Chapter 3
Title: Birds
of a Feather Chapter 3: Sorting
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: Yes, once again I
had to look at SS to get the chapter rolling. Trust me, after
this there won't be any more paralleling, just mentions. Okay?
I subscribe to the small school
line of thought when it comes to the number of Hogwarts
students--only about 300 students. Yes, I know that JKR said
there were about a thousand, but I'm not all too sure about that.
Don't own this, don't own this,
don't own this...
Thanks be to Haggridd and Madhuri
for making sure I don't sound stupid as I write.
*~*~*
Chapter 3
Sorting
Morag stood quietly, looking at
Professor McGonagall as she continued speaking. He felt a bit
squished and was still wobbly from being on the boat. He really
hated boats.
"The start-of-term banquet
will begin shortly, but before you take your seats in the great
hall, you will be sorted into your houses. Sorted? Morag
though. Sorted how? We aren't expected to know any
magic before we get here of course, else they would never
invite people who were Muggles or half Muggles. But still
He quit worrying and continued to listen, noting that Miriam had
said some things about this to him when they first spoke about
Hogwarts. "The four houses are called Gryffindor,
Hufflepuff, Ravenclaw, and Slytherin." Miriam's
inwhich one is it? Hufflepuff, that's it.
"Each house has its own noble history and each has produced
outstanding witches and wizards."
Morag was starting to get bored
by this speech and quit paying attention, until he heard her say,
"The Sorting Ceremony will take place in a few minutes in
front of the rest of the school." Morag gulped. In front
of everyone? That sounds embarrassing!
"I suggest you all smarten
yourselves up as much as you can while you are waiting." I
suggest you all smarten yourselves up as much as you can while
you are waiting." The stern Assistant Headmistress looked
over the room, her eyes lingering on some of the students.
Antigone, with little flakes of mud still of the hems of her
robes, blushed a second and shook them off the best she could.
"I shall return when we are ready for you. Please wait
quietly." She left, and Morag let out the breath he
didn't know he was holding.
"I wonder how they sort
us?" Antigone made sure she held onto the now silent Shadow.
"It's probably a lot simpler
than we think, you know." Morag answered. They overheard
voice mumbling something that sounded like spells. "I've
heard of entrance exams and the like, but none of us knew any
magic before we got here, right? They can't test us on what we
don't know."
"Right," Carolina
nodded, "We shouldn't panic. We should all just stay calm
and--"
At that moment, several people
screamed. All three startled, then turned to see a score of
ghosts float through the back wall. Translucent and pearly, they
glided over their heads in deep conversation with each
other—almost as if they were arguing about something. It
sounded like another of their group, Peeves, wasn't being
allowed at the banquet. The trio whispered furiously to one
another. Why would ghosts want to be at a banquet? Can ghosts
even eat? Maybe they came to watch the Sorting.
Morag kept completely silent when
the ghosts started speaking. A tall lanky blonde girl looked like
she was going to faint. "New students!" a fat little
friar said, smiling warmly (as warmly as possible for a ghost).
"About to be sorted, I suppose?" Some people nodded
mutely. Carolina was one of them, Morag noted out of the corner
of his eye. "Hope to see you in Hufflepuff! My old house,
you know."
Morag shook off his fright and
was about to ask the ghost of a friar what the House was like
(Miriam hadn't talked about it much) when a sharp voice
broke the silence. "Move along now," Professor
McGonagall announced. "The Sorting Ceremony is about to
start." As she spoke the ghosts floated off through the wall
opposite the one they came in. "Now form a line, and follow
me."
Morag got in line behind a girl
of Indian descent, who looked exactly like the girl before her.
Behind him stood Antigone, with Carolina behind her. They walked
out of the chamber quietly, back across the hall and through a
set of double doors into what could only be the Great Hall.
*~*~*
Beautiful!
It was the first word that popped
into Padma's head. The hall was illuminated with thousands
of candles that floated above all the tables to cast a soft glow.
This is where the other students sat, quietly staring at them as
they walked in. Padma shifted nervously. At the top of the hall
in a higher place sat the teachers, and Professor McGonagall led
them all to stand in front of this table in a line facing back
out at the students. Ghosts hovered here and there, each with a
faint silver shimmer. Padma looked at the head table to see a
wizard with long silver hair wearing half moon glasses. Padma
knew his face immediately, from her trading cards. Albus
Dumbledore, Headmaster of Hogwarts. She swallowed and turned
back to face the front, where all the eyes stared at her.
Professor McGonagall placed a
four-legged stool in front of the first years, then set a frayed
and very dirty wizard's hat on it. It had patches on its
patches. As the hall became completely silent, Padma stared at
it, wondering where she had seen that particular hat—until
she recalled her reading of Hogwarts, A History. Just then
one of the rips near the brim opened up and in a clear, bright
voice, the hat started to sing. Its song was pretty basic; that
nothing more complicated than putting on the Hat was how you got
sorted into the houses; that the Gryffindors were brave and
chivalrous, the Hufflepuffs strong steady workers, the Ravenclaws
bright and clever, and the Slytherins ambitions and cunning.
Everyone in the hall started clapping as the hat finished.
Padma grinned as she clapped,
glad she remembered her reading. Beside her Terry sighed in
relief. "My older brother David wouldn't tell me what
it was. He's so mean." He motioned to a boy who was
sitting at the table second to the left, with hair like his but
much taller. Padma remembered how he liked to zip around them
with some of the older children at parties, playing pick up
Quidditch with a children's set.
"When I call your name, you
will put on the hat and sit on the stool to be sorted."
Professor McGonagall looked at the list. "Abbott,
Hannah!"
Hannah stumbled out of line,
blushing and moving her pigtails. Padma relaxed a bit.
Alphabetical order was a great thing—she was always in the
middle, right before Parvati. The hat fell right over
Hannah's head, sat on there a moment, then screamed out,
"HUFFLEPUFF!" She sat the hat down and shuffled off to
the table on the right as its members cheered brightly.
"Bones, Susan!"
A decent pause.
"HUFFLEPUFF!"
"Boot, Terry!"
Some consideration, as Terry
shifted nervously under the hat. He seemed to shake his head a
moment, then relaxed as the hat shrieked out,
"RAVENCLAW!" This time the table that was second from
the left burst into cheers and some of the Ravenclaws shook his
hand. David, mussed his hair, grinning. Padma relaxed a bit as
names were called. Her turn wouldn't be for a while.
*~*~*
Carolina watched as one by one,
people were sorted. Some only took moments—one girl,
Atlantia Huckle, barely had the hat on before it shouted
"SLYTHERIN!" Others took a very long time—one
tall, thin boy with blonde hair named Andrew Dickson sat on the
stool trembling for almost a minute before the hat sent him to
the Ravenclaw table.
"Hutchins, Oliver!"
The little brown haired boy that
had ridden in her boat across the lake shuffled forward, picked
up the hat and sat on the stool. Hs head was almost swallowed by
the hat, and his little legs dangled down as he sat there
quietly. A moment, and then—"RAVENCLAW!" Oliver
grinned as he removed the hat and placed it back on the stool
before heading to the Ravenclaw table amid cheers.
"Jemsin, Adrian!"
"HUFFLEPUFF!"
"Kamain, Alph!"
Carolina saw a mean looking boy
with evil looking green eyes step forward. He dropped the hat on
his head, and almost immediately the hat screamed out,
"SLYTHERIN!"
"Kipley, Carolina!"
Carolina blinked, then made her
way forward. She reached over and dropped the hat over her head,
closing her eyes as it fell over them. There was a moment of
silence, then a little voice whispered, "HmmMy
goodness, you're a super smart one. It stands out like a
flash. There's almost no choice here, looks like you're
gonna be a RAVENCLAW!" The hat shrieked out the last word to
everyone, and Carolina lifted off the hat. She walked over to the
Ravenclaw table, hearing all the cheers and claps for her, and
grabbed a spare seat to sit down.
Oliver grinned at her—he was
sitting by her. "You're the one who helped me into the
boat, yes?" he asked. Carolina nodded. "I was hoping
that we'd be in the same House." He flashed her a grin that
lit up the Great Hall.
"Thank you." Carolina
turned back to watch as "Lakely, Rita" was placed
neatly in the Hufflepuff house.
*~*~*
"Longbottom, Neville!"
A round faced boy stumbled
forward and promptly fell over. His toad was almost squashed
under him, but he threw out his hands and the toad only slid a
bit. He climbed to his feet sheepishly and picked up his toad
before sitting down on the stool and dropping the hat on. It was
very long time before the hat made its choice:
"GRYFFINDOR!"
Neville hopped off as Professor
McGonagall called out, "MacDougal, Morag!" He heard a
few whispers from the head table and some of the older students,
but thought little of it.
Morag stepped forward, then saw
the hat was not on the stool. He looked over at Neville as he
scrambled for the Gryffindor table—he was still wearing the
Hat. He bit his lip so he wouldn't laugh-- that would make the
situation even more embarrassing.
"Mr. Longbottom,"
Professor McGonagall called out, looking at him sharply.
Neville stopped in his tracks,
then looked around. "Oh—oh my," he whispered, then
lifted the Sorting Hat off his head and jogged back as people
giggled and laughed around him. He was blushing all the way to
his ears as he set the hat in Morag's hands. "I'm
sorry," he sniffled.
"It's okay," Morag
said gently before lifting the hat and placing it on his head. He
saw Miriam wave at him from the Hufflepuff table and cross her
fingers as the hat slipped over his eyes.
"Decent thing there, not
laughing at Neville," the Hat said softly.
No trouble. I wouldn't want to
be laughed at if I were in his situation.
"Let's
seeyou're a brave onebut also bright, in equal
proportions. Something like your father—I remember his
sorting."
My father? What about him?
"Morag, I don't tell
about other people. Only you."
Ah. What about Miriam's
house? Would I do well there?
"No, you're not
Hufflepuff material. Another house would be better for your
learning. They aren't the brightest kids I put in
there."
Thought so.
"Hmm...where should I put
you? You could make great friends in Gryffindor or Ravenclaw, and
expand yourself in either. What do you think?"
Oh, let me be with Carolina,
she's such a nice person. I know, I can make new friends in
Gryffindor, but we've just met, and we do get along so well.
Plus, I would rather be known for being smart.
"Hmmsmartness over
bravery. Not a bad choice. Well, if that's what you
want—you would like Gryffindor, you know, but as you
asked—to RAVENCLAW!"
Morag ran over to the table
(first making sure that he left the hat) and smiling, plopped
down beside Carolina. Morag introduced himself to Oliver, the boy
sitting next to her, bouncing up and down in his excitement.
"Hey, what took you so long?" Carolina smiled.
Morag shook Oliver's hand
and then looked at Carolina. "It was between Ravenclaw and
Gryffindor. So I asked to be with my friend."
*~*~*
Antigone continued to hold Shadow
in her arms as she watched Morag sit by Carolina. I hope
I'm bright enough to get into Ravenclaw too—I
don't want to be in another house, I'd be lonely.
Beside her now the same pale boy who had passed them on Platform
Nine and Three-Quarters stood, looking bored as "Macmillian,
Ernie" sat on the stool. She smiled at him and whispered,
"Hello."
If looks could kill, Antigone
would have been the only first year in the history of Hogwarts to
miss being Sorted because of sudden death. With a drawling, very
cold voice, he replied, "I don't associate with
mudbloods." Antigone was hurt. She didn't even know what a
mudblood was, but it obviously wasn't a compliment. She bit
her lip and held Shadow closer.
"Malfoy, Draco!" The
boy beside her swaggered forward and dropped the hat on his head.
It barely got a chance to fall over his eyes before screaming,
"SLYTHERIN!" He went to sit by the two hulking boys
that had been near him earlier, smirking like a satisfied cat.
"Moon, Antigone!"
Antigone made her way forward,
still holding onto Shadow. She managed to drop the hat on her
head while holding on to Shadow, who looked at her quizzically
just before the hat covered her eyes in darkness.
The same voice that had sang
loudly now whispered to her. "First, I see a fair amount of
bravery. Dear meyou have been through a lot to get
here." There was a clucking sound, as if the hat felt a bit
sorry for her. "That's a considerable thing to do, and
very brave as well. You also seem like a loyal, honest
person—a bit shy—there is the potential to be a wise
little witch one day."
Antigone's shoulders
slumped. I'm not smart enough to be in Ravenclaw, she
sniffled silently.
"Hold on, miss, I
didn't say you were stupid. I said you have potential. As a
matter of fact, you would do well in any of the
houses—excepting Slytherin. They wouldn't want you
there, trust me."
But potential is not the same
as brilliance. If my mind is the same as my heart, and heart is
both bravery and loyalty, then that combined is more that what my
mind alone is.
"Potential is a lot better.
You will expand and become a very brilliant person, once I put
you in Ravenclaw. Listen to yourself—you're analyzing
right now, and I haven't even placed you. Always ask before
you're sure, that way you'll know. Remember that."
O-okay.
"You might be brave, but
your bravery won't get a challenge in Gryffindor. You may be
loyal but, contrary to your thoughts, your mind can become
stronger than your heart. So, Antigone, I am Sorting you into--
RAVENCLAW!"
Antigone gasped, pulling the hat
off her head. She had actually made it into Ravenclaw. The
Ravenclaw table was cheering, welcoming her in, and Carolina was
jumping up and down with Morag. As soon as Antigone was by them
Carolina swept her up in a tight hug.
Shadow, squished between them,
meowed in protest.
*~*~*
"Patil, Padma!"
Padma ran forward and dropped the
hat on her head, staring at the darkness. "Ah," the hat
whispered. "A twin, yes? I hope you're not like those
Weasley brothers—they're a wild set."
Padma nodded. She had heard about
the Weasleys—the whole family had flaming red hair. There
was even one to be Sorted in her year—she'd seen the
whole family at the station. It was known that they were not one
of the more affluent families, and once or twice they had been to
a Patil party with their brood. But Mrs. Weasley almost never
held dinner parties—probably because they could barely
afford to feed themselves sometimes. The Patils understood this
and didn't hold it against them when they came over.
"Your mind's
rambling." The Sorting Hat sounded a bit lecturing.
"You know, the idea is to think about where you want to go,
not about other people."
Sorry.
"Hmma right little
bookworm here. You seem to love learning and thought, yes?"
Very much so, I want to learn
about everything that's possible. Please let me go to
Ravenclaw.
"Well, then the choice is
clear. Nowhere else but-- RAVENCLAW!"
Padma replaced the hat, ran over
to the Ravenclaw table, and sat by Mandy Brocklehurst, who still
seemed awed by it all. She looked as if she felt much better
having someone she knew from the Hogwarts express with her. Padma
gently placed her hand on Mandy's, then watched as Parvati put on
the hat. Please, put her in Ravenclaw too.
There was a moment of silence,
then the rip opened as the hat announced, "GRYFFINDOR!"
Padma gasped. Surely—surely
her sister wanted to be with her. Why'd the Hat separate
us? Parvati took off the hat and went to the Gryffindor
table, passing by her sister with an apologetic look and
whispered, "Sorry—but I want to be a Gryffindor."
Padma wanted to demand the hat reconsider—or at least, her
sister reconsider—as her eyes filled with tears. But she
knew that it was useless. Sighing, she looked at the table as
"Perks, Sally-Ann" was called forward.
One girl who sat across from
her—with caramel skin and plaited black hair—tapped
Padma's hand. "She's your sister?" she asked
softly.
Padma nodded. "My twin.
We've never been separated before this—she's never
voluntarily wanted to be away from me."
The girl looked as if she was
going to say something else, but settled with just squeezing
Padma's hand with a small smile of friendship on her face.
"Potter, Harry!"
Padma's eyes widened at the name,
and she climbed up on the bench on her knees to get a better look
at the boy as he walked up to the stool. He appeared much as she
had remembered from the few pictures in her copy of Modern
Magical History-- of course, he was much older than the one
year old boy in the pictures. He was small and skinny, with wild
black hair that was all over the place. Bright green eyes peered
out from behind round glasses held together with a lot of scotch
tape. He's actually very cute. Padma strained to find
it-- the lightning bolt scar that was on his forehead. She
didn't see it before he placed the hat on his head and it
sank over his eyes.
"What's so special
about him, Morag?" an auburn haired girl whispered to the
boy beside her.
"I looked in one of Aunt
Opaline's history books—apparently that's the
person who defeated Voldemort when he was one year old,"
Morag shivered, "And the book said Voldemort was a horrible
dark wizard."
Padma startled, and the boy
beside the two shoved Morag. "Don't say that! Don't name
him!" both of them hissed in fright.
"Hmm?" Mandy asked,
noticing the conversation from her spot.
Their conversation was cut off
just as the hat shouted out to the hall. "GRYFFINDOR!"
Padma snapped her fingers
disappointedly as the Gryffindor table burst into the loudest
cheers that anyone had gotten. One of the older
Weasleys—there was no mistaking that red hair—shook his
hand tightly and excitedly, and the two Weasley twins practically
shouted to the enchanted ceiling. Padma took a quick glance at
Parvati, who was shouting as loud as anyone at the Gryffindor
table. Guess she's definitely over the separation already,
she sulked silently. McGonagall waited until the cheers died down
some, then called out, "Ranston, Robin!"
Morag and his friend turned back
to Padma and the other little boy. "What was that you said,
Oliver?"
"Don't say
You-Know-Who's name!"
"Who?" The girl blinked
confusedly. "Are you saying don't say
Volde—mmph!" For just then Padma had reached across the
table and forcibly placed her hands over the girl's mouth.
She struggled, as "Rogers, Joseph" joined their table
and sat down, overlooking the struggle with mixed amusement and
shock. He was a skinny boy, like Harry, but his skin was pale
honey brown and his eyes were a dark hazel-green.
"What's going on
here?" he asked, sitting beside Padma.
Padma turned and the girl managed
to pry off Padma's hand. "She almost said
You-Know-Who's name!"
*~*~*
Antigone looked at Padma blankly.
"Um, Padma?" She mumbled, a bit unsure of the
girl's name. Was she Parvati or Padma?
The girl turned to her now.
"Yes—um, what's your name? You didn't tell
me." Good, it's Padma.
"Antigone Moon." Shadow
meowed, as if confirming what his mistress said.
"Um--why'd you cover Carolina's mouth when she
said that name?" She felt stupid asking, but if you
didn't ask when you didn't know, then you'd never
know—that's what the Hat had said. "You see,
Morag's been raised by his Muggle mum, and Carolina and I
are Muggle-born. So we don't know why not to say his
name."
"Well, you just don't.
Many families lost people in the first era when he came to power.
One of the girls Sorted into Hufflepuff—Susan
Bones—lost both her grandparents and all of her big brothers
and sisters. The only reason she's alive is because she was
a baby and her mother and father had to keep her at home that
night." She pointed out a girl with mousy brown hair.
Carolina blinked.
"Oh—okay, then. I won't say it." They all
turned to see that only four people had to be Sorted.
"Thomas, Dean," was quickly placed in Gryffindor. Lisa
Turpin, a tall, lanky blond girl was placed at their table, and
she grinned as she sat down by Mandy.
"Weasley, Ronald!"
Antigone watched the tall, red
headed boy step forward, pale green as he put on the Hat. She
noticed that there were three other redheaded freckled boys at
the Gryffindor table. Those must be his brothers. But that
doesn't mean he'll be with his family. Like Padma. "GRYFFINDOR!"
The boy that they had said was the famous Harry Potter clapped
loud as he could as the boy sat down. After the last person was
made a Slytherin, Professor McGonagall rolled her scroll up
neatly and put the Hat and stool away before taking her place at
the head table.
A man with long silver hair and
half moon glasses rose to his feet, his arms held open as if he
was hugging them all. "Welcome! Welcome to a new year at
Hogwarts! Before we begin our banquet, I would like to say a few
words." He paused. "And here they are: Nitwit! Blubber!
Oddment! Tweak!" He smiled. "Thank you!" He sat
back down, and Antigone giggled while others clapped and cheered.
"He's silly," she
said softly.
"Silly? He's the best
damn wizard in the world!" Padma looked indignant.
"Even so, he's got a
sense of humor." Antigone grinned just before the just
before the large platters in front of her filled with all sorts
of food.
*~*~*
Carolina grabbed a lamb chop,
several scoops of green beans, a spoonful of broccoli and rice,
and a wheat roll before setting her plate in front of her and
starting to eat. Padma got everything but the meat. She
announced, "I don't eat meat." When Carolina looked at
her plate confusedly.
"Can you eat proper
that way?" Lisa mumbled through a mouthful of roast chicken.
"I've done it for
years. No one in my family eats meat, other than fish.
There's none on the table though" Just then a
platter of hot smoked salmon appeared. Padma blinked.
"There is now." Morag
grabbed one of the fish and started to cut it up on his plate.
"Enjoying yourselves,
dears?" a soft voice said. Carolina looked up, seeing a tall
witch with long, neatly braided hair hover near them. She looked
like she came from the middle ages—under her robes Carolina
noticed very simple slippers and a simple homespun dress.
Carolina nodded, not being afraid of the ghosts much now.
"I'm the Grey Lady—Ravenclaw's resident
ghost. My full name was Felicity Elizabeth Angelica Greyfourde
when I was alive, but that's a bit long, so I'm just
called the Grey Lady now. Not quite as exciting a sobriquet as
'the Bloody Baron'," she pointed out an evil-looking ghost
wearing robes stained all over with silver blood, sitting at the
Slytherin table—"or as embarrassing an epithet as
'Nearly Headless Nick'." She nodded her head towards a ghost
who, just as Carolina looked, grabbed his left ear and pulled his
head off his shoulders so that it fell on his shoulder.
"When they beheaded him, they didn't do it right."
Carolina nodded, pushing her
plate away and picking up her roll to finish it. She wasn't
quite full, but was always a dessert course at a banquet, and
dessert was her favorite part. "Well, how'd you
die?"
"Dragon. It came through my
fields, long ago. This was before the International Statute of
Wizarding Secrecy so I and the others in the village that were
witches and wizards ran out with our wands at the ready to subdue
it and get it to go away. I almost had it, but then it turned and
roasted me like a turkey." The Grey Lady shrugged.
"Anyway, here's dessert. Go on."
Carolina turned to see the plates
were all clean, and in the center sat every type of dessert she
could think of. Carolina filled a bowl with vanilla pudding and
dug in while the others conversed. Shadow was asleep in
Antigone's lap while she delicately ate strawberries dunked
in cream. Carolina took a drink of the iced pumpkin juice and
listened to the conversations around her. Padma was explaining
some of the things about the wizard world, with help from Terry,
Lisa, and Oliver. Right now, she was explaining moving pictures.
"I'd show you, but I left all my things on the
train—before we go to bed, I'll show you a few of my
trading cards and things." Padma finished off a doughnut.
"I've got a lot of them—some doubles, if you want
to start collecting or trade with me."
Morag reached in his jeans
pocket. "I think I have Merlin with me. I got it in a
Chocolate Frog." He pulled out the card and held it up, and
Carolina recognized the picture that had looked at them
seriously, though not at all fiercely. Merlin was leaning on the
frame of the picture, looking quite disturbed by being shown off
like an oddment. "Yes, that's it!" Padma pointed
at the card and Merlin shot her a look as she did so.
"See?"
Mandy nodded, nibbling on grapes.
"How do they move like that?"
"They're developed in a
special potion, which makes the pictures move. If any of you have
a Muggle camera or something and you like developing pictures,
then I'm sure that you can make them move."
"I do," Carolina said.
A pretty Asian girl with shoulder
length dark hair looked up from her ice cream.
"Muggle-born?" Carolina nodded. "My name's
Cho Chang. I'm a second year. I have some of that solution
to develop pictures—tell you what, I'll show you how to
develop them. I find Muggle photography interesting; it's my
favorite thing other than Quidditch."
"Quidditch? What's
that?"
"Oh, that's right,
you've never heard of Quidditch. It's a sport—do
you like sports?"
"I like to watch them."
"Oh, it's a delight to
watch—there's four balls and seven players, all on
broomsticks, and three goal posts. I can explain it better when
we have the tryouts. First years aren't allowed to play,
because you can't bring your own brooms to school and some
of you don't know how to fly at all. I'm going to try
out this year. Maybe I'll make Chaser."
A boy next to Cho with violet
eyes and reddish-gold hair stepped in. "You talking to the
first years?" he asked.
"Yes, Lawrence." She
tapped Carolina. "This is Carolina Kipley—she's
Muggle-born."
"Ah, cool!" Lawrence
took her hand. "Name's Lawrence
Hillbourgh—wizard-born, myself, but fascinated with Muggles
and their things. Do you guys really have lights that don't
work on fire? Electricity, I was told it's called. And
batteries too—ooo! You have a Muggle watch!" He took
Carolina's hand and looked at her watch. "It won't
work here on the Hogwarts grounds, of course. See, it stopped
long ago. I'm sure I can find you another watch, one that runs on
magic--they make them. We third years are allowed to go into
Hogsmeade on trips—if you have some spare money, I'll
buy you one."
"Thanks." Carolina
smiled. Lawrence leaned and asked about the others at the
table—he raised an eyebrow when he heard Morag's last
name but said nothing. Carolina found him very friendly and
intelligent. He even tickled Shadow under the chin and made him
purr, which made Antigone smile. "You'll like the
Ravenclaw house. We stay up at night, discussing things and being
creative—you should see our common room, it's covered
in projects and things. Of course, it's not right now
because we haven't started on this year's designs. All
the members of that year get together and make their area look
however they want. We decorate for the holidays too, and the year
that gets the highest vote gets a special gift from the others.
You'll love the room once you see it."
"They'll see it in a
few minutes," a girl with long curly hair said, placing down
her spoon. "The Headmaster's about to speak to
us."
"Who's that?"
Morag asked Lawrence as the girl turned back around.
"Penelope Clearwater, a
fourth year. She's very smart." Lawrence leaned over to
whisper. "She's a bit of a wet blanket at
times—doesn't like to rock things much."
"Shh!" Penelope hissed.
"Professor Dumbledore's about to talk."
"Oh, don't get your
knickers all knotted up," Lawrence teased. "I'm
not a first year."
"You're only a
third."
"You're only a
fourth."
It sounded like they were going
to bicker more, but the desserts disappeared and Professor
Dumbledore rose to his feet. The hall went silent.
"Ahem—just a few more
words now that we are all fed and watered." Carolina tuned
most of it out—she had held a few cookies and was munching
on them.
"Quidditch trials will be
held in the second week of term. Anyone interested in playing for
their house teams should contact Madam Hooch." Cho's
eyes danced at the announcement.
"And finally, I must tell
you that this year, the third-floor corridor on the right hand
side is out of bounds to everyone who does not wish to die a very
painful death."
"Hmm," Lawrence said.
"Well, we'll do as he says. No use mussing the pond
water when the mud's settled."
"What do you think the
reason is?" Terry asked.
"Whatever it is, it's
none of our business," Penelope cut in. Lawrence made a face
at her.
"And now," Professor
Dumbledore finished up, "before we go to bed, let us sing
the school song!" Lawrence and Cho groaned, and Carolina
noticed even the teachers looked chagrined behind their smiles.
"What's so bad about
this?" Lisa asked.
"Now, everyone pick their
favorite tune, and off we go!" Dumbledore started to sing.
"Hogwarts, Hogwarts, Hoggy
Warty Hogwarts"
"That's what's so
bad," Lawrence hissed as the school broke out in a bellowing
song.
Carolina winced, slamming her
hands over her ears in the cacophony as everyone sang in
different pitches, tunes, speeds, and howls. She noticed that one
section of the Ravenclaw table was in perfect pitch with each
other as they sang the same tune. They were tuned out
considerably by the others, but still very nice. Finally, the
only ones left were the redheaded twins at the Gryffindor table
who sang as if the School Song were a funeral march. Once they
finished, everyone clapped (with Professor Dumbledore clapping
the loudest). Carolina uncovered her ears just in time to hear,
"And now, bedtime. Off you trot!"
The Ravenclaws all rose to their
feet in groups, and a tall boy with neat glasses and a silver
badge pinned to his chest with a P on it rose and
motioned. There were seven people who all had these badges, and
they motioned for all the Ravenclaws to follow them. As they
headed up and down stairs and under different tapestries,
whispering and chatting, Carolina saw Antigone tap Lawrence on
the shoulder. "Lawrence?" she asked meekly.
What is it, Antigone?" He
turned to face her as they walked through a sliding panel.
"I've been meaning to
ask you older kids since I sat down, but it just came back to my
mind."
"Yes?"
"Well, when I was standing
waiting to get sorted, one boy named Draco Malfoy was rather
nasty to me. When I tried to say hello, he told me that he
didn't associate with mudbloods."
The older students stopped dead
in their tracks, and the prefect next to them had to call sharply
to make them continue walking forward. "He called you
what?" Cho said furiously. "Why that swotty little
brat—stupid Malfoys, I knew he was one the second I saw
him."
"A mudblood," Carolina
repeated. "Is that the same one who was at the platform when
we got on the express?" Antigone nodded, looking like she
wanted to cry. Carolina looked a bit frightened.
"Did—did Antigone say something nasty? Is it like
You-Know-Who?"
"I'm sorry, I only
wanted to know the meaning." Antigone looked at her feet.
"No, it's not as bad as
You-Know-Who, but still fairly nasty. Don't feel bad, you
didn't know." She placed a hand on Antigone's
shoulder. " Mudblood' is a really degrading term
for people born that have two Muggle parents, like you two. The
Malfoys and a lot like them look down on anyone who's not a
pure-blood—in other words, only wizard blood."
Lawrence sighed. "In
Ravenclaw, that problem's not really here. We try to achieve
to be better than that. Slytherin, on the other hand—well,
You-Know-Who was in there. But enough said about that, we're
almost to Ravenclaw Corners."
"Raven-what?" Terry
asked.
"Ravenclaw Corners.
It's what we call our place."
The prefect beside them—a
girl with short blonde hair—leaned over. "Now, the
password's a bit long this time, but it's only till we
change it later. It's 'Si Hoc Legere Posses, Nimium
Eruditionis Habes.' Latin for if you can read this,
you're overeducated.' " She kept leading them
forward, until they made it to a large tapestry with various
letters, symbols, and colors woven into it, as well as picture of
the Greek goddess Athena. The prefect tapped on the tapestry
twice, and Athena turned and whispered, "Password?"
"'Si Hoc Legere Posses,
Nimium Eruditionis Habes," she answered calmly.
The letters shifted back into
place, then the tapestry slid over to one side to reveal a rather
nice wooden door. Everyone walked in and they got a first look at
Ravenclaw Corners.