Getting the Wrong Answer part 2
By Curious Forgotten Lore
The first part was meant to be a one-shot, but I had a plot bunny, so I thought I'd add a second chapter. I've never done anything with chapters, so this is another experiment for me; getting the upload feature to work. Sounds easy enough, but I am a bit technologically impaired.
This ficlet is also 400-words. Please read and review (it's only 400 words. How long could it take?).
I forgot to put in the disclaimer on the first chapter, but rest assured I am making no profit from this story, nor do I intend any copyright infringement.
Thanks to all the reviewers and special thanks to RedRoses2 who wanted more of this story. I hope you like it.
George ripped the hat off his head and flung it back on the shelf, hurrying away to contemplate the hat's cryptic response.
A quick stop by the Hospital Ward garnered no information. Madam Pomfrey was still busy healing and had firmly told him to leave her to her work. Still worrying over his brother and bemused by the Sorting Hat's ridiculous statement, George wandered the halls until he found himself on the Hogwarts grounds.
How could the hat say he was like Percy? The twins and Percy had always been at opposite ends of the Weasley personality spectrum. Laughing, lighthearted pranksters and pompous severe prefects had little in common. Anyone could see that.
The walk through the grounds did little to clear his head; only emphasizing the difference between George and Percy. George would have been on the pitch while Percy was in the stands. George would have been tickling the Giant Squid while Percy was sitting at the lake's edge. As George walked past the Forbidden Forest, a random thought entered his mind; George knew he never would have gone into that forest without Fred's encouragement. That was when it hit; that was when George understood.
He and Percy had one crucial thing in common; they based their decisions entirely on pleasing others. Percy was forever striving to impress authority figures; George to please Fred.
It had started a long time ago; when George was a very small child. He remembered letting Fred have first choice over their toys, letting Fred decide what games they played and what rules they broke. George liked seeing the grin on his twin's face; it was like seeing your own smiling face in a mirror. And if your reflection was smiling, naturally you would be smiling too.
Making Fred happy meant playing pranks; it meant making jokes; and it meant playing Quidditch. Luckily for George being a mischievous, witty, Quidditch player made a person very popular with his peers.
But without Fred; would George have done any of those things? Would he have laughed with large groups of friends and played Quidditch or would he have spent his days in the quiet library and got top marks in class? Without Fred, would George's instinct to please have made him forever seeking his mother's approval or his boss's respect?
Would it?
For one exhilarating moment; George felt he understood Percy.
And it terrified him.
