Love
was both his Boggart and what he'd witnessed the one time he'd
glimpsed into the Mirror of Erised. It was why he'd built walls
around his soul, mastered Occlumency, lived in a dungeon during most
of the year. He wanted to keep love away forever. It was
foolish and risky and not worth paying the price of the heartbreak
that was surely to come his way. Love was the warm red and gold of
Gryffindor, not the chill of Slytherin's green and silver; the
affectionate, comforting smile of Remus Lupin, not the sarcastic,
disdainful sneer of Severus Snape.
It shocked him to see the same
image in the Mirror as the one that had shown itself when he'd found
a Boggart in his old linen closet. He supposed it couldn't be helped,
and guarded himself against it.
Amazing, how some things slip through the strongest barriers.
Who'd
have known his life would include it? He'd spent most of his young
days alone – alone in a corner, hidden from his abusive father.
Alone, wandering the corridors of Hogwarts, alone even with the
chatter of his "friends" around him. Alone when he joined
the Dark Lord, alone and pathetic when he realized his mistake and
went to recant to Dumbledore.
His life was a series of nightmares.
Nearly killed by his father, nearly killed by himself, spending hours
staring at the small glass vials that kept the lethal poisons he'd
brewed illegally, in secret, in his sixth year. Nearly killed by
Lupin that night, when he'd been foolish to listen to that idiot
Black. The face of the werewolf soon became his most terrifying
nightmare, snarling and slavering, and he couldn't keep the venom out
of his voice when talking to Lupin, especially when the boy
apologized continuously, claiming he'd never planned the act along
with his friend. But Severus was not one to let go of grudges. His
sharp tongue protected him from being associated with the werewolf
during the rest of his school days.
Who'd have foreseen the
romance that had somehow crept its way into his life? Slinking into
his mind years later, with the bars of Honeyduke's best, silently
appearing on his desk every Thursday during his free period in the
afternoon. They came without a note, or any trace of why, how, or
who…
Soon enough, he became aware that that the friendly glances
were no longer as quick and subtle as they had been, but became more
intent, and the quiet, well-mannered werewolf was often caught gazing
in Severus' direction, to be brought out of his reverie by the
ever-twinkling Headmaster, who subtly seemed to notice
everything.
Severus noticed that he would be fooled by the trick
steps in the staircases that he'd known to jump for years, and the
walls that pretended to be doors seemed to snigger at him as he tried
to pry them open. He noticed he was no longer blasting apart the
rosebushes on Valentine's Day, and the sparkling rubies that rested
in Gryffindor's hourglass were no longer taking the abuse he'd shown
them so many times before. It couldn't – no, it couldn't have
anything to do with the fact that it was the same house that Remus
Lupin had lost and won points for in his own childhood. He couldn't
explain the sudden warmth that stole its way into his heart when
Lupin's eyes settled upon him.
And when he stared at his own
reflection, he couldn't see what someone else would be attracted to.
But for once, he didn't hate himself.
To Slytherins, never being loved didn't necessarily mean never having a family, though for Severus, the two would have to go hand in hand. He didn't at all like the notion of marrying a relative, however distant. He'd never preferred women anyway.
Love came along with the chocolate bars, even when they were missed once a month at the full moon; he received two the next time.
A
relationship was slowly created, with hesitant touches on the
shoulder, on the arm, comfortably sitting next to Remus at
Headquarters.
Once Severus had collapsed after a particularly
dreadful meeting with the Dark Lord, and Severus didn't notice he was
being carried to a bed until he was halfway up the stairs, wordlessly
watching as Lupin made him comfortable, falling asleep, soothed by
the warmth of the werewolf watching over him.
The next morning he
woke with a cry as he realized his barriers had been broken, and all
the words he'd always needed to say streamed out of his mouth, and he
found himself confessing and apologizing, and nearly revealing what
had happened to his battered heart.
Heartbreak came only in the form of the miserable, slumped shadow of Remus mourning Black. Severus knew he would break because of it.
He let it. It wasn't as if he could stop anything anymore.
