Author's Note: Just a one-shot, people, really. I've always loved Ginny. Alongside Ron, I think she's the character who has taken most heat from most people - I still don't understand why (no, I do, I just think it's silly). A bit of Ginny's POV during HBP.

Disclaimer: It's all JKR's and she works them in a lovely way.


"Weasleys'."

It stood out smugly from the boggle of subdued whispers and Ginny lifted her eyes from her textbook, secretly thankful for the interruption. She glanced over the pile of books Hermione had picked out for her ("They're not that many, Ginny, really, if you fit in some reading time every day you'll get through them in a flash.") and frowned quizzically as she recognized Olivia Dunn and Romilda Vane as the unmistakable leaders of the small but noisy group of girls. Just what they could want with a Weasley of any shape or size – let alone more than one – was absolutely worth wasting a moment of Theories of Transubstantial Transfiguration.

"It isn't allowed, though, is it?"

"We owl-ordered it. They have a package-option that Confounds the detecting spells. Costs a peck more but it's so worth it, isn't it Rommy?"

The dark-haired girl smiled demurely and nodded, caressing the pinkish vial in her hand with one perfectly manicured nail. Ginny sighed and rolled her eyes, suddenly losing all previous interest. Her brothers must have had inhaled one too many toxic fumes the day they set up Easy-Order packages for Hogwarts's students – especially girls, Ginny thought. She wondered why not even one of the hare-brains gawking at their pack leaders dared to mock Vane's need to order cheap love potions to get whoever she had set her galleons on.

You know who. People with glass roofs shouldn't talk out their asses like you're doing.

Ginny scoffed to herself and popped open another book. She was very proud of how she'd been able to browse through that particular shelf in her brothers' shop without anything but mild curiosity, thank you ever so much. Looking back on the past four years or so, she felt she had every right to be so; there hadn't even been a tendril of her brain occupied in adding pink vials and Harry Potter and coming up with disaster. The equation didn't even need to be thought up; she knew she didn't want to do it, would never do it and didn't need to do it.

That's right. Dean.

And not just Dean; she wasn't mooning after Harry Potter not only because she had her own boyfriend, but because she wasn't mooning after Harry Potter, period. Had been over it for so long it would be laughable – that was, if she didn't pity her eleven year old self's misery so much. She didn't want pink vials and she didn't want Restricted spells just as much as she didn't want Harry Potter. Vane could make good use of it for all that Ginny cared.

However, as she watched the vial tip in Romilda's hand and the dark pink liquid slouch gently, something inside her twisted and churned and she hated her brothers a little bit.


The Gryffindor fourth year girls' dorm room was a baboon mess. Now, Ginny didn't pride herself of being some Little Miss Tidy, but she was sure there were things living under some of the beds – things who didn't particularly care for baths, either. Fred would have turned his nose at the sight of it and that was saying something.

She wasn't expecting to spot the vial right away. She had really expected to have to go through everything in that hell's pit of a room, and get bitten once or twice before she got to it; however, there it was, upright and proud in all its pink malignance on one of the nightstands by the window side.

Not your problem.

I know, but –

Not your boyfriend.

Of course not, still –

Not yours.

Don't want him to be, just –

Not your friend.

He was, though. Harry was her housemate and her teammate; she had learned from him in DA and fought alongside him in the Department of Mysteries; they had spent holidays together and he had eaten her mother's Christmas pudding; she had rooted for him during the Triwizard Tournament and he was Ron's best friend.

My friend.

It doesn't concern you.

My friend.

It's not your business.

My friend.

A friend who wouldn't invite you to the Yule Ball, not even as a last resort. A friend who still thinks of you as an annoying infatuated brat clinging to his side. A friend who goes gaga over Chang but won't ever look twice at you. A friend who just forgot you had been possessed by Voldemort.

He saved me. I owe him my life, and my father's life, and the lives of everyone I love a thousand times over. For that. And because he's my friend.

Even if he was the one to put those lives in danger in the first place just by existing?

Ginny flipped her mind the bird and grabbed the vial with a steady hand.


Watching the pink swirls slide around in the basin, Ginny racked her brain for any dormant feeling for Harry Potter and found none. Humming out of tune she trashed the empty vial and walked out of the bathroom with a light spring in her step.


Staring at Ron laid out in the infirmary bed with an ashen-faced Hermione sitting by his side, Ginny felt her hand close in a white-knuckled fist. She did not hate her brothers and she did not hate Vane; she did not even hate whoever had poisoned the bloody drink.

She hated herself because, even as she stared at her brother's unconscious form, she could not muster enough strength to will Harry in that bed instead of Ron.


She finally snapped the thirteenth time Dean tried to help her through the portrait.

The sixth time he yelled he hadn't done shit to help her through she believed him – and was stunned to discover that wasn't the point at all. It wouldn't matter if Dean Thomas actually started tripping her every time they passed through a door, or if he pushed her of her broom every time she blocked him during Quidditch practice.

The point was Harry's laugh when she told that horrible joke about the centaur's Halloween poker game.

The point was the Harry Potter Rules badge in the bottom drawer of her bedroom at the Burrow.

The point was nauseous relief over her brother being the one laying in an infirmary bed.

The point was pink swirls in a basin on the third floor bathroom.

The point was that she didn't give a rat's ass about Harry Potter anymore.

The point was she liked Harry a bit too much.

And it wasn't going away anytime soon.


When Ginny Weasley was four she loved Harry Potter the most.

Her mother had taken out a blank notebook and written down her daughter's favorite story with all the right details in her firm, clear handwriting; in the cover she glued green rhinestones to form the title. The little book had no drawings but it had Harry Potter and You-Know-Who and Ginny worn all the rhinestones off the cover.

When Ginny Weasley was ten she hated her brother, Ron, the most.

Ron talked and ate and played with Harry Potter and Ginny couldn't because she was "still too young, love" so she took one garden gnome by his feet and let him loose in Ron's bedroom for a whole afternoon. All over his Chudley Cannon posters.

When Ginny Weasley was eleven she liked her diary the most.

She fancied Tom with dark hair and bright eyes and a bashful grin and fell a little in love with him. He listened patiently when she told about how Mrs. Norris was a wicked cat, a disgrace to all of her kind; how Justin Finch-Fletchey was spreading stupid, awful rumors about Harry Potter; how Colin was sweet but obnoxious with his superiority, claiming to know all there was to know about Harry Potter when Ginny was the one who'd had his book and stood up for him against Malfoy; how she would never be as smart, as confident or as important to Harry Potter as Hermione Granger was. Tom Riddle broke Ginny Weasley's heart for the first time.

When Ginny Weasley turned fourteen she stored Harry Potter awayin the attic (careful to keep it far from the ghoul's reach, though); she gave Ron new Chudley curtains; she began and left a dozen diaries, burning each one after she'd had enough of insulting their blank pages.

When Ginny Weasley was fifteen she had a boyfriend she liked a lot, three friends she loved to pieces, and some subjects she hated with a passion. She liked her friend, Harry, because he was brave, and kind, and smart, and funny, and she could totally give him a hard time if she had to.

When Ginny Weasley, as honorary captain, shook Cho Chang's hand one Saturday morning, she knew she was going to win. Not for Gryffindor, or for her captain in detention, or even for her own competitive streak. She had to win because Harry had to know Chang had lost and she had to give him that Snitch and tell him everything about how he was brave, and kind, and smart, and funny and how she could totally give him a hard time if he acted out.

She had to show him the spot in her soul that was shaped like Tom Riddle; the spot that would never wash off; the spot that made her weaker and stronger at the same time because only he could know it was there and still forgive her for it.

She had to let him know that Ginny Weasley wasn't the same that had ran after the Hogwarts Express six years ago, the one Ron saw, the one her family saw, the one through which not even Hermione could see, and let herself be okay with it.

She had to tell him she'd never written that stupid card all those years ago. Even if his eyes were bloody gorgeous and even if he was divine.

She had to take the Snitch from Chang because she was in love with Harry.

And that wasn't going away anytime soon.

The End.