. It had more in common with
rock than glass. Though one could argue that glass is sand so thus the steak
and glass must have similar molecular structures (if not the same) thus making
them relatives, second cousins of sort.
"And then there's that man from the
cable company, Vernon. He comes here and says he'll fix our cable every single
morning–precisely quarter till ten in the mornin'–even though I do believe it
works. But why should I care? After all, the telly's just full of junk. Don't
you agree, Vernon?"
Vernon looked up from his steak (now divided
into quarters) and nodded.
"You haven't been watching anything at
two in the morning, have you, Vernon?" Petunia asked. Vernon shook his
head as he tried to cut one of the quarters of steak.
"Honey, don't you think this steak is a
bit overcooked?" Vernon asked before scratching his ceramic plate with his
steak knife, sending chills down his spine like nails on a chalkboard.
Petunia looked up at him, her ostrich-like
neck extending over the table. "Yours looks pretty rare, Vernon. But then
again, so is mine."
* * *
That next morning, the phone rang at about
9:30. Dudley reached for it in the kitchen, its ringing always lured him to it.
"No, no," Petunia said in her
sweet voice as she picked it up. "Dursley residence."
"Petunia, this is Margie."
"Hi, Margie. I hope Piers isn't giving
you too much trouble today." At the name Piers, Dudley reached for the
phone. Piers Polkiss was Dudley's best friend; Piers's father and Dudley's
father had gone to school together. They'd also managed to have married very
similar women.
"Aw, Piers is wonderful. He had a
little cold a few days ago, but he's perfectly fine. Anyway, Piers asked me if
Dudley and Harry could come over this afternoon to swim. It's a lovely July
day, Petunia. Come bring them over to swim." Petunia thought about
Potter's punishment. Well, it only applied till ten; and Piers had requested
both . . . she decided it would be okay if she let Harry go.
"What time?" Petunia asked,
shaking off Dudley's leaps for the receiver.
" 'Bout four or so."
"We'll be over there, Margie.
Bye."
"Bye, Petunia." The other line
went dead, and Petunia hung the phone up.
"Guess where you're going today?"
she asked Dudley. Dudley shrugged.
"You're going swimming!"
* * *
A few minutes later, a man knocked on the
door. Petunia, remembering her fears, checked her watch. It was 9:45. Almost
exactly.
A large blonde man stood at the door,
knocking on it. He was especially buff, and his smile on his face was rather
suggestive. He had a red jumpsuit on with his name embroidered on a patch:
"Fred."
Petunia groaned as Dudley ran to the door.
"Mummy, Mummy, I'll get it!"
"Go to your room, Dudley. This is a
very important person who needs me to open the door to them." Dudley,
though a bit saddened, nodded and obeyed his mother, running off as fast as he
could . . . a few centimeters per hour faster than his walk.
Gosh, what does that man want? Petunia asked herself as she opened the door.
"Oh, Petunia," the man said,
falling down to his knee. "You are the flower of my love, blossoming among
that which is wilting."
"Now, now," Petunia said, noticing
the rolled-up shirt sleeves, "I'm flattered."
"This is not flattery," the man
said, flexing his biceps, "but the mere truth. You are the loveliest
flower in the garden, my love." He flexed his muscles a bit more.
"You are quite the fellow,"
Petunia said, smiling. "How old are you, Fred?"
Suddenly the phone began to ring. "Hold
on a moment, Fred." Petunia ran to the kitchen.
"Hello?"
"Petunia, this is Vernon. I've got to
go out of town today; I'll be gone till Thursday . . . problems in
London."
"Okay, honey. I love you." Vernon
didn't reply; his line went dead, and Petunia could gather that he was in a
rush. She rushed back to the door.
"Fred, you're quite a handsome man,"
she said. Fred nodded. "And if you absolutely want to come by and see me,
come by tomorrow at nine in the morning. I'll make sure the kids are gone, and
the husband's out of town." Fred nodded.
"Mrs. Dursley, have you been working
out?" he asked. Petunia nodded.
"After being pregnant with Dudley, it's
been taking me forever to work off this weight. A session with the weights is
wonderful for the body; and when Dudley's our number one rugby player, he'll be
using them every single day."
"So Wednesday at 9:00?" he said,
pulling out a pocket organizer from his back pocket. Petunia nodded, and her
frame graced the doorway.
"I'll be expecting you."
* * *
The Polkiss family lived in the next
neighborhood–it was called Manor Estates–so Petunia had to drive about five
minutes to get there. They braked at the stoplight; and Dudley watched it
carefully, as did Harry.
"What do you think makes it go like
that?" he asked Harry. Harry shrugged.
"Maybe like little bitty people inside
it. They press the buttons for the different lights."
"Like midgets?"
"Yeah," Harry said. "I always
thunk that was how they did it."
"Seems about right," Dudley said.
"Hush, boys!" Petunia yelled.
"You're making me nervous.
"Yes, Daddy," Dudley replied.
Petunia smiled to herself and made a mental note to find a psychiatrist for her
sweet little Dudley.
* * *
Margie Polkiss was a woman with
frighteningly tall hair. It was tall and red, unhumanly thick as well.
She stood outside the door to the large
Polkiss house, waiting for Petunia and the children. The brown station wagon
pulled into the driveway, the Dursleys (and Potter) in tow.
The car stopped; and Petunia Dursley stepped
out, running out of the car to greet Margie.
"Petunia!" Margie said, hugging
her friend. Harry and Dudley made their way out of the door and ran inside,
yelling and screaming for Piers.
"Precisely on time, Petunia. I've got
some tea made if you'd like."
"It's in the back near the pool,
right?" Petunia asked. Last time Dudley'd gone swimming, he'd nearly
drowned playing Marco Polo after employing a new strategy: stay underwater as
long as you can and wait for a person to bump in to you. It had been a horrible
failure, not to mention that the Dursleys–even the Potter–were banned from the
swimming pool. (The owners do not like to mess with insurance folks or lawyers
and ban those who do stupid things.) Needless to say Dudley nearly died, and
while a crowd formed outside the pool Harry had the entire Olympic-size pool to
himself.
"I've made the tea in the kitchen, so
you'll have a perfect view."
"Good, Margie. By the way, can you
watch Harry and Dudley tomorrow? I've got a doctor's appointment at nine, and I
need someone to watch them."
"Sure thing, Petunia. Drop 'em off at
around 8:30."
"Is eight okay?"
"Sure, Petunia. I'll fix 'em breakfast
as well." Petunia nodded. "Now would you like to go inside?"
* * *
Harry, Dudley, and Piers had their shirts
off and jumped in the pool, each yelling "Cannonball!" at the
top of their lungs. Dudley'd made it into the pool first, seeing that he didn't
jump that high to begin with. Harry and Piers–a little skinny boy with brown
eyes and black hair–followed.
"Hold on," Piers said, "Mummy
said I have to clean the strainer basket." Harry and Dudley nodded as
Piers proudly swam to the deep end of the pool and pulled open the plastic
cover to the strainer basket.
"Hey, come here!" Piers said.
"You're not going to believe what's in here!
* * *
Vernon Dursley's client was a squat man with
brown hair braided into a ponytail. He owned a construction company, and Vernon
was offering him a wholesale deal on nuts, bolts, and screws.
"Look, the way I see it is that you're
building a house for one of the richest families in London; but you can't
afford the hundreds of accessories that come with building a house."
"We were the lowest bidder," the
client said.
"And for two-thirds the cost of the
competitors, we will sell you everything you need."
"You know, I don't know anything about
business; but this a bloody good deal."
"I know, Sir. I did come up with
it," Vernon replied. "I need you to sign this contract . . ."
* * *
Harry, Dudley, and Piers each knelt around
the strainer basket.
"A dead frog!" Piers said.
"Don't those give you warts?"
Dudley asked. Harry shook his head.
"Those are toads."
"You sure?" Piers asked.
"Yeah," Harry answered.
"What's the difference?" Dudley
inquired.
"Toads give ya' warts, and frogs
don't," Harry answered.
"Man, some people just get all the
luck," Dudley said. "Dead frogs in their own swimming pool. I'd kill
to have a dead frog."
"Me, too," Harry said. Piers
reached into the water, grabbing the frog by its stomach.
"We'll share it," Piers said. The
three stood up and formed a circle, each of them admiring the frog in Piers's
right hand.
"It's so ugly," Dudley
said.
"This is great," Harry said.
"We should do something with it,"
Piers said. The other two nodded.
Suddenly there was a noise from behind them,
behind the fence in the yard behind them. There was a splash, and a man slid
down a slide into a pool.
"They'll love it," Harry said.
Piers and Dudley nodded in agreement.
* * *
Vernon looked at his client, who had just
happily signed his contract.
The male adult Dursley extended his hand to
his client. "I'd just like to–"
A secretary popped her head into the room.
"Mister Dursley, you have a phone call from your employers."
"Thank you," Vernon said.
"Excuse me for a moment please?"
* * *
"Yes, thank you," Vernon Dursley
said. "I'll see you tonight. What's the number again?" Vernon jotted
a number down in his organizer. "Thanks. Yes, I'll see you tonight."
He hung the phone up and thanked the
secretary, stepping into the meeting room with the client once more.
"Where were we?"
* * *
"What are they doing?" Petunia
asked, looking out the window at the circle of children.
"Probably just looking at a leaf,"
Margie said, taking a sip of her tea. "I'm giving Piers that new Mister
Puffy Puff game if he does it.
"Good way to bribe him," Petunia
said, turning back to Margie. "They're fine."
* * *
"How are we going to do this?"
Piers asked. Harry shrugged.
"It'd be funny, to see them running
away from a dead frog," Dudley said. "Lemme hold it, Piers."
Piers shook his head. "I found
it."
"You said we'd share," Dudley
said.
"Yeah," Harry added.
"I changed my mind," Piers said.
"Besides, I'm the expert frog holder here; he's fragile and dead, so we
must treat him carefully."
"Okay," Dudley said. "I get
what you're t-t-talking about."
"Whatever," Harry said.
"Okay, who wants to throw the frog
over?" Piers asked. Harry and Dudley looked at each other.
"I think you should, Piers, seeing that
you're the expert on this and all," Dudley said. Harry nodded.
"Harry, why don't you do it?"
Piers asked. Harry nodded.
"Lemme hold it before you throw,"
Dudley said. Piers sighed and handed Dudley the frog.
"Don't squeeze it now," Piers
warned. Dudley nodded.
"Wow . . . it feels so . . . I dunno .
. . it's all smooth and stuff."
"Hand it to me, Dudley," Harry
commanded. Dudley obeyed. The frog was now in Harry's hand.
"One, two–" Piers began.
"Wait, lemme get the feel for it
first," Harry said. Piers waited while Harry tried to "get the feel
for it."
"Get in the pool," Harry said.
"Act like your swimming or playing or something."
"Righto," Dudley said, falling
backwards into the deep end. He sprang up, doggie paddling to the side as Piers
fell into the pool and waded to a bench at the end of the deep end. Harry's arm
was behind him, ready to launch the dead frog into the swimming pool.
"One–" Dudley and Piers began.
"Don't do that," Harry whispered.
"Start swimming away. Don't let them think you're out here, or they might
arrest us."
"Is this a crime, Harry?" Dudley
asked, becoming a bit scared. Harry shook his head.
"I don't know if they arrest four year
olds."
"Or fans of Mister Puffy Puff,"
Piers said, standing up to show off his boxers.
"Man, we missed it!" Dudley said.
"It was an old one," Piers said.
"I watched it in the morning."
"Good," Harry said.
"It must be the one I missed!"
Dudley cried. "Oh no, I've seen every single one but that one."
"Now, Dudley," Harry said,
returning his arm and frog to his side, "that is impossible. There are a
billion zillion jillion episodes of Mister Puffy Puff. I don't think
it's the one you missed."
"But what if it is?"
"Then you'll have missed it,"
Piers said, swimming over to the side next to Dudley. "Come on, let's get
to the other side of the pool so they can't see us when Harry throws it."
Dudley and Piers each held onto the edge and
moved themselves to the shallow end. Harry's arm went back as he threw the frog
over the fence. He walked on the concrete–"Don't run around the pool"
says Mister Puffy Puff–and jumped into the shallow end.
There was a scream from behind the fence.
* * *
"My God, Petunia!" Margie said,
dropping her tea cup on the floor. "What was that?"
Petunia looked outside. "It wasn't the
boys."
"You little brats!" yelled a male voice.
"Are you sure it wasn't the boys?"
Margie asked. They ran outside.
* * *
Swears flew at the boys, who appeared to be
guilty of something.
"You no good, ignorant, sons of–"
"Excuse me!" Petunia
Dursley yelled. "But if you're going to swear at my children, come do it
to where we can see your faces!" A man struggled over the fence, but made
it over and walked over to the two adults.
"Those three kids–well, one of
them–threw a dead frog into our swimming pool."
"I highly doubt that," Margie
said. "My Piers is a little angel."
"And Dudley's perfect as well. You'll
never met a sweeter child," Petunia said.
"Well, who's the third kid?" the
man asked. Harry, Dudley, and Piers looked at each other.
"He did it!" Piers and Dudley
said, both pointing at Harry.
"Potter!!!" Petunia yelled.
* * *
The Dursleys (and Potter) were in the
station wagon, driving back to the Dursley home. Harry had promised he'd never
touch a frog again, and that he would (for the most part) never go swimming
again.
"I just can't believe you'd do that,
Harry. I know you're a bit of a–how do I say this–disturbed child, but that
behavior was completely uncalled for. You're grounded: no Mister Puffy Puff,
no nothing! You are to be in your cupboard except when we allow you out. I just
can't believe this."
Dudley looked at Harry and stuck his tongue
at him. Harry laughed, and Petunia was shocked.
"Don't you ever laugh at me,
boy!" Harry shut up, and Dudley
stuck his tongue at him again.
* * *
The next morning, Petunia sat alone in the
house, romantic music playing on the stereo. The record had a few
scratches–Dudley loved records when he was a baby–but for the most part it
played well. There was a knock at the door, and Petunia knew who it was.
She ran to the door and opened it, looking
as seductive as she could. Fred smiled, and they went back into the house.
* * *
Two minutes later, a man who did not belong
in the house stepped inside. He'd gotten through the lock; and he thought it
odd the shades were shut at this hour.
He walked through the kitchen, making his
way to the living room.
Petunia Dursley looked up, as did Fred.
"Petunia, what's going on?" Vernon
Dursley asked.
Author's Note: Hope you enjoyed!
There are quite a few twists in here, and whoever knows what Vernon did that
night gets a few points in my book. This story started out as a look at
Harry and Dudley while children, but in the end I wanted to explore the
relationships between Petunia and Vernon. I've never believed there is
any love between them at all, just a shared love for their son. So it's logical
these things might have happened when Dudley's four. Though I doubt JK
would ever do anything like this.
Thanks to the Draco Dexter board (http://www.yahoogroups.com/group/draco_dexter),
PikaCheeka, and Chix for commenting on this and helping me out with some
ideas. Thank you for reading, and please tell me what you thought about
it . . . I'll answer your questions pertaining to the story if you have any in
your review . . . just leave your email, and my email address is quidditch_seeker@angelfire.com
in case you'd like to ask them privately.
Thank you for reading.