Birds of a Feather: First Flight
Title: Birds
of a Feather Chapter 1: Owl Post
Author name: Nethilia
Author email: nethilia@yahoo.com
Category: Novel length. Drama/Angst.
Keywords: Ravenclaw, novel-length, Harry era, 1991-1998,
Cho
Spoilers: All the books
Rating: PG-13
Summary: As we all know, there's four houses in
Hogwarts--just because Harry gets all the glory doesn't mean the
other houses don't have things happen there! Follow the story of
the Ravenclaws of Harry's year.
Disclaimer: This story is based on characters and
situations created and owned by JK Rowling, various publishers
including but not limited to Bloomsbury Books, Scholastic Books
and Raincoast Books, and Warner Bros., Inc. No money is being
made and no copyright or trademark infringement is intended.
Author's Note: Thanks to Beta readers Haggridd and
Madhuri. AIM: Kittikattie. Fic also on personal HP site at
http://www.geocities.com/ravenclaw_princess.
Author's Notes: Yay, my first HP
fiction. This is a fic that's about the Ravenclaws of Harry's
year. I'm starting with the first book, which is a parallel of HP
and the Sorcerer's (Philosopher's) Stone. There might be a few
vague mentions of Harry and the other major characters, but not a
lot. I want you to look at these as what happens in the other
house. (Always Gryffindor and Slytherin. I need fics about MY
people, thank you.) There are a lot of author's liberties here,
with a lot of characters. Not set ones though. Since almost none
of the students I mentioned are seen in canon, other than a quick
name mention, I've taken full liberty with who they are and what
they act/look like/etc. I got their names from pulling last names
and granting firsts, making them up entirely, or using the Harry
Potter Lexicon to gather them. This fic was started after reading
the first four books, and thus anything seen wrong in later books
is not my fault. Got that?
I don't ship. So don't expect me
to add any relationships that you care for. I don't care if Harry
gets with Hermione and Draco gets with Ginny and Pig gets with
Hedwig and Scabbers gets with Snuffles and Crookshanks gets with
the Nimbus 2000. I'm just not that kinda person.
Oh, and please don't review me or
e-mail me and state the obvious such as, "We don't know
where Morag was sorted, or if Moon is female, or if Lisa Turpin
is a short squat brunette instead of a tall lanky blond."
It's called _fanfic_, and as such I get to take liberties.
Especially because these people have no faces and names. And
please please please compare my personality of Terry Boot--or any
one else in canon--to the other fics you've read about him. No
one knows what he acts like, honestly, except for a few spits. So
if you would rather him be a suave sexy lover of all instead of
how I make him, I'll have to decline. After all, we don't need
TWO Siriuses in the world. *grin*
As we know, I don't own HP. Do I
look like JKR, or Warner Bros., or Scholastic, or blahblahblah?
No....
Many many thanks and cookies to
my beta readers Haggridd and Madhuri (Otherwise I would have
mixed names, Britishisms, and the fact that Wizards don't have
fridges!) 20 points to each of them.
Okay, I'm done ranting happily.
Thank you for dealing with me, read onward.
*~*~*
Chapter One:
Owl Post
Carolina Kipley dropped her
binoculars after squinting through them at the barn owl that
hovered near the barn. She had seen many owls flying out around
the moors she lived near, so seeing one was no big deal. She
lifted the binoculars again and looked more closely at this
particular barn owl, first moving some of her thick curly auburn
hair out of the way of her dark eyes.
Wait a minute She
looked more closely. Since when do owls carry papers in their
beaks? She looked again, highly confused by now. No, not
paper—parchment!
She dropped the binoculars and
watched the owl. It looked as though it was flying towards her
house. She watched as it came closer and closer, then swooped and
started to descend towards her front door. It swooped, dropped
the parchment on the ground, pecked twice on the front door, then
flew off.
Carolina scrambled out and picked
up the thick yellow parchment letter. The address on it was
written in emerald green ink, and there was no stamp. She read
the address aloud, finding it moderately strange. "Miss
Carolina Kipley, The Second Bedroom, 12 Gully Lane"
She didn't get any further before she saw through the front door
her father looming over her, looking at the letter. "Papa,
what's this?"
Her father looked at the letter,
his eyes widening. He took it from her and flipped it over to
examine the purple wax seal. "I—I don't
know"
*~*~*
Morag MacDougal's mother,
Mavericka, sat down as she looked at the letter. ..."Oh my!
I never suspected—I wasn't certain that this would ever
come, but your father said it would"
Morag stared at his mother with
surprise. He'd gotten many letters before, but when he got
this one, with its strange calligraphy and the unusual parchment,
he'd taken it straight to his mother. She opened it, read
over it, and then gasped in surprise. He waited till she sat
down, then asked what had been preying on his mind. "Where
is this letter from? What is Hogwarts? What do they mean 'You
have been accepted'? I never applied to any Hogwarts."
Mavericka looked at her son,
whose thick black hair fell into his wide almond shaped eyes, as
it always did, and sighed. "Your father, rest his soul, was
a wizard. I am what he would have called a Muggle, that is, a
person with no magical skills. As the letter says, my son, you
have been accepted to Hogwarts. Hogwarts is a school that trains
wizards."
Weak at the knees with shock, it
was now Morag's turn to sit down. "I'm a—a
wizard?"
*~*~*
Padma Patil and her twin sister
Parvati were not the least bit surprised by their Hogwarts
letters. It would have been a major disappointment if they
hadn't come, actually. They were in a very well known
wizarding family, and both their parents had been in Hogwarts
when they were children. Anything less would have been a family
embarrassment. They grinned in twin likeness as their parents
read the letters.
"When do we go shopping at
Diagon Alley, Father?" Parvati asked happily. "I
can't wait to get my wand."
"I want to get my
books," Padma said. She'd been reading all the books
she could get her hands on her whole life, wizarding books about
everything. She especially liked the novels, and the books about
magical beasts. Parvati wasn't into books as much as Padma, but
she would read a lot as well.
"We'll go in a few
weeks," their father said in his thick English accent,
patting Padma on the head. "Term starts in a little over a
month, and we have to make sure that you two have everything you
need."
Their mother hugged them tightly,
grinning broadly. "My little girls are growing up!" she
beamed. From his spot on the floor, their little brother Amar
giggled as he played with a set of wooden blocks, each of them
chiming a different note as he touched them. He flung one at
Padma as she left the room, and the sound of an A sharp rang
through the air. Luckily, their mother had charmed the blocks so
that they glided slowly through the air and fell harmlessly to
the floor.
Padma and Parvati ran up to their
room, grinning. "Hogwarts," they said in a hushed
whisper. "In a month and a half we'll be at
Hogwarts."
*~*~*
Antigone held the letter up in
front of her, reading the words over and over, shocked beyond
belief. "Dear Miss Moon, We are pleased to inform you that
you have been accepted at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and
Wizardry. Please find enclosed a list of all necessary books and
equipment. Since you are Muggle-born we have arranged for you and
you parents to be visited in the forthcoming weeks by an official
from the Ministry of Magic to explain your situation in full.
Please reply by post no later than July 31 to confirm your
enrollment. Yours sincerely, Minerva McGonagall, Deputy
Headmistress."
Above her she could hear her
mother and father fighting, screaming at each other. She knew
they were screaming because of her. Her mother wasn't even
supposed to acknowledge these things. She certainly was not
supposed to give her daughter the letter-- but she had. She had
replied to the Deputy Headmistress as instructed, and arranged to
meet the Ministry spokesperson along with Antigone later that
week. Now these actions had set off her father once again.
The other kids were crying as she
hid there in the basement, sniffling. There were loud screams,
and the sound of fighting. Antigone curled up, her light brown
eyes red from crying. She hid there in the basement for almost an
hour, until the screams died and she heard the basement door
open. She wiped her tears from her cheeks, and hoped that it
wasn't her father
"Antigone?" Her
mother's soft voice whispered. "Antigone, are you
here?"
"Yes, Mummy," Antigone
replied softly. Her mother shuffled into view. Antigone snuffled
as her mom pulled her into her arms. "Mummy, Daddy
won't let me go there. I'll have to go to his school.
You know how he feels about things like this."
"Antigone, this is a
wonderful opportunity for you, and I won't let your father take
it from you. You're going to learn magic, honey, real, honest to
goodness magic. Do you know how proud this makes me?" Her
mother hugged Antigone proudly. "Come on. We're going
to spend the night at my sister's, and later this month,
we'll meet this official person and learn everything we can
about this school. This wonderful school"
Carolina and her father sat at a
London café that was across the street from a record shop and a
large bookstore. "The letter said to meet Ms. Toners
here," her father said, as Carolina looked up and down the
street from her seat.
"Did you bring what she
asked you over the phone?" Carolina said.
"Yes, enough to buy your
supplies for the year." He looked around, then checked his
watch. "She said she would be here around noon, that there
had been a change of plans with the other people she was meeting
today and she had to pick them up. She'll be here shortly, I
hope."
Carolina, bored from waiting,
gazed up and down the street. She hoped that it wouldn't
take too long. She was about to reach into her backpack and pull
out the copy of Trumpet of the Swan when a very nice Miata
pulled into the parking lot beside them. She watched as a woman
in a pair of comfy jeans and a loose T-shirt climbed out, her
long black hair back in a long braid. She seemed to be carrying
something over her arm, a long cloth, and she had what looked
like a wand in her hand. "We're here, Mrs. Moon,"
she said, closing her door.
A black woman with thick curly
hair climbed out of the car, wearing sunglasses. She opened the
back door and a young girl, about Carolina's age, stepped
out. She was lighter than her mother, and her hair wasn't as
curly. She looked around fearfully, then gripped her mom's
hand. She's awfully big to still be holding her
mother's hand, Carolina thought to herself. Well,
whatever makes a person feel safe.
The trio walked over to where
Carolina and her father sat. "Mr. Kipley?" the tall
raven-haired woman asked. Carolina's father nodded.
"Good, good!" She took his hand and shook it firmly
with her free hand. "I'm Esmerelda Toners, the lady who
spoke to you on the telephone from my home. Just call me
Esmerelda."
"The Ministry
official?" Carolina piped up.
Esmerelda grinned. "Yes,
Carolina, just one of many at the Muggle-born Wizard and Witch
Liaison Office. This is Mrs. Moon and her daughter Antigone. She
is starting at Hogwarts too. My assignment is to help you all
during your first visit to Diagon Alley, where you will learn
more about the wizarding world, and about what the children will
be doing this first year." She motioned for the Kipleys to
follow her. "To the Leaky Cauldron."
"You've done this
often?" Antigone said. Her voice was much quieter than
Carolina's, and she still clung tightly to her mother's
hand.
"It's my job, Antigone.
I help Muggle students adjust to the wizarding world. I've
been doing it since the letters started going out this
summer."
"What's a Muggle?"
asked Carolina.
"It's people like your
parents, with no magical talent. There are many young witches and
wizards who are Muggle born or reared, and it's the job of
my department to lessen the shock a little for their families.
Yesterday I spent the day with a charming young family named
Granger. When she got to Flourish & Blotts, little Miss
Hermione wanted to buy every book she saw. Bright girl, she'll
make a great witch. Ah, here we are."
Antigone and Carolina saw a tiny,
grubby looking pub that was nestled tightly between the record
store and the book store. Those walking past didn't even
notice it, except for a few people who waved at Esmerelda before
entering. A heavyset man in a blue suit and tie called, "
Lo, Esme! Taking more Muggle-borns on their first visit to
Diagon Alley?"
"Sure am," she grinned.
"Meet Antigone and Carolina."
The jolly man waved at the two
girls. "Have fun! You've got one perky woman with
you."
Grinning broadly, Carolina waved
back. Antigone managed a half smile and a little wave before
Esmerelda hustled them all in. The pub was dark and rather
shabby. People dressed in long wizard's robes sat around tables,
conversing while drinking unfamiliar drinks. Esmerelda shook out
the garment she was carrying. The girls could then tell that it
was a set of what could be considered rather fashionable dark
grey robes. She pulled them over her clothes and tied them shut,
then walked over to speak to the bartender, a toothless old man.
then walked over to the bartender, a toothless old man. After
speaking for a few minutes, she motioned to the girls'
parents. Carolina's father and Antigone's mother walked over.
Carolina took this moment to speak to Antigone.
"Nervous?" she asked.
"A—a little,"
Antigone admitted. "I don't know what to expect."
"Me too. I bet all the other
first years that weren't born to—what did she say our
parents are?"
"Muggles."
"That's it. Muggles. I bet
the wizard-born kids are all used to this. I feel sort of out of
place."
"Me too."
"Well, we can be out of
place together, right?"
Antigone grinned meekly. "I
guess so."
Esmerelda walked back to where
they stood and led them to one of the booths. "Come on,
let's sit at this table over here. Tom's going to bring us
our drinks. Till then we can talk. I think I'll start with
the basics, is that okay?"
Mrs. Moon and Mr. Kipley nodded.
Carolina and Antigone slid into the booth so that they sat
between their parents.
"I'll begin with Hogwarts.
It is the best school of witchcraft and wizardry in the country;
to be enrolled there is quite an honor. We don't know how Muggles
can have children with magical powers, but they do. Don't worry,
you won't be alone-- far from it. There are a lot of Muggle-born
students at Hogwarts; and at Hogwarts, you children will learn to
use their powers safely, with skill and with ease."
The bartender walked up with a
large teapot and five cups, along with a plate of crumpets. There
was a few minutes of silence, while they were all served, then
Esmerelda continued while the others sipped at their cups.
"Any questions so far?"
Antigone spoke up. "You
don't seem so much like a witch as do the other people here. You
wore normal clothes..."
"Muggle clothing,"
Esmerelda corrected. "There's nothing unusual about
wizardry. It's just a different world."
"Muggle clothing, then.
And—and you drove a car up here and you said you called Mr.
Kipley and Carolina from a phone. Do wizards know about things
like that?"
"Not really," Esmerelda
said. "But you see, I was Muggle-born, like you."
Carolina blinked. "But you
blend in as if you were born to this world!"
Esmerelda shrugged.
"I'm used to it now, after my years at Hogwarts and
then at the Ministry. At first, they didn't want to hire
me—thought I was a bit daft to want to work in a high
Department. Lots of stress there, most Hogwarts students who go
into the Ministry pick something a little easier and work their
way up. But when they saw my ease at communicating with
Muggle-borns, and how easily I calmed their fears, they knew I
was perfect for the Muggle-born Wizard and Witch Liaison Office.
After all, having an owl deliver the letter was shock enough for
your families, I expect."
Mrs. Moon nodded hard. "Very
much so."
"Precisely. We Muggle-born
witches and wizards explained to the Liaison Office that it
wouldn't help much to have us pop out of thin air, wand out, at
the new students' houses, dump them at the Leaky Cauldron, and
then leave them to fend for themselves. We came up with this
method of meeting and guiding each of you the first time. It's
much nicer, I'm sure you all agree." She finished her tea
and crumpet. "First of all, we'll have to have your
money converted. They don't use Muggle money in Diagon
Alley."
Mr. Kipley nodded. "Surely.
Are we all done?"
Everyone nodded.
"Good!" Esmerelda rose
to her feet. "Let's head there now." She led them
outside to a small walled courtyard, with a dustbin at the back
wall. "Now remember this. Tap on the brick that's three
up and two across from the dustbin. Once you have wands,
you'll be able to do it yourselves. Very easy." She
pulled out her wand and tapped the brick. It started to move,
then a small hole appeared and opened up to make an archway onto
a cobbled street that twisted into the distance.
They were all considerably
surprised, and Esmerelda grinned. "I always get that
reaction. Welcome to Diagon Alley."
*~*~*
Morag watched in fascination as
his Aunt Opaline held out a pot of glittering powder. After the
initial shock, his mother had alerted his aunt, his father's
sister, and she had Morag come over and explained to him all
about Hogwarts. She was still a practicing witch, and she had sat
down and spoken frankly to Morag about his magical heritage and
what he could expect. He'd taken it all in, but was still a bit
confused. Soon he would be going to get his school supplies and
other material. Aunt Opaline's daughter Miriam was holding his
hand tightly. Cousin Miriam was sixteen and a half years old, and
would be starting her seventh and final year at Hogwarts. She had
explained some of the things his aunt had not, and so she would
be taking Morag to get his things.
"This is Floo powder."
Aunt Opaline showed Morag. "Dead useful for traveling. Just
take a pinch and toss it into the fire, then say Diagon
Alley' very clearly and loudly. I've heard you speak in
school plays, speak just like that. Once you get there,
don't move from the fireplace until Miriam gets there."
Morag pinched up the powder and
tossed it gently into the flames. It turned emerald green and
flamed up brightly. He stepped into the flames, which were as
warm as a comfortable bath, and said clearly, "Diagon
Alley."
Immediately there was a feeling
of being sucked through a tube...He spun fast, feeling dizzy,
but, thinking of it like a roller coaster ride, he stayed still
as he spun. Minutes later he stumbled out of the flames and
barely caught his footing as he stepped into a dark, shabby pub.
He stood, taking in all the sights. Then he waited until Miriam
showed up, wearing her Muggle clothing.
"You made it okay," she
grinned. "Come on, that was the hardest part." She let
him out into the courtyard, and then pointed out one of the
bricks on the back wall before tapping it and waiting for the
portal to open. Once it was open she led him through. "Mum
has a vault in Gringotts Bank. She said that Aunt Mavericka can
just pay her back, I'll take out enough for both of us to
buy things. I need to get new dress robes, my old ones are a big
snug across the hips."
She took Morag's
hand—--even though he was big, she didn't want him to get
lost here in this new world—and led him to a snowy white
building that was much larger than the little shops around it. A
goblin stood on the stairs wearing a uniform of vibrant red and
sparkling gold. Morag looked somewhat fascinated, and grinned at
the goblin. He bowed to them and they reached a pair of silver
doors. Miriam skipped over the words as they were bowed through
the door by two more goblins.
"What do the doors
say?" Morag asked.
"Only that you'd be
daft to try and rob the place. They've got dragons, and
griffins, all sorts of tricks and security measures." She
walked up to a free goblin stationed at the long counters.
"I am Mrs. Opaline MacDougal's daughter Miriam," she
said, holding up a small key, "I need to open her
vault."
The goblin examined it closely.
"Yes, that is her key. Who is this boy?"
"Mrs. MacDougal's nephew
Morag. He starts at Hogwarts this term."
The goblin nodded and waved over
another goblin. He led Morag and Miriam to one of the many doors
that led off the hall. In this room was a stone passageway with
tracks on the floor. The goblin whistled and a small rail cart
wheeled up. They all climbed in and the car sped off.
Now this is like a
roller coaster, Morag thought as they zipped down the tracks.
They sped up and down, back and forth, over hills and into
valleys, until they stopped at a small door. Miriam climbed out
carefully and then unlocked the door. "It shouldn't take
more than a hundred Galleons for both of us, more for you than
for me, because you have to get fully outfitted. So, we'll take
another handful, and toss in some Sickles as well."
"What?"
Miriam held up a gold, silver,
and bronze coin. ..."Galleons are gold; sickles, silver.
These little bronze ones are Knuts. Mum's got a lot for me,
and your papa left a lot for your education. Mum will just have
Aunt Mave pay out of her vault."
"But what if I hadn't
made it into Hogwarts?"
"Gringotts has a transfer
service," Miriam closed up the bag, and she and Morag got
into the cart. "Your mum's been using it for years,
especially that first year after Uncle Geoffrey died, before she
found a job. She didn't tell you-- she felt bad about using it
for awhile. She only used it when she had to, mind."
"Oh."
A few minutes later they were
outside and Miriam led them towards Madam Malkin's Robes for
All Occasions. A squat, happy looking witch in mauve robes and a
tape measure around her neck spoke while pulling out a
pincushion. "What'll it be, miss?"
Miriam glanced at the school
list. "Three sets of plain work robes, one plain pointed day
hat, and a winter cloak—all of these black—and a pair
of protective gloves. All tagged." She pointed at Morag, who
pushed some of his hair out of his eyes. "First year at
Hogwarts."
"Ah." She pulled out a
stool and had Morag stand on it, then dropped a long black robe
over his head and started to pin it up. "I do this once a
year, near the start of term. You're not the only one
who's been here today. A half hour ago I outfitted
twins—twin girls, mind you, and alike as night and day.
However, there's always a subtle variation in the
measurements. Can't have one wearing the other's robes.
Wouldn't do a bit." She finished with the first robe
and dropped another over Morag's head, then continued
speaking. "Miss MacDougal, yes? Daughter of Opaline?"
Miriam nodded. "He's my
cousin."
"Ah, son of the late
Geoffrey MacDougal. He was a nice man-- I remember him from when
we were in school together. Smart as they come, was Geoffrey. You
anything like him?"
Morag nodded.
"You do look like
him—you've got his eye color, but not his hair. Geoff
had thick red hair all over the place. Now you—you take
after your mum. Pretty Muggle woman I saw her at the wedding.
Yes, Geoff was a close friend of mine. Wish he hadn't died
like that." She finished up the third robe—Morag
hadn't even noticed that she's finished the second and
dropped the third on him—and took them in her hands.
"I'll have these hemmed in the time it takes you to
pick out a cloak, hat and gloves. Boys to the left. And Opaline,
you need a new set of dress robes, yes?"
Opaline nodded. "Morag, find
a good pair of dragon hide or the like for gloves, and your cloak
needs silver fastenings. Got that?"
Morag nodded, searching around
the store. He settled on one of the simpler black cloaks, a basic
nice pointed hat, and a pair of shiny silver-blue gloves just as
Miriam came up to the counter. She held a beautiful floaty pale
yellow dress robe. (It looked like a normal dress to Morag, only
fancier.) She also had picked up a set of ribbons to match. She
paid for the robes and got her change. "Thank you," she
replied, carrying her packages and Morag carrying his much larger
ones.
"Morag! Miriam!" Aunt
Opaline and Morag's mother ran up. Morag's mother
looked a bit calmer. Miriam suspected that Aunt Mave and Mother
had been drinking some of Aunt Opaline's tea with rum.
"How goes the shopping?"
"Just got the robes,"
Miriam said.
"Ah, we'll go with you
the rest of the way."
Morag's mother grinned. She
hadn't had that much; she was calm but not giggly like when
she was sloshed. "What to next?"
"Wands take the longest.
Let's get the books next."
*~*~*
Padma flipped through her books
while Parvati tried out wands at Ollivander's. She already
had hers—oak, ten and a half inches, dragon heartstring.
This was the last thing to get—they had been to the other
shops, for their supplies and uniforms. Before counting out the
cost of both their wands, their father had said that they could
each have a gift. Parvati had immediately selected a pretty set
of quills and pink ink with matching parchment. It was the kind
of thing she was into. Padma had passed over the stationery in
favor of a novel—Maria and the Griffin of West End.
She was now reading silently to herself. She was almost to the
part where Maria would learn who her captors were—when
Parvati walked out. "All done," she said.
"Let's go home."
"I was just getting to a
good part," Padma complained, rising to her feet. She
stuffed her book in with her things and followed her mother and
father up towards the Leaky Cauldron, carrying all her packages
she could handle. Her father carried the rest, whatever she and
Parvati could not.
"When we get home, start
packing your trunks," their mother said as Amar chewed on a
Cauldron Cake. She turned to her husband. "Do you know who
was here last week? We should have done our shopping then."
"Who?" Parvati piped
up.
"Harry Potter," Mother
whispered. "With the groundskeeper from Hogwarts. It seems
he starts this year.
Madam Jakarta—you remember
the Jakartas?"
"Vaguely," Father said.
"Weren't they our neighbors once?"
"Yes. Well, they saw him.
Scar and everything."
"Ooo!!" Parvati
trilled. "Tell me more, Mother!"
Padma kept out of the
conversation, and silently carried her parcels. She didn't fancy
gossiping about Harry Potter as if he were some vague figure. She
had read a great deal about him in those books that she kept on
her shelf--the special ones. She held her packages tightly to her
as they traveled by Floo powder—she didn't want to lose
anything. As soon as she tumbled out of the fireplace, she waited
for her father and set her packages on the kitchen table before
fishing something out of the pantry. As she munched on carrot
sticks, Parvati landed in the fireplace and tumbled out. Her
things didn't fall, however. She dumped her packages and
bags on the chair and dug out her wand. "Look!" she
chirped. "It's ten and a half inches, yew, with unicorn
hair. What's yours?"
"Same length, only oak with
dragon heartstring."
"I wonder if I can do
anything yet, like Mother and Father." She probably would
have swished it around if their mother hadn't stepped in the
kitchen that minute.
"Parvati! Put your wand
away! You know better than to play with that. Go on, put it back
in the box." Parvati pouted, but she did as her mother said.
"Now do like I told you and go pack. Term is almost upon
you. Two weeks and I'll have to take you to King's
Cross Station and put you on the train. Go on!"
Parvati gathered up her things
and sulkily carried her things to their room. Padma was right
behind. She opened up the steamer truck that their parents had
purchased for them a few months back. She cleaned out all the
dust and other things, then started to lay her things in. First
was her black robes—all but one, she would have to change on
the train. She also left her hat out, just in case. She did pack
her cloak, gloves, school books and cauldron. She put her potions
equipment and supplies in the cauldron so they would be protected
during shipping. She then neatly placed her parchment, quills,
ink bottles, and other little things she knew she would need. She
had enough room to add some extra things, so she pulled her
favorite books from the shelves. She also added her journal and
some of and some of her "Famous Wizards" cards-- she
had been been collecting the Chocolate Frogs cards since she was
little and kept them in a nice wooden box. Parvati had collected
them once, but she tired of them and gave all hers to Padma last
year. (A lot of them had been sticky and smeared with chocolate,
but that was Parvati for you. Padma had always been the neater
twin.) She finished and plopped on her bed with her novel, when
she heard Parvati complaining.
"Oh, I can't get
everything in here!" She tried to stuff in A
Beginner's Guide to Transfiguration and huffed.
Padma groaned and put her novel
down. "Hold on, Parvati. I'll help you pack."
"Oh, would you, please? I
hate folding and making everything neat, and you do it so
nicely." Parvati grinned broadly at her sister.
"Stop with the buttering up.
I said I would do it."
"Thank you."
"Yeah, yeah," Padma
snorted, pulling everything out of her sister's trunk.
*~*~*
Antigone grinned brightly as her
and Carolina stood inside Eeylops. This auburn haired girl with
dark eyes had been nice and charming since they had met outside
the café. She'd also stayed with her while they went to
Flourish and Blotts, and together they'd found their books
and parchment and quills. They'd chatted while Madam Malkin
had adjusted their robes, giggled at the beetle eyes and other
supplies in the apothecary, and watched as they each tried out
wands and finally both received theirs (Carolina's was ebony
and phoenix, Antigone's was holly and unicorn). At the
moment, Esmerelda, her mother and Carolina's father were
outside Florean Fortescue's Ice Cream Parlor, keeping an eye
on their packages while each enjoyed a charmed lowfat milkshake.
Esmerelda had assisted the Muggle families with their purchases,
and they had obtained all the essentials. They each had some
money left over and so they decided to get pets. Esmerelda had
told them that as long as they didn't wander too far, they
could explore by themselves. They had wandered, looking at
everything there was to see, then headed to Eeylops.
""Ooo!" cooed
Antigone, as she looked at the pretty brown owl that Carolina had
picked out from Eeylops Owl Emporium. "That's such a
beautiful owl!"
"Yah." Carolina laid
her fifteen galleons on the counter and watched as the clerk
gently placed the owl in a pretty silver cage. "The clerk
said she was a girl. What should I name her?"
"How about"
Antigone thought for a moment. "Nike—wasn't she
the Greek goddess of victory?"
"I like the sound of
that," Carolina grinned, "Nike it is, then! Are you
getting an owl?"
"I dunno"
Antigone chewed on her bottom lip. "I do have enough, but I
really want one of those adorable kittens they had at the Magical
Menagerie."
"Well, get a kitten
then."
"But owls are so useful, you
heard Esmerelda. They take your mail and everything."
"The school has owls. You
can use a school owl."
"But school owls are used by
everyone"
"Tell you what. Whenever you
need to send a letter, I'll let you use Nike even if we're Sorted
into different Houses. Fair enough?"
"Okay."
Once Carolina had Nike (and a
book on owl care), they walked over to the Magical Menagerie.
Antigone rushed over to the basket and started to examine the
mewling kittens in the basket near the counter. "This
one!" she crooned, picking up what looked like a puffy black
ball. "Can I have this one?"
"You can have whichever one
you want, so long as you pay for it." the witch behind the
counter said, checking on a basket with large mustard colored
puffs in it. "That one's a tomcat."
"How much are they?"
"Seven Galleons each."
"Oh." Antigone looked
crestfallen. "I only have six."
"Here." Carolina dug
out a Galleon and pressed it into Antigone's hand. "Get
your kitty."
Antigone blushed. "I
can't accept money from you."
"Sure you can. You're
my friend." Carolina smiled.
Antigone looked at Carolina.
"Thank you," she replied. She dropped the money on the
counter and watched as the witch placed the black puff in a small
carrying cage and scooped the money off the counter. Then she
handed Antigone the cage and they left.
"Thanks a lot,
Carolina!" Antigone hugged Carolina tightly.
"No trouble, no trouble at
all."
Antigone practically bounced as
she went to show her mother. "Mummy, mummy, look what I got!
A little boy kitty!"
Her mother looked in the cage.
"It's a kitten! Oh, how precious! What will you call
him?"
"How about Shadow?"
"Shadow is good."
Esmerelda stuck a finger and
watched as he batted at it. "Feisty little one!" She
smiled. "Is that it?"
Antigone and Carolina nodded.
"Well, then back to the street." She rose to her feet.
They all gathered their packages and headed back through the wall
and then into the Leaky Cauldron. The bartender was cleaning the
tables and grinned toothlessly as they stepped outside. The sun
was setting as Esmerelda handed their train tickets to their
parents.
"Now, remember what I told
you about getting onto the platform, Mr. Kipley and Mrs. Moon.
Just in case, a group from M.B.W.W.L.O. will be there on duty.
I'll be one of them, and I'll help you. Just look for me,
I'll be in normal clothes and I'll wave at you.
Okay?"
"Okay," Mrs. Moon said.
Even with the sun setting, she kept on her sunglasses.
"Remember, the train leaves
at eleven o'clock, the first of September. Don't be
late."
"We won't,"
Carolina nodded. "Will we, Papa?"
"Nope."
"Well, I have to drive the
Moons home," Esmerelda said. She had pulled off her robe
inside The Leaky Cauldron, and the Muggles on the street
didn't bother them. (There were a few weird or bemused
glances towards Nike, who was asleep in her cage.) "See you
the first of September."
"See you then,
Antigone!" Carolina chirped as her and her father packed her
things into their car and placed Nike in the backseat.
"See you," Antigone
said shyly. She climbed into the car with her mother after they
packed everything inside the car, and she held Shadow's case
on her lap. They pulled off in a separate direction from the
Kipleys, and headed towards Antigone's aunt's house.
"Mrs. Moon?" Esmerelda
looked at Antigone's mother. "Will you and Antigone be
okay at your sister's?"
Her mother nodded. "Yes. Her
father doesn't like my sister much. He won't come
over."
"Good. Good. I'll pick
you and Antigone up on the first of September, and we'll
send her off." She placed a hand on Mrs. Moon's
shoulder. "Don't feel isolated. You're not the
only Muggle parent who's dealt with things like this to get
your child into Hogwarts. It'll be okay."
Antigone held Shadow's cage
closer to her chest. "Yah. I've even got a friend there
to be with me, Mummy."
"Good. You should make
friends that are like you," Mrs. Moon said, turning to her
daughter. "It's good to make friends."
Antigone nodded. She could see
the faint outline of the former black eye around the rim of her
mother's sunglasses.