Chapter 5
Title: Birds
of a Feather Chapter 5: Flying and Sport
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: Now this a good
long chapter, with a bit of teaser. Very nice, and now my
Ravenclaws learn about Quidditch ^.^. This would have been out
sooner, but with school and stuff, I had to step back and do
class writing first.
As we should know, this is not my
playground, it's JKR's. I just like to play on the swings.
Haggridd and Madhuri, thank you
for making sure this is worth reading by others and the mistakes
aren't *too* obvious.
*~*~*
Chapter 5
Flying and Sport
Carolina had stayed up late to
work on an essay for History of Magic that she had put off until
the last minute, sitting in front of the first year dorms clad in
her pajamas, comfy fuzzy slippers, and her robe, and sipping a
cup of hot cocoa. It was very late, so everyone else was in bed.
As she was writing the last two inches of parchment, the door to
Ravenclaw Corners opened and Antigone walked in. She looks
like she's been through hell.
Antigone's eyes were still
red-rimmed, and she sniffled as she pulled off her cloak, which
was a different one from the one she had left Hogwarts in. Her
robes underneath were somewhat rumpled, as if she had slept in
them. It was fairly clear that she looked like she was trying to
forget something very bad. "Hello, Antigone," Carolina
called out, setting down her essay.
Antigone started at the sound,
spinning to face Carolina with widened eyes. "W-what are you
doing awake?" she stammered. "It's almost after
one in the morning, I thought everyone would be asleep."
Carolina held up her roll.
"Finishing up an essay." She motioned Antigone to sit
by her. "Antigone, are you okay?"
Antigone looked like she
desperately wanted to run. "O-of course I'm fine. What
would make you think otherwise?"
"The fact that you took off
Saturday morning without so much as a something's come
up' and didn't return until now."
"I gave Professor Flitwick a
note to give to you."
"I got the note, but it
didn't help my worries much. I still spent the weekend
frantic." She took Antigone's hand in her own.
"What's going on with your mother that would pull you
off the grounds?"
Antigone looked at her feet.
"I don't want to talk about it."
"Antigone, nothing gets
solved if you don't talk about it."
"Everything's all right now.
Esmerelda handled the situation. She shouldn't need to come get
me anymore."
"I just want to make you
feel better, and I can only help if I know what's
happening."
"I'll be okay,
Carolina. It's nothing you should have to worry about.
It's my problem."
"Don't you trust me
enough to let me help?"
"Of course I do,
Carolina."
"Then why won't you..."
Carolina let the words die before she finished them. She
really is shaken up about this.
Antigone looked up at Carolina
miserably. "Please, Carolina," Antigone sounded like a
whipped little puppy. "My weekend has been hard enough on
me, and I barely got any sleep last night. I don't want to
hurt your feelings, but I really don't want to talk about it
right now. Just let me go to bed." She looked like she was
going to cry.
Carolina sighed. She let go of
Antigone's hand and watched as she walked towards their
dorm. Then she turned back and finished writing the last inch. It
didn't take too long. She gathered her things and walked
into the dorm. Antigone had pulled off her robes and dropped them
on the floor before climbing into bed. She silently pulled back
Antigone's bed curtains and saw her curled up on top of the
sheets, fast asleep. She hadn't even pulled the blanket over
herself or changed out of her clothes. Carolina covered her up
and placed a gentle hand on Antigone's shoulder. I wish
you were brave enough to tell me what's wrong.
*~*~*
Padma grinned broadly Tuesday
afternoon as she and the rest of the First Years all headed out
to the Quidditch pitch. On Monday a notice had been tacked up
announcing that they were starting flying lessons with the
Hufflepuffs on Tuesday. The reactions ranged from absolute
delight—Andrew Dickson had chirped that he'd been
looking forward to flying since they'd gotten there—to
absolute horror. Mandy Brocklehurst had admitted she was
terrified of heights and the last thing she wanted was to be
suspended in the air with nothing to keep her from falling other
than a stick of wood and some twigs. There had also been the
announcement that the current Ravenclaw Quidditch captain, Roger
Davies, was holding tryouts for anyone second year and above on
Saturday. Cho had gone out Monday evening and came back sweaty,
announcing she'd been practicing her handling while flying.
Padma had wanted to get on a
broom ever since she had left home. Her father still had his old
broom from his days at Hogwarts and had shown her some of the
basics of flying, though he had never let her go higher than his
shoulders and kept a firm hand on the handle the whole time. Now
she would get to fly alone. She looked up at the clear sky. I'll
be up there soon enough
The Hufflepuffs arrived at about
the same time as the Ravenclaws. The field was completely clear
other than for the school brooms laid out in a row. Madame Hooch
wasn't too far behind. She had short grey hair and a whistle
around her neck. Her sharp yellow eyes scanned the class as she
called the roll. "Go on, everyone stand by a broom,"
she barked out when she was done, and everyone scrambled for a
broom. Padma found herself by Antigone and Ernie Macmillan in
Hufflepuff.
"Now, hold your right hand
over your broom and say, Up!' clearly and
confidently."
Antigone raised her hand.
"Um, Madame Hooch?" she whispered, looking at her feet.
"Yes? Is this
important?"
"Wouldn't it be
somewhat more effective to hold my left hand over the broom?
I'm—I'm left handed, and I'm probably not the
only one."
Madame Hooch nodded. Madame Hooch
nodded. "Of course. All lefties proceed to the far right of
the line so you don't bump into the others." Antigone,
Andrew Dickson, and Justin Finch-Fletchley all shifted to the
left end of the line, and now Padma found herself standing by
Mandy. Once everyone had gotten back into place, Madame Hooch
repeated, "Now, hold your right or left hand over the broom
and say, Up!'"
"UP!" went the chorus.
Padma's, Justin's and Morag's brooms each flew into their owner's
hands. They were the only ones that did. Most of the brooms just
lay there on the field. Carolina's had lifted up off the
ground but fell back down, and Mandy's had sat there
defiantly. It took about twenty minutes before everyone got their
brooms up in unison.
"Now, mount your brooms. You
just swing yourself on, very neatly, so you don't fall off
the end." Madame Hooch demonstrated, then one by one each
student did so, and no one fell off. "Grip the handle firmly
but not too tight. Make sure your dominant hand is below the
other one, the steering hand. This is very important: when you
fly one-handed, you must keep your steering hand on the
broom." She walked about correcting grips before returning
to her own broom.
"Now, when I blow my
whistle, kick up from the ground and rise a few feet. Descend by
tilting your handle down. One—two—three!" She blew
hard on her whistle and the group took off. They all flew in
varied arcs, then landed one by one. Padma made sure she landed
on her feet and only stumbled a bit, but a few people made crash
landings. Antigone almost fell backwards, and Mandy (who had only
gone up enough to let her feet leave the ground) slipped on a
spot of damp grass, spilled off her broom and tumbled end over
end. Over and over they took off, flying a bit higher each time,
until everyone of the group could land on their feet.
Finally, Madame Hooch kicked up
herself. "We're going to fly around the field. Kick
up." She kicked up neatly from the ground and went up pretty
high. The rest of the class kicked off, but hovered at various
heights. Mandy once again was not very far from the ground, and
she wasn't the only one—the only person who had gone as
high as Madame Hooch was Morag, who looked pretty calm up there.
"Come on, into the
air," Madame Hooch ordered. "You have to get as high as
I am." Mandy whimpered and Antigone looked scared. Madame
Hooch patiently waited until they all were at the same level,
ignoring Mandy's whimpering. "Keep the length of a
broomstick between you, and follow my lead. Single file."
She started off, and the students streamed behind her around the
field.
I must be at least ten feet
up, Padma thought. At times her broom veered to the left, but
she made sure to hold it on course so she wouldn't crash
into anything or anyone. In front of her, she saw Mandy start to
relax, not looking at the ground, but still whispering, "I
want to get down now, I want to get down now."
For almost thirty minutes the
class made lazy circles around and around, and flew in various
directions learning how to turn gently (and remain steady during
the turn) until Madame Hooch announced, "Line up in the air
now, just as you did on the ground." They all obeyed and
Madame Hooch hovered before the class. "You've done verey
well, class. Twenty points each to your houses. We're only at
about fifteen feet. This is the highest you are allowed to go for
today. Now, just practice flying. The rest of class is free
flight. Don't get too close to each other or go too fast,
and make sure you don't crash into the ground or go higher
than this. And no Quidditch moves or fancy showing off or
you'll find yourself in detention if not the hospital wing.
I will be up in the air watching you." She tilted her broom
and went up about five more feet.
Slowly everyone separated. Padma
dropped to the ground and practiced landing and taking off. Above
her she saw Morag flying lazily around at a constant height,
steering very well all the while. "He's a
natural," she whispered to herself as she pulled up to about
ten feet.
"I know," Antigone
said. She had pulled up beside Padma. Though her hands gripped a
lot tighter than Madame Hooch had suggested, she seemed to hold
on well.
"Are you still as
scared?"
"Not as scared—I still
think that this isn't the safest method of travel, but
it's so..." Antigone paused, looking for the right
word.
"Breathtaking?" Padma
prompted.
Antigone looked around, taking in
the sight of the lake and Hogwarts. "Yes," she
whispered. "Breathtaking."
*~*~*
Morag hated when flying class was
over. He hadn't wanted to get off his broom. He loved being in
the air, flying around on his own. It was almost natural to him--
even though this was the first time he'd ever flown in his life--
but it still felt like déjà vu. Perhaps his father had
been a good flyer. Once class ended, he decided to speak to
Madame Hooch to see if she knew anything about his father.
Sending the rest of his friends along without him, he waited
until everyone else had left. Madame Hooch was picking up the
brooms and heading towards the shed to put them away when she saw
him standing there. "Yes, Mr. MacDougal?" she asked.
"Do you need something?"
"I just wanted to ask you if
you knew anything about my father. I spoke to Professor Flitwick
last week and he told me that chances were that most of the
teachers knew him, and I felt almost kind of—well, natural
flying up there. I was hoping you knew about his flying
ability."
"Who was your father?"
She looked interested.
"Geoffrey MacDougal. He died
when I was a baby. My mother's a Muggle, and she didn't tell me
anything about him."
"Hmm" Madame
Hooch's brow furrowed in thought. "I remember him. He
was an instinctive flyer. He was a reserve on his house Quidditch
team until his sixth year, when he made permanent Chaser.
Geoffrey wasn't all that good at it, from my professional point
of view. He tended to play it solitary and fly solo without
passing to his teammates. Then again, most of the players on the
Slytherin Quidditch team didn't have to be good at the sport.
They got on because of whom they knew"
Morag cut Madame Hooch off.
"Slytherin? My father was in Slytherin?"
"Yes, I clearly recall that
he was a Slytherin, which is why I was quite surprised when I saw
that you were a Ravenclaw. You look quite a bit like him-- except
for the hair. You've got your mother's hair; Geoff had thick red
hair. You and Geoff have the same eyes, only he himself rarely
looked a person directly in the eyes. The few times he did, his
gaze could be quite piercing. Not much got by Geoff-- had he been
lighter he would have made a great Seeker. His lack of teamwork
wouldn't have hurt him at that position. That is the best I can
recall, to be honest—I didn't see much of him after he
graduated. Not many people did."
"Thank you, Madame Hooch.
That's all I wanted to know for the moment."
"If anything else comes to
mind later, ask me. I only saw your father when refereeing the
Quidditch matches between houses, but I do remember a lot from
those matches."
Morag nodded his thanks and made
his way up to the castle. He didn't go back to Ravenclaw Corners,
however, but headed straight to the library. Madame Pince, the
librarian, noticed his entrance, but seeing that he was a
Ravenclaw, said nothing else. Ravenclaws were in and out of the
library so frequently (studying as well as reading for enjoyment)
that sometimes other houses jokingly called it the
Ravenclaw's second Common Room. Digging around in his tote
bag, he pulled out his copy of Magic Drafts and Potions
and pretended to study. No one came up to him—a Ravenclaw
disturbed from studying was not a happy Ravenclaw. As he sat
there, the thoughts turned over in his head.
Shocked didn't even begin to
describe his feelings at learning that his father had been a
Slytherin. Slytherins were known to be mean and nasty to anybody
not a Slytherin. Once one had tripped him in the hall when the
teachers weren't looking and almost made him drop his inkwell.
Even the girl Slytherins looked unpleasant. Some were pretty
enough, but they walked around with sneers that made them look
like they were big trouble.
Morag had been highly upset with
every single one of them since the incident in Herbology, and
never passed one without a cold remark. He'd always had a
temper when pushed—even when little—and everyone who
knew him had noted that Morag could make almost anyone back off
if they got him enraged or picked on someone he cared about.
There wasn't a first year who didn't know about the incident in
the hall before dinner a few days ago. A First Year Slytherin
named Alph Kamain had made a rude gesture at Carolina. Morag had
promptly snarled that if Alph didn't want to find himself
choking on his fingers after he stuffed them down his
throat—without any help from a wand—he'd better
apologize. He'd lost three points for the Ravenclaws when
Professor Quirrell heard him, but he didn't care about points.
Carolina had looked so embarrassed at the time, and Alph had been
made to apologize, even though it was clear that he didn't mean
it.
No one outside of Slytherin liked
a Slytherin. Even the Hufflepuffs, who were kind to everyone,
were known to make disparaging remarks about Snape and his
students. According to Aunt Opaline's books, Voldemort himself,
the greatest Dark Wizard of the times—so evil that people
never spoke his name—had come from that House.
His father—he had been one
of them?
*~*~*
Antigone stood and watched as
Professor Snape inspected her bruise healing potion. She hoped
she had stirred it properly and had added the right number of
unicorn hairs-- she and Carolinas had used four strands, but she
suspected that was too few. She ducked her head under his cold
gaze and waited nervously as he took a dropper and dipped it into
the watery pink solution. I hope it's right
Snape's cold drawling voice
cut through her thoughts. "Miss Moon, how much unicorn hair
did you add to the solution?"
Antigone looked up, her eyes
wide. "Sir?"
"I said, Miss Moon, how much
unicorn hair did you add to this solution?"
"F-four hairs."
"And how many are you
supposed to add?"
Antigone gulped.
"Four?"
Professor Snape sneered.
"No, Miss Moon. You do not add four hairs. You add two. Any
more than two unicorn hairs in this solution will cause a very
nasty effect." He held up his dropper. "You get an type
of caustic solution, which, should it make contact on wood,
causes a undesired reaction." He dropped some of the
solution on the table and Antigone watched helplessly as the wood
turned into powder, leaving a neat hole and sawdust on her feet.
Antigone whimpered. The rest of
the class sat silent. Even Carolina, who sat beside Antigone,
looked nervous. Why does he always pick on me? She meekly
pointed at her notes. "Professor Snape, you told the whole
class to add four hairs two minutes after the lacewings."
Snape didn't even glance at
her notes. "It is two hairs after four minutes."
"Then you must have made a
mistake." The words were out of her mouth before she
realized it.
Snape shot Antigone a cold glare.
"I do not make mistakes, Miss Moon."
"Professor Snape, my notes
say the same thing," Lisa Turpin spoke up meekly. Every
Ravenclaw nodded. "And I know I took accurate notes. We
can't all have gotten it wrong, sir."
Snape picked up Carolina's
notes and glared at them. "Very well. A point for each
student too careless to take proper notes will be deducted from
his or her House—ten from Ravenclaw and ten from
Hufflepuff." The bell then rang. The Ravenclaws quickly
picked up their things, cleaned up and cleared out.
"Ten points because he
misspoke!" Morag fumed as they left. "That's
unfair!" His voice didn't carry the force it normally held
when he talked about a Slytherin who'd wronged him (and
Morag had gotten the reputation of being a pain to every
Slytherin that brushed his robes, excepting Professor Snape) but
Antigone thought nothing of it.
"Snape is unfair, in case
you haven't noticed," Padma said resignedly.
"Antigone, didn't you read about the potency of a
unicorn hair in potions? I did, but I just thought Snape knew
better than the book, since the formula wasn't fully laid out in
the text. I didn't have time to go do a cross reference in
another book."
"I was going to this
weekend," Antigone replied. "But I forgot."
"Speaking of your weekend at
home," Padma asked, "is your mother okay?"
Antigone's throat locked up,
and she didn't answer Padma. The picture flashed in her head
as she said thather mother's face in bandages, her
left arm in a cast, and her soft voice barely able to be heard as
tears squeezed out from the tightly swollen eyelids.
Antigone's face scrunched up in pain, and she swallowed
tightly, looking at the floor. Esmerelda had rushed her to the
Muggle hospital, where her mother had just been checked in, and
they had spent the night there before her mother had been
discharged.
"Antigone, your
mother's not okay else she wouldn't have had you picked
up," Morag cut in.
Antigone whimpered. "I
don't want to think about my mother's condition."
"Condition? What kind of
condition? Is she in a hospital?" Carolina blurted out her
questions rapidly. "Did she hurt herself in a car accident
or something?"
"It was only a little
accident" Antigone blurted out before she caught
herself. Oh my god, I should have kept quietif they ever
find out what kind of accident She clamped her mouth
shut and pretended to be very interested in a stain on the wall.
Carolina's eyes took on a look of concern. Padma looked
shocked, and Morag looked as if he didn't believe her
completely. But they didn't ask any further, and Antigone
didn't speak anymore.
When they made it back to
Ravenclaw Corners, Antigone headed into the dorm by herself and
sat on her bed, with Shadow asleep on her pillow. Carolina looked
like she wanted to follow, but Padma stopped her with a touch on
her shoulder. Antigone pulled her bed curtains tight, grabbed her
pillow, and silently started to cry. She hated lying to her
friends, keeping secrets and only telling half truths. They
should know why she had to leave, they should know about her
family and what she was going through simply because she was a
witch. They all seemed concerned—honest concern, not the
false concern she had dealt with before she had come to
Hogwarts—but they wouldn't understand why she had been so
secretive. They hadn't grown
up in the kind of family she had. When you were a Moon, you were
taught from a young age that you kept your family problems to
yourself. You kept your face washed and your skirts pressed and
your mouth shut like a good daughter. Only when nobody else was
around but you and your mother could you cry, quietly.
Shadow brushed up against her,
almost as if he was trying to calm her.
*~*~*~*
On Friday at lunch Parvati passed
a note to her sister from the Gryffindor table, written in the
pink ink she had bought, and with her trademark heart-dotted i's.
Only Parvati dotted her i's with hearts. "Wanna chat? If so,
look over here and nod, then meet me by the big stairwell in the
Great Hall before dinner." Padma looked over and caught
Parvati's eye, then nodded and stuffed the note in her
pocket, before continuing to eat.
"Who's it from?"
Antigone asked, munching on her chicken.
"My sister, Parvati. She
wants to meet me just before dinner."
"Oh, could I go with you?
I'd like to meet her."
"Sure, she didn't say
to come alone. I was just about to ask you if you wanted to go
with me."
Antigone smiled.
"Thanks."
When they had gotten out of
afternoon classes, the two headed to the big marble stairwell
with their book bags (or, in Antigone's case, her backpack)
still over their over their shoulders. Parvati was leaning
against the railing and chatting about something that sounded
very important with a witch who had long blond hair down to her
back. Padma noted that she too had the Gryffindor patch on her
clothes. Her face looked familiar, but she couldn't place the
witch's name.
"Padma!" Parvati called
out, waving her over. She pointed out the girl she was speaking
to. "This is Lavender Brown, she's in my house."
Lavender smiled politely. "Who's with you?"
"Antigone Moon,"
Antigone spoke up, dropping her backpack on the stairs.
Parvati wrinkled her nose, which
Padma knew meant that she was thinking, and not a sign of disgust
as it seemed at first glance. "You don't sound
familiar."
"I'm Muggle born."
"Oh, that's why. When
Padma and I were little we only played with wizard borns and half
Muggles. Not out of segregation or anything like that, it's just
that our mother and father only knew a few Muggles."
"And they were all married
to witches or wizards," Padma added. "So. What was it
you wanted to talk about?"
"At first I was just going
to ask you how your classes were going, who've you made
friends with, and how much you hate Snape's
class—things like that. But something absolutely stunning
happened today—we had flying lessons yesterday you
know."
"With the Slytherins."
Lavender made a face.
"Anyway, Neville broke his
wrist; he kicked off when he shouldn't have and fell off-- he's
absolutely uncoordinated if you ask me. Madame Hooch had to take
him to the hospital wing, and while she was gone that dreadful
Malfoy prat found out Neville had dropped his
Remembrall—it's a little thing that turns red when you
squeeze it if you've forgotten something you should do.
Well, Draco took off on his broom because he was going to toss it
in a tree and Harry followed him"
Padma cut her sister off.
"Harry Potter? You hadn't even flown yet, and he had never
been on a broom! He was raised by Muggles!"
"I know," Lavender
chirped, "but he took off like a rocket—like he'd
been born to fly. It sure startled Draco, especially when Harry
dived at him. First he tossed the Remembrall as high as he could
so it would break. They were fifty feet high, and anything made
of glass would have shattered even if only dropped from that
height. Then Draco dived for the ground like a little
chicken."
"And?" Antigone
replied.
Harry dived after the
Remembrall!" Parvati squealed. "He streaked straight
for the ground and caught it with his right hand only a foot off
the ground. It was frightening, we thought he was going to break
his neck, but he just tumbled back onto the ground like nothing
had just happened."
"Then Professor McGonagall
caught him. We all tried to explain what happened but she just
took him off. We were sure he would be expelled, of course."
"Well, since I saw him at
breakfast, I'm guessing he wasn't," Padma replied.
Parvati had always had an inclination to gossip, and though Padma
noted what she heard if it was important, she very rarely
repeated it if it wasn't. "So why'd she'd
take him off?"
"He's been put on the house
team," Lavender and Parvati said in unison.
"McGonagall made him Seeker!"
"Seeker?" Antigone
blinked. "Isn't that a position in Quidditch or
something?" She turned to Padma. "Cho's been
chirping about it all week since Ravenclaw tryouts are
tomorrow."
"Yes, it's the most
prestigious position one can have on a team." Padma looked
at Parvati. "But you can't be serious. There
hasn't been a first year on house team since 1872."
Well, Harry's the Gryffindor
Seeker, and he didn't have to try out or anything! The last
seeker just graduated, and I've heard that the reserve Seeker's
not that good anyway. Tryouts for our house were held Wednesday
and there wasn't a decent Seeker in the bunch. Oliver Wood
practically had a fit of joy when McGonagall presented him with
Harry." Parvati leaned back, grinning.
"He's so lucky,"
Lavender said softly. "I'm so glad he got placed in our
house."
Padma nodded. But he
wasn't sorted into my house.
*~*~*
Carolina wasn't in the mood to
study early Saturday morning. Though she was a very studious
witch, Saturday mornings were her time off. If she were home she
would be up watching television, but of course there were no
televisions at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, so she
was content to read a book Padma had lent her. Cho and Lawrence
were both trying out for the house team at noon, and had invited
any first year who wanted to come see the tryouts. Padma wasn't
going, opting instead to study and to help the other first years
with wall design. Antigone, Morag and Carolina were all going,
however, as was Joseph Rogers, the tall wizard who, save his
coloring and his eyes, bore a passing resemblance to Harry
Potter.
"I'm not Muggle born,
myself," he said as they all headed towards the field. Cho
and Lawrence had been out very early to practice in the morning
hours, and so had stayed on the field. "Only half, through
my mother—like Morag. I spent my childhood in the wizarding
world after my parents divorced and my father got custody of me,
my big brother—who'd just started at Hogwarts—and
my little sisters. I was only three, I haven't had a day in
my life where it wasn't obvious what our heritage was,
though I do like Muggle things and know how they work.
"I'd try out for the team
myself, but that rule forbidding first years to have their own
brooms is totally unfair. We can fly well enough within first
month of classes. Once Quidditch games start in November they
don't even teach flying anymore. But no! No first years are
allowed to bring their own brooms, so we have to stay off the
team."
"What about Harry
Potter?" Carolina asked. Padma had retold the story to all
the Ravenclaw first years, determining that this wasn't
going to stay a secret anyways and thus wasn't gossip.
Lawrence had backed her up after hearing it from the Ravenclaw
Team captain, Roger Davies.
"Oh, him." Joseph
snorted a bit. "If you ask me, I think he's getting
special treatment since the Gryffindors haven't had anything
worth counting as a Seeker since my older brother Mark was here.
The last time Gryffindor won the house Quidditch Cup was when he
and Charlie Weasley played for their house team. Mark's just
turned nineteen and helps raise griffins over near Athens. It's
so unfair! I have Mark's old Cleansweep at home and can't bring
it till next year."
The four of them sat in the
stands on the field just as Roger Davies, the team Captain, blew
a whistle to catch the players' attention. He was a tall,
handsome fourth year boy who kept his straight black hair clipped
neat. With him was a strong looking sixth year that Joseph
identified as one of the current Beaters and another fourth year
boy who was the current Keeper. He announced the main positions
that needed filling were two primary Chasers, a reserve Seeker,
both a reserve and primary Beater and reserve Keeper. First to
try out was the Chasers, then Beaters, and finally Seekers and
Keepers. Roger blew his whistle again and all the potential
Chasers soared up. Cho was at the head of the pack, and Roger
went after them carrying a scarlet ball the size of a soccer
ball.
"What's that ball
he's got?" Antigone asked as the students flew around,
passing the ball back and forth.
"It's called the
Quaffle," Joseph replied. "It's only for scoring.
Chasers throw the Quaffle back and forth among one another and
try to get it through the hoops at the end." He pointed out
where the current Keeper was flying back and forth in front of
the hoops. "That one's the Keeper, his job's to
keep the Quaffle out of the goals. Every Quaffle through is worth
ten points."
"Like every goal in soccer
is worth one," Carolina mused. "And the goal posts are
like the net, and the Keeper's a goalie."
Joseph looked confused for a
moment. Then he nodded. "Oh, yes, the Muggle sport.
I've played it once in a while, but most of the wizard kids
I knew never understood the fun of it. I've been told
I'm very good at soccer— Dean Thomas in Gryffindor
brought his ball here with him and Mandy and I have been known to
play a game with him. So do Lisa and Justin from Hufflepuff. Not
quite enough for a three on three, however."
"I'm not an excellent
player," Morag spoke up, "but I'm decent enough if
you want to have someone else."
"That'd be good, Dean
tried to talk his dormmates into it but none of them were too
keen on it. The Weasley kid—you know, the one hanging around
Harry Potter?—keeps poking his poster of West Ham and trying
to make the players move."
It was awhile before the
potential Chasers dropped back to the ground. Cho looked sweaty
and a bit nervous. She waved at Carolina, who waved back. So did
Joseph, then pointed at the next group who had already gone up
and was swinging around bats at two black balls. "The
Beaters are the next players, and there's two of them. They
don't handle the Quaffle, mind. Their job is to stop the
Bludgers from hitting their team and aim them at the other team.
See those black balls zooming around? Those are
Bludgers—ouch! That's not good!"
Carolina winced the same time
Joseph did—a Bludger had just slammed into one
student's face. Blood spurted out his nose and ran down his
robes—his nose was either broken or badly injured, but it
looked to be the former. Antigone and Morag looked shocked as the
boy carefully made his way to the ground with the help of another
student and they headed towards the castle. "Do students
often get hurt like that?" Carolina asked nervously.
"Well, Bludgers are made of
solid iron, and if you don't move fast enough they'll
whack you a good one. Poor guy can't continue tryouts now,
but Madame Pomfrey can fix him up well. I think the worse
that's ever happened is a broken jaw."
"So three Chasers who score
with the Quaffle, A Keeper who guards the posts, and two Beaters
that stop the two Bludgers from hitting their teammates."
Antigone totaled them on her fingers. "That's six
players and three balls."
"Ah, the last position is
the best position on the team, the Seeker. See, the Seeker's
job is to fly around the field and capture the Golden Snitch. Of
course, the Snitch isn't out right now during tryouts, it
can get lost much too easy. Capturing the Snitch ends the game
and gives your team a hundred and fifty points."
"All that from catching one
ball?" Morag looked impressed. "That's not unfair,
is it?"
"No, because the Golden
Snitch is only as big as a walnut and has little wings that lets
it hover and dart all around the field like a hummingbird.. When
there's fourteen players all zooming around, plus a referee,
and people shouting in the stands, a Seeker who's not
focused can easily lose sight of it. And if you see the other
team's Seeker dive, you've got to be right behind him
or her and hope you can out race them—or hope it's not
a Wronski Feint so you don't go crashing into the
ground."
"Tryouts are almost
over," Carolina noticed. "I guess the positions are
going to be posted later today."
"Nope, you find out here on
the pitch whether you've made it or not. See?" Joseph
pointed towards the broomshed. "Roger's posting the scroll
now." Just after he did, everyone rushed to see, and there
were a great many groans as people sighed and walked away. Once
in a while there was a whoop of happiness.
Carolina noticed Cho standing
over with the Ravenclaw Captain, in deep conversation and
separate from the other Ravenclaws. I wonder what it's
about, she thought to herself.
Lawrence came up into the stands,
his broomstick over his shoulder. He was grinning happily.
"I made Chaser," he announced proudly.
"Chaser! I thought you were
trying out for reserve Keeper," Carolina replied.
"I was. But they made me
Chaser instead. Roger and Samuel Sears—he's the Current
Keeper—both agreed I'd be better on the main team and
that I would make a great Chaser."
"What about Cho?"
"Dunno. I didn't see
her with me on the list."
"Oh," Antigone sighed.
"She didn't make Chaser then."
A squeal of happiness made
everyone turn towards where Cho and Roger was just in time to see
her fling her arms around his neck and hug him tightly, shrieking
loudly. "Thank you thank you thank you!" she yelled.
"I thought you said she
didn't make Chaser." Carolina looked at Lawrence,
confused.
"She didn't."
Lawrence turned towards them. "Cho, what are you so happy
about? You didn't make Chaser."
"I made reserve
Seeker!" Cho hollered back, grinning from ear to ear.
"That's much better
than Chaser," Antigone remarked.
"You're not
kidding," Lawrence said.