Title: Assumptions
Author: Catsncritters (Adrienne Wolter)
Disclaimer: Potter is JK Rowling's, not mine. If you don't know that by now, you're probably not going to want to read this. The plot is miiiiiine, although the characters are hers. No moolah is being made, as this is a work of fan fiction.
Summary: This is what could've happened during the Yule Ball is GoF. It's some lovely, angsty, slashy goodness. Percy's lonely. So is Neville. You can pretty much figure the rest, can't you? :)
Rating: PG. Just in case. (There's one kiss, folks.)
Warnings: SLASH. As in male/male romance. There's also a slight age difference. Percy/Neville stuff, y'know. Flames will be used to light Hagrid's woodstove. If you don't like SLASH, simple, don't read it.
Enjoy! (And, please, if you read it, don't be a bastard and just leave, review it. :) )
.~*~.
The bell rang.
"Potter–a word, if you please."
Neville gathered his things and left the classroom with the bulk of the Gryffindor
students, sighing. The Yule Ball. How on Earth was he going to be able
to show his face at that?
Hermione and Ron, not being able to wait for Harry as class would start in four
minutes, muttered quietly to one another, wondering what McGonagall had asked
Harry to stay for.
Neville sighed to himself and quietly shuffled through his papers for his schedule.
He'd left it in the Transfiguration classroom.
Dangit, Neville looked back behind him. The classroom was half the school away
now, and he decided just to get it later. He followed Ron and Hermione to Potions,
head down, face red.
The days passed. Neville, who had always been somebody who trailed after the
others, noticed how many girls laughed and giggled when Harry or Dean or Seamus
passed in the hallway; he didn't get that sort of attention. Truth be
told, he didn't know himself if he wanted it.
The final week of term came too quickly, and Neville felt himself getting more
and more nervous. In the Gryffindors' free time between Potions and Herbology,
looking braver than he felt, he worked up the nerve to ask Hermione to the Ball.
"Um, Hermione," the girl looked up from her book as Neville noiselessly
took a seat across the table from her. "Do you..." he went pink,
and gulped. "Do you... havadatoteball?"
She blinked, and then her mouth fell open a little but no words came out for
a few seconds as she strung them into sentences that had plausible meaning.
"I'm sorry Neville...." His face fell despite his attempts
to appear indifferent. "I'm already going with someone.... Sorry,"
she repeated, genuine sorrow in her eyes.
"Yeah... that's okay," he got up somewhat stiffly, avoiding
her eyes. He wanted to say something else to appear less disappointed, but forgot
what that was immediately after it flashed across his mind.
Neville lay in his four-poster, staring up at the velvet covering the top
of the bed. It was too early to go to sleep, but too late to start his essay
for History of Magic.
I have until January, he told himself, sighing and rolling onto his stomach.
He stared at the mismatched sheet and pillow for a few seconds, then plopped
his face forward into the pillow, inhaling the musty scent. His eyes hurt, like
they do before you cry. He knew the feeling, expected it, could never fight
it. He felt empty. Hollow.
The tears came. They came in waves, shaking his somewhat pudgy frame and soaking
into the pillow and his robe collar. Tears rolled down his nose into the pillow,
stung his eyes and made them blur up. He trembled and wished it would stop.
I hate staying at Hogwarts, he thought to himself. He had already signed
up to stay for Christmas break, as his Gran had assumed he would.
Neville hated her assumptions, her overprotectiveness. He hated the way she
always did things for him, like he was a helpless five-year-old stuck in bed
from illness. He hated the way every time she let him try himself, he failed
miserably. He was a hopeless case.
The dormitory door creaked open, loudly. Then was shut softly. The person coming
in apparently thought he was sleeping, and Neville stayed silent, listening.
It was either Dean or Seamus; Harry and Ron never cared how much noise they
made when they came to the dorms, usually at a very late or early (as often
was the case) hour.
The tears stopped. Neville stared at the spot of pale light the moon made through
the velvet late into the night until he finally fell to a less troubled sleep
hours later.
Coming out of Potions on the final day of term, Neville bumped into Ginny,
who was there early for whatever reason.
"Ginny," he whispered, feeling himself getting hot. "Do you
already have a... date to the
Yule Ball?"
"Oh... no," she answered, not particularly interested.
"Would you go with me?" Neville asked in a rush.
"Er... sure," she answered, keeping the disappointment in her voice
to a bare minimum. Her eyes followed Harry's back until he turned the
corner out of the dungeons.
"Ok... thanks," Neville inwardly slapped himself for his too-quick
decision. He knew Ginny wasn't interested.
Christmas morning, Neville woke to the yell of one of the other boys. Rolling
over groggily and peering through the moth hole in the curtains, he saw that
it was Harry who had shouted. He shook his head to clear it. As Ron, Dean, and
Seamus had scrambled out of bed at the sight of their Christmas gifts, Neville
reluctantly followed their example and scanned the small stack of presents at
the foot of his bed.
Not having parents who sent him gifts, or many relatives who could remember
when Christmas was, he opened the gifts he had received from Gran, his uncle,
and a few other ancient relatives. Sighing, he tossed the dress robes Gran had
sent him onto his bed, and sent the tin of cookies from his uncle after them.
A few other varieties of candy, and a card. He sighed and tried to smile, but
it was very forced. Dean and Seamus, who had unwrapped a very large variety
of posters and books and candies and wizarding magazines, gave each other a
nervous glance.
Neville spent the rest of the morning off classes losing spectacularly to
Ron in chess, and avoiding Fred and George's airbourne exploding snap
cards, which seemed to like starting small fires when they came in contact with
things like curtains, sweaters, and Crookshanks' tail.
Then there was lunch, with spectacular arrays of turkeys and puddings; Neville
ate silently while Dean, Seamus, Harry, and Ron animatedly argued over Quidditch
teams and other wizarding politics. At one point, in a light-hearted fight about
Quidditch, Dean and Seamus had asked him about which team he thought would make
it to the next world cup. As he stayed very silent, poking at his porkchops
and gravy, they didn't ask him again.
Then he followed the rest of his house out into the snow, making deep tracks
and throwing snow about maniacally. A Slytherin clomped him in the back of the
head with a snow ball, and he moved closer to the lake, further from the castle
and the students. Loneliness was good.
Neville worked on a small snowman, propped against a bare tree by the water.
Just when he had finished his snowman, a wind came and snow fell out of the
tree all over him. He sighed and decided it was about time to head back to the
castle.
He stood slowly, grasping the tree trunk for support, and kicked what was left
of the snowman down, glaring at it. The sudden wave of anger ceased just as
suddenly, and he made his way to the dorms to change into dress robes.
Somewhat self-consciously, Neville met Ginny in the common room, who stiffly
stood and look over his robes silently. They offered each other very false,
insecure smiles, and made their way out of the common room.
The Great Hall looked very different. The students were obviously expected to
seat themselves at the small tables scattered around the edges of the large
room, so Ginny and Neville made their way to one of the closer ones, Ginny looking
apprehensive, and Neville looking like he'd much rather be somewhere else.
Neville's eyes flitted around the Hall; McGonagall called the champions
and their dates over to the head table, and his eyes scanned the faces there.
Ludo Bagman stood out in violently purple robes dotted with small yellow stars.
Dumbledore was smiling and talking to Karkaroff, who seemed like he'd
rather not be there, and Madame Maxime was watching the champions draw nearer.
And then, on her other side... Percy Weasley?
His thoughts wee interrupted as Dumbledore looked down at his plate and said,
"Porkchops." Ginny looked down at the gold plate in front of her,
and the menu, and clearly said to it, "Baked potatoes." Neville
raised an eyebrow and ordered baked potatoes as well, as the only nearby menu
was on the seat next to Ginny, and he didn't want to ask her to hand it
to him.
He hardly noticed what he was eating, and talked very formally to Ginny. Soon
they went into a somewhat comfortable silence, listening to the dull chatter
of other students around the Hall. Dumbledore told them to stand, and Neville
and Ginny nervously did so, eyeing the ground. The table flew away at the wave
of his wand, crashing into the wall and folding itself, and Neville caught Ginny's
eye and offered a reassuring smile. A group of witches marched to a slowly rising
platform to the right, and started a slow tune. Neville saw Harry trip slightly
as he stood to start the dancing with the other champions.
Ginny grinned and took Neville's hand to dance too, and soon they were
dancing, albeit pretty badly on his part. Hard as he tried to avoid it, he kept
stepping on the redhead's feet.
They stopped shortly before the end of the next song, and Ginny went to get
drinks. Neville watched her bump into a Durmstrang boy, and sighed as she followed
him off to another table.
~*~
Percy Weasley felt very uncomfortable. Quite a few people had noticed that
he resided in Crouch's spot, and he felt like he was in a spotlight. When
people got more absorbed in dancing, however, they stopped looking at him.
He watched them sadly. A thought of Penelope floated across his mind. She had
asked him to marry her, assuming that he wanted to live just as she did; to
have amazing success in the ministry and then to have a large family. She reminded
him perfectly of his parents. He couldn't do it though. He couldn't
accept that, and lie about his feelings for her. He thought he had loved her,
he really had. But... he couldn't. It didn't feel right. She had
looked so hurt when he had nervously refused. She had narrowed her eyes sadly,
put them to the floor, and had nodded. Said it was for the better. Percy hated
himself for hurting her, but was glad he was no longer lying to her. He hadn't
seen her since.
He shook his head lightly, as if to clear it, and tried to ease himself into
a conversation between Dumbledore and Trelawney, but gave up as soon as he started.
Standing very suddenly, he pushed in his chair and started out the doors, running
a shaking hand through his hair.
The redhead passed the rosebushes silently. Some couples hid in them and behind
them, making them shake unexpectedly, and more than once he jumped and sped
up down the path. It was moderately clear of snow, although the cobblestone
path was lined with about two feet of snow on either side.
The bushes gave way to a dirt path that led out to the Beauxbatons carriage.
He veered from the path a little to one of the few fountains that had popped
up along with the Christmas decorations. Knocking a bit of snow of the side
of it, he sat on the edge of it, feeling the dampness soaking through his robes.
Percy leaned against a short stone arch on the fountain, and brought his knees
to his chest, shivering. Cold never bothered him too much; it was a distraction,
often a welcome one.
~*~
Neville was torn between joining another table or going outside. Sighing, he took a gulp of pumpkin juice that he had gotten a while ago, and left. He didn't have the faintest clue where he was going, but 'away' was enough.
Sliding, unnoticed, from the Great Hall, he started down the cobblestone pathway,
his Hogwarts boots making quiet clip, clop noises as he stepped.
These soft pattering sounds were what kept him from going over memories of cold
winter nights when he had been forgotten; they kept him close enough to some
sort of reality.
He continued walking, watching small, glittering fairies throw tiny snowballs
at each other, or him. They flew around in large, glowing packs, zooming around
obstacles like bushes or tree trunks. They caught Neville's short attention
and kept it.
As he had been listening to the sharp clacking of his boots on the slick stones,
he noticed almost immediately when the cobbles changed to grit. He was brought
back to Earth with a very unpleasant bump.
The path went towards the huge carriage of Madame Maxime, and he also noticed
deep tracks turning left off the path. He paused here. Not wanting to meet anyone,
but not wanting to be caught where he wasn't allowed, he decided to turn
left.
The footprints led him to a small fountain with a few arches spanning over top
of them, and a jet of water shooting up between them; he thought he saw a flicker
of movement behind one of them, but decided he had just imagined it.
~*~
Percy heard the soft trudging of somebody coming nearer; he jumped slightly
and felt stinging cold on his cheeks. Bringing a hand up to touch them, he felt
tears.
Ugh... Percy hurriedly wiped these off on his robesleeves, and tried
to calm his tousled hair. He saw someone stop in front of the fountain and look
up at it, not having seen him.
The Weasley stayed silent and wanted them to go away. Her nervously flattened
his dishevelled bangs and bit his lip.
~*~
Neville jumped. He saw red hair above one of the stone archways, and saw a robesleeve flutter in the wind. Coming a bit closer out of curiosity, he stopped in his tracks when he saw who was seated there.
"P-Percy?"
Curse stuttering, Neville noted self-consciously.
Percy Weasley looked up at the voice, and saw the short boy. Straining his memory
for a few seconds, he tried to remember his name. L–Longbottom is his
surname. Er. Charles? No... Norbert? Eh...
Neville? That rang a bell. Neville Longbottom.
"Neville?"
The boy nodded, and shivered slightly. Percy dropped his feet to the ground
and shakily stood. "What are you doing out here?"
The redhead inwardly cringed at the very stern way he had asked this. Neville
seemed to wince too, and Percy frowned. "Sorry." he whispered, stepping
a bit closer to the other boy so they wouldn't have to talk so loudly.
"Why are you out here, though?"
"I... don't know." Now that Percy was within the light given
off from the lantern in the tree, Neville could see that his hair was mussed
and his eyes were red and rubbed at. He recognized this immediately; Percy had
been crying.
"What's wrong? Do you... er... want to talk about it?" Neville
said, sounding much braver than he felt. Percy's eyes flickered up to
meet the brown-haired boy's and then back to the ground. "You've
been crying."
The older boy winced. So he noticed anyway, he mused to himself. He tried
to find words for an explanation, but his brain felt numb, like there was a
blanket of fog over it.
"It's nothing, I'm... fine." The words sounded very
bitter. Neville sighed and didn't pursue the subject any longer.
"Don't you want to go in? It's warmer," Neville murmured.
Percy shook his head.
"It's... quieter... out here."
"Please don't do this, Percy," Neville whispered, looking
genuinely concerned for Percy. The older boy felt his insides go warmer, and
closed his eyes for a moment, reveling in the warmth.
"Why shouldn't I?"
The moment after the words escaped his mouth, he regretted them. Neville shrank
away from him, something he hadn't wanted to do. He was pushing the boy
away from him, just like he did to everyone else. But this boy was persistent.
He hadn't left after Percy's first cold statement.
"Nobody should have to... feel like they need to keep a distance from
others because they don't think they are deserving of love and care,"
Neville said in the same low undertone, slurring the end together, but Percy,
a meter or less away, heard him quite clearly. He raised his eyes to meet the
other's.
I should be taking my own advice, thought Neville bitterly, and he mentally
laughed. I've probably done more bad than good now.
"How did you know that?" Percy muttered, and looked up at Neville.
He didn't glance this time, but really looked; saw the mirroring loneliness,
the same sorrow in the younger boy that he felt in himself. Does he feel the
same way that I do?
Despite himself, Neville's right foot took a short step backwards. No!
I don't want to go to the castle again! "I...."
"Do you feel that way? Like you just said?" Percy interrupted him
by accident, nervously standing up. He pushed away the urge to cross his arms;
it always made him look intimidating, and he didn't want to do that to
this boy.
Neville's face darkened and he said in a normal tone of voice, "I'll
leave if you want me to." He took another step backwards, keeping his
eyes determinedly on the ground. He felt as if he was having a staring contest
with the snow.
Before he knew what he was doing, Percy was in front of Neville, his hands on
the other boy's shoulders. "No! I mean...." Neville shook
noticably.
Damn you, Percy, you've scared him.
"It's... ok... I – er...."
Their eyes met, and Neville shivered, even though he felt neither cold nor
scared. He felt... he didn't want to think about it. He had plunged headfirst
into a pool of emotions he didn't understand. He wanted to kiss Percy.
He wanted to comfort him. He wanted to run.
His legs wouldn't move, not with Percy holding his shoulders firmly.
He looks so cute, Percy told himself, then mentally slapped himself.
No. I'm not supposed to be....
He chose to ignore this voice in his head, and, to his horror, felt himself
leaning forward and catching Neville's lips in a kiss. He felt Neville
shake violently under him, felt his own stomach curling up. The other boy was
frozen. He wasn't kissing back.
I made a bad assumption, Percy realized, and just as suddenly as he had
kissed the boy, he wrenched himself away, eyes wide in absolute horror. He had
undoubtably scared the boy, and he took a few steps back, going very red. Neville's
eyes were wide, and he also backed away. His boot slid on ice, and he fell backwards.
His weight landed completely on his right hand, and he scrambled to stand back
up.
Percy's mouth had opened, and he had made to help him up, but Neville
had scuttled awkwardly out of his reach, not wanting him to touch him. Once
again standing, Neville backed away further and finally turned and ran back
to the castle.
Percy felt dead.
.~*~.
Yup, that's it. You like? Shall I continue? (I have an idea for the continuation of it, if so. I might choose to get into action and continue sooner if ya'll want me to.)
Review, please. :)
