Elara lay still on the couch, her fingers absentmindedly tracing the edges of Ollivander's journal, though her eyes were unfocused, staring into the quiet flickering of the fire. The dream had been… overwhelming. No, more than that. It had beentoo real—too tangible in its strangeness, too heavy in its symbolism.
Her heart still beat fast, though the oppressive weight of the dream had faded into the warmth of the Hufflepuff common room. The shadows of the night lingered in the corners, but everything felt normal again, as if the world had quietly spun back into place. Still, her skin felt clammy. The lingering chill of cold sweat clung to the back of her neck, an unsettling reminder of the world she'd just left behind.
Get a grip.
Elara sighed and sat up, her legs slowly sliding off the couch. The fire crackled, the embers faintly glowing, but she barely noticed. The feeling of her wand—broken, then whole—stuck with her. It had felt… significant. More than just a dream symbol. It had felt like the key to something she hadn't yet understood.
She closed her eyes for a moment, trying to ground herself. Sage stirred beside her, sensing her discomfort. She reached down, absentmindedly running her fingers through his soft fur, though it did little to calm the storm of thoughts in her head.
"What do you call a girl who can't choose a face?"
What is your true form?
"The Sorting never ends."
Her eyes snapped open, and she felt a wave of unease rush through her. No. She couldn't let the dream take hold of her. Not here. Not now.
She stood up, her knees a little unsteady, but she caught herself. The quiet of the room was grounding—steady, reliable. Her thoughts could whirl, but the world around her stayed still, unwavering.
Her fingers brushed her wand in her pocket, and she closed her eyes again. For a moment, she could almost feel the forest again—the shimmering moss beneath her feet, the weight of the masks' gazes, the silence that was as loud as any scream.
But in the stillness of the common room, Elara simply took a deep breath.
She could feel the weight of the dream fading, but the uncertainty lingered, as thick and heavy as the air in the glade.
Elara moved through the dormitory door like a shadow, barely making a sound as it clicked shut behind her. The moonlight had dipped into the room through the high windows, casting long silver ribbons across the beds. Susan, Hannah, and Sally-Anne were already fast asleep, their breaths slow and even, their faces peaceful. Untouched by strange forests and watching masks.
She padded quietly to her own bed, heart still not quite steady. Sage slipped in behind her with a soft meow, as if he'd been waiting all along.
Elara sat on the edge of the bed for a moment, her fingers curling into the blanket. The silence of the dorm pressed in around her—not oppressive, juststill. Safe. But it didn't reach the place inside her that the dream had touched.
She climbed under the covers without changing clothes, tugging the blanket up over her knees. Sage nestled into the hollow between her legs and stomach, his warmth a quiet anchor. She reached for her wand with one hand, her journal with the other, and curled around both like they were the only things keeping her tethered.
Her hands were still cold.
The dream wouldn't let her go. It hadn't been just strange—it had been personal. Intentional. Like something had been peeling her apart piece by piece. Not to hurt her, but toshowher something. Something she didn't understand.
She opened her journal but didn't write yet. Her quill hovered uselessly. Her thoughts felt brittle.
What do you call a girl who can't choose a face?
The question echoed again, like a voice from far away, and yet right inside her bones.
Her throat tightened.
"The Sorting never ends,"the dream had said.
And it didn't, did it? She wasn't sure it ever had. She had sat beneath the Sorting Hat and felt the pull ineverydirection. The Hat had seen pieces of her that didn't match. Hufflepuff by heart. Slytherin by potential. Ravenclaw by mind. Gryffindor by some buried spark.
She didn't know who she was. She never had. Always shifting. Always listening. Always becoming what the moment asked of her. It wasn't dishonesty—it wassurvival.
But now…
Now she wasn't sure if the masks and skins she'd worn had ever really beenherat all. Or if she was just a collection of reflections, like water catching different skies.
Elara pressed the journal to her chest. She stared up at the dark canopy of her bed, and whispered, barely audible,
"…Who am I?"
There was no answer. Just the quiet breath of sleeping girls and the slow rhythm of Sage's purring. But the dream had asked that too, hadn't it?
What is your true form?
She didn't know.
She clutched her wand a little tighter, almost afraid it might change in her hand. The memory of it breaking—then repairing itself—still flickered behind her eyes. It had feltright, somehow. Like the wand wasn't just a tool, but part of her.
Broken, then whole.
She exhaled shakily. Maybe that was the truth of it. Maybe she wasn't meant to have a final form. Maybe she was meant toshift. To question. To rebuild.
But tonight, that truth didn't feel comforting. It felt lonely.
Elara closed her eyes and finally let the quill touch paper.
A forest. A mask. A question. A warning.
She wrote slowly, her hand steadying with each word.
The Sorting never ends. I don't know who I am. But I'm listening now.
She paused. Then, almost like a confession:
I think something in me is waking up.
She signed nothing. Just closed the journal, pulled Sage closer, and curled into the dark.
September 3rd, 1991
The pale light of morning filtered through the high, arched windows of the Hufflepuff dormitory, casting gentle patterns across the stone walls and golden bed hangings. Elara stirred beneath her quilt, her body tangled in the sheets, Sage curled like a comma at her side. For a moment, she forgot the dream—forgot the masks, the glade, the voice.
But then the stillness settled, and the memory of it crept in like fog—soft but suffocating.
She blinked up at the ceiling, quiet as the dorm around her began to wake. The rustling of blankets, the clink of someone's trunk, a yawn muffled by a pillow. Susan's bed creaked, followed by the soft thud of her slippers hitting the floor. A moment later, Hannah let out a sleepy groan and muttered something about pumpkin juice. Sally-Anne was already brushing her hair, humming a gentle tune under her breath.
Elara sat up slowly, rubbing the sleep from her eyes. The dream still clung to her like dew. It hadn't faded the way most dreams did. It felt... stored. Like it had been tucked into some quiet drawer in her mind, waiting to be pulled out again.
She swung her legs over the edge of the bed and padded to the bathroom, her wand and journal still nestled under her pillow. She left them there for now.
The showers were blissfully warm. She let the water run down her back, tilting her head to let it soak through her hair. For a few minutes, the dream dulled beneath the rhythm of the water and the scent of lemongrass soap. She braced her hands against the cool tile, breathing in steam and calm. Her reflection in the steam-misted mirror blurred, but it was almost as if the face staring back at her wasn't quite her own. It was the same face, but… not.
She quickly shut off the water, wrapping herself in a towel, and let the rhythm of getting dressed help push the doubts aside.
By the time she was dressed—her hair tucked neatly into a braid, robes buttoned with deliberate care—her mind felt a little clearer, the chaos of her thoughts tamed by routine. She gathered her things: her wand, her journal, and Sage, who had followed her into the bathroom and was now rubbing against her legs. With one last glance at her reflection, Elara left the room, making her way down to the common room.
Susan, Sally-Anne, and Hannah were already there, chatting quietly as they prepared for breakfast. Elara gave them a small smile as she joined them. There was an ease to their company, a quiet comfort she hadn't known she needed.
"Sleep well?" Sally-Anne asked, giving her a knowing look, though her tone was casual.
Elara nodded, though the unsettled feeling still lingered in the pit of her stomach. "Yeah, just… the usual." She didn't know how to describe the dream. It was too much, too real, too… haunting.
"You look more awake than last night," Hannah teased, her voice light, "though I think Zacharias would argue you're still giving off some of that 'Dark Lady' energy."
Elara couldn't help but laugh, the sound feeling foreign but soothing. "He'd probably say that whether I was smiling or scowling."
"True," Susan agreed with a wink. "But you know, you don't have to be anyone but yourself with us."
Elara's heart warmed at her words, the familiar sense of belonging settling over her like a soft blanket. For all her insecurities and the questions swirling in her mind, here—among friends who saw her and accepted her—she could breathe a little easier.
They made their way to the Great Hall, the morning bustle of Hogwarts unfolding around them. The corridors were filled with students hurrying to their first classes of the day, the low murmur of voices blending with the scent of fresh bread and porridge that wafted from the Hall.
As they entered, Elara's eyes automatically flicked to the staff table, and for a brief moment, her gaze met Snape's. His expression was unreadable, as always, but something about the encounter sent a chill down her spine. She quickly looked away, her fingers tightening around the strap of her bag, as though it could anchor her.
They made their way to the Hufflepuff table, where warm smiles greeted them. Elara settled into her seat between Susan and Hannah, though she couldn't fully escape the weight of her thoughts. The dream still lingered, taunting am I really?The question echoed in her mind again, and she tried to push it down, focusing instead on the ordinary, grounding rituals of breakfast—serving herself toast and eggs, buttering it slowly, the chatter of her housemates surrounding her.
But she couldn't shake the feeling that, somehow, she was being watched. Every glance she caught from a passing student, every subtle shift of a gaze, felt like it held more weight than it should. It was like they all knew she was different—like they could see through the mask she so carefully crafted.
As she took a bite of her toast, she glanced at her friends, their quiet comfort offering some is who I am,she reminded herself, trying to steady her , among these people, I am enough.
Yet the whispers of the Sorting Hat's prophecy, the strangeness of her magic, and the ever-present feeling that she didn't quite fit anywhere tugged at her still.
As Elara chewed her toast, the familiar hum of the Great Hall felt distant, muffled, as if she were underwater. Every student passing by, every head that turned toward her, seemed to hold more weight than usual. She could feel their eyes flicker toward her, some glancing with casual curiosity, others with barely concealed whispers. It wasn't new, this feeling of being watched, but today it was sharper—more obvious. Her fingers tightened around her mug of pumpkin juice, as if the grip could anchor her to the table, to the comfort of her friends.
Susan and Hannah were deep in conversation, their voices low and easy, but Elara found it hard to focus on their words. It wasn't the first time she'd noticed people staring at her, but now… it was different. Less of a trick of her mind and more... real. There was a sharpness in their gazes, a question in their eyes, like they were all trying to piece together the puzzle that was her.
She swallowed the last bite of toast, forcing herself to take a breath. It's just the wand, she reminded herself. Just the wand incident. The whispers were still fresh, still buzzing in the air like static.
Her mind flashed back to that moment yesterday, the wand lighting up in her hand, the shock and confusion on everyone's faces. She'd felt like a fool then, like a freak. No one had ever seen anything like that before.
Her fingers twitched involuntarily at her pocket where her wand was, hidden from sight but present with its strange weight. She could feel the warmth of it beneath her robes, a quiet reminder of the chaos she'd caused.
Across the room, Professor McGonagall was speaking with a group of students, but Elara could swear her eyes flickered in her direction. For a split second, their gazes locked. There was no obvious judgment in McGonagall's expression—just that calculating look Elara had seen many times before. It was the look the Transfiguration professor gave to students who puzzled her, who didn't quite fit the mold of what was expected. Elara felt a shiver creep down her spine.
There was something almost knowing in McGonagall's eyes, but then the moment passed, and she was gone, moving on to speak with a couple of second-years. Still, the weight of that glance lingered.
Elara turned back to her friends, forcing a smile as Sally-Anne caught her eye.
"You sure you're alright?" Sally-Anne asked, her voice soft but full of concern.
Elara nodded, but she could feel the lie on her tongue. "Yeah, just… tired."
The lie felt thin, but it was enough for now. Her mind was still racing, the fragments of the dream, the lingering weight of everyone's eyes, and the quiet hum of something deeper, something still awakening within her.
Sage, sensing her unease, hopped up onto her lap, curling into the warmth of her robes. She ran her fingers through his fur, letting the simple action ground her. He always seemed to know when she needed a bit of comfort.
But the truth was, the questions still gnawed at her. Who was she? What was she supposed to be? And why did it feel like the world—at least, Hogwarts—was suddenly watching her every move?
She wasn't sure. But she knew one thing for certain: the Sorting Hat's words still echoed in her mind. It wasn't over. The Sorting—her identity—wasn't over. It hadn't even begun to make sense.
And with every passing day, it felt like it was becoming more and more difficult to find the right mask to wear.
The familiar hum of the Great Hall felt strangely amplified. She could feel it now—subtle glances tossed her way, a hush of whispers whenever she turned her head, like ripples following a dropped stone.
She wasn't imagining it. The wand incident had done something. Branded her with a quiet sort of notoriety.
It wasn't malicious, not really. But itwaswatchful. Curious. The kind of attention that lingered longer than it should.
As Elara nibbled half-heartedly at her toast, the mask was back—but looser at the edges than it had been the night before. She looked up only once when the boys arrived, offering a faint smile before returning to her tea.
Zacharias slid into the seat across from her, narrowed eyes scanning her face like a grumpy detective in a breakfast-themed mystery novel.
"So… is this a new daily persona now, or should we be bracing for a sudden wardrobe change and an evil monologue?"
Justin coughed into his pumpkin juice, half-choking with laughter.
"Zacharias!" Susan scolded, but even she looked mildly amused.
"What?" he said, gesturing vaguely to Elara. "She's all… serene and ominous again. I'm just asking the questions people are too polite to ask."
Elara arched an eyebrow. "I think that says more about you than it does about me."
"Exactly. I'm a public service," he said smugly. "You do realize most people can't just toggle between 'melancholy garden ghost' and 'quiet apocalypse' without raising some eyebrows."
"I'm pretty sure you just called her a haunting and the end of the world," Hannah murmured.
Zacharias looked unrepentant. "I said what I said."
Elara, to her credit, simply sipped her tea with a smile and tilted her head slightly. "It's comforting to know you're always suspicious, no matter the mood."
Zacharias blinked, then gave a small, begrudging smirk. "Consistency is important."
Justin leaned over toward Elara, whispering, "He watched you from across the common room last night like you were going to levitate your spot and float out the window."
"Idid not—" Zacharias began, flushing slightly, but Ernie cut in with a grin.
"Mate, you whispered 'this is how cult leaders are born' when she lit the sidetable candle without touching it."
"Okay,thatwas impressive," Wayne added, sliding onto the bench beside Hannah. "I've been trying to do wandless stuff forever. She just… does it."
Elara shrugged one shoulder, still quiet, but a little less distant now. "It just happens sometimes. I'm not trying to be weird."
Zacharias folded his arms, huffing. "Well, you'resucceeding 're like if mystery novels and floral disasters had a baby."
"Thanks?" she said dryly.
"But," he added, voice lowering slightly as he reached for a spoonful of porridge, "you did good. Yesterday, I mean. You didn't fall apart. Most people would've. You just… kind of bloomed like a dangerous metaphor and kept walking."
Elara blinked, surprised by the tone shift.
"Don't make it weird," he muttered immediately, glaring into his porridge like it had offended him. "I'm just saying."
Justin beamed. "That's, like, peak praise from him."
"Truly glowing," Susan added.
"Shut up, all of you," Zacharias grumbled, ears a bit pink.
Elara's lips curled into a faint smile, the tension in her shoulders easing.
She could feel it again—that same golden thread from last night. Weaving its way through her chest. Safety. Belonging.
Even if it came wrapped in sarcasm and porridge-based compliments.
A few moments passed before Zacharias returned to his usual self—listening intently to the gossip surrounding them. He leaned forward, arms crossed, brow furrowed in that signature look of skeptical concern.
"You know your wand incident is still being dissected by at leastfourdifferent common rooms, right?" he said dryly, jabbing his spoon in her direction. "I overheard a second-year Ravenclaw saying you might be some kind of sleeper agent for the Dark Lord. Charming."
Elara blinked, deadpan. "Wow. Onlyoneconspiracy theory? Disappointing."
Zacharias huffed, clearly unimpressed. "Oh, there are more. The Gryffindors think you're cursed, and the Slytherins think you're applying for transfer." He paused. "And honestly, with the way Malfoy keeps looking at you, I'm starting to wonder ifthey're right."
"I thought you liked evidence," Elara said coolly, sipping her pumpkin juice.
"I do. And that's exactly why I'm concerned."
Justin snorted from across the table. "You're just mad Elara's more interesting thanyoufor once."
"I'm not mad," Zacharias retorted, but his ears flushed faintly. "I'm just saying that when someone shows up and starts glowing and breaking wands and attractingSlytherins,maybe we should ask a few questions."
"Youask questions," Ernie muttered, "we just accept the chaos."
"That's why you'll all die first," Zacharias muttered back, then narrowed his eyes at Elara. "Seriously, are you planning to tell us whatthatwas?" He gestured vaguely toward her wand, now hidden safely in her robes. "Or are we just rolling with'whoops, my magic went nova in front of the whole school'?"
"I vote we roll with it," Elara said lightly. "Keeps things mysterious."
Zacharias stared at her. "Youenjoythis."
"I enjoy toast," she said, taking another bite. "Everything else is just background noise."
The table burst into quiet laughter—less explosive than yesterday's teasing, but still warm. Zacharias made a show of groaning and burying his face in his hands, but the corner of his mouth twitched. He wasn't fooling anyone.
Despite his bristly skepticism, Elara could tell he was paying attention. Watching her like a puzzle that didn't quite add up. And yet… he sat beside her anyway.
She glanced toward the Slytherin table, where her peripheral awareness had already clocked a familiar gaze.
Draco Malfoy was watching her again.
Not sharply. Not unkindly. Just... observantly. His gray eyes glinted with something unreadable, and then the faintest smirk lifted one corner of his mouth.
It wasn't the cold sneer he wore for everyone else. This one was almost conspiratorial. Familiar. The echo of yesterday's strange camaraderie—the walk from Potions to Transfiguration with him and his crew. Pansy's snide comments. Blaise's raised eyebrow. And Draco, smirking over his shoulder at her like he wasn't sure if she was a rival, a novelty, or something more interesting.
She raised her eyebrow in response, cool and unreadable.
Zacharias caught the exchange immediately.
"Ohgreat,he's smirking again," he muttered. "Do we need to start an intervention? Or at least a quarantine?"
"Don't be dramatic," Wayne said.
"I'malwaysdramatic when snakes are involved," he shot back.
"I don't know," Susan added lightly, "I think it's kind of fascinating. Elara's got the whole 'gentle mystery meets Slytherin chaos' vibe going."
"That's exactly what worries me," Zacharias muttered. "She's giving off 'Dark Lady in training' energy and everyone's just letting it happen."
Elara gave him a flat look. "You're projecting again."
"Projectingconcern," he corrected. "It's called being responsible."
Justin leaned in, grinning. "Don't worry, mate. If she turns evil, we'll make sure you're the first to be sacrificed."
"Thank you," Zacharias said solemnly. "That's all I ask."
Elara smiled, a quiet curl of amusement on her lips. Her friends were ridiculous—but they were hers. For all of Zacharias' suspicion, Justin's jokes, and Ernie's mockery, there was something grounding in their presence. They didn't try to fix her or force her to explain herself.
They just sat beside her, even when the rest of the school didn't know what to make of her.
At the staff table, she felt more eyes. Hagrid gave her a cheerful thumbs-up. Professor Sprout offered a quiet, supportive nod. And then… Snape.
He wasn't even pretending not to look.
He had been watching her ever since the incident—no, since the Sorting. Always analyzing, always observing, never quite giving anything away. She couldn't tell what was going on behind his sharp, calculating eyes. But the attention—it wasn't ordinary.
He knew something. He had to. And there was something unsettling about the way he watched her. Not with disdain, but with curiosity. Almost as though he was waiting for her to reveal something to him. She couldn't tell. But as the minutes passed, the unease only grew. Her mind couldn't focus. It flickered between the dream, the eyes watching her, and the strange tension she felt around Snape.
His gaze was steady, sharp, and calculating, the way someone might study an unfamiliar plant to see if it was poisonous or powerful—or both. He didn't look away even when she met his eyes.
Neither did she.
It wasn't quite a challenge. More like… a recognition.
When he finally looked down, it was not in defeat. Just a pause. Like the page had turned but the story was far from over.
Her wand pulsed faintly in her robes—still untested, still strange.
She didn't know what had happened yesterday, not really. But she knew the feeling in her chest—the golden flicker from the dream, the way her magic never quite fit the Hogwarts mold. She'd hoped for normal.
What she got was something else.
Something that had people whispering and watching.
And maybe, deep down, something that was beginning towake up.
By the time they left the Great Hall, the castle was alive with motion—students rushing to classes, staircases shifting with their usual lack of mercy, and the smell of dew-soaked grass wafting in from open archways.
Elara clutched her satchel a little tighter as she and her Hufflepuff friends made their way across the grounds, scanning a slightly smudged schedule as they went.
"Flying," Justin read aloud. "With the Ravenclaws. On the east field."
"Is that past the Greenhouses or before?" Wayne asked, already half-turned in the wrong direction.
"Before," Susan said, tugging him back by the sleeve. "C'mon, I think I see other first years heading that way."
Elara trailed slightly behind the others, the morning sun cool against her face. Her eyes drifted toward the sky—endless and pale blue, dotted here and there with birds soaring on effortless arcs. Something fluttered in her chest.
Chestnut wood,she remembered from the wand lore book she'd buried herself in last night, flipping pages until her eyes were sore.
Well suited for tamers of magical beasts… or skilled fliers. If the personality matches, a wand of chestnut often seeks the thrill of the skies. Not everyone can handle one.
She had tilted her head at that line, skeptical but intrigued.
A natural flier, huh?
Elara had never so much astoucheda broom before. The idea of soaring above the ground, with nothing beneath her but air and enchantments, felt like something out of a dream. Or a nightmare. Depending on the moment.
She wasn't sure yet which one this would be.
They reached the east lawn just as Madam Hooch strode onto the field, her short grey hair swept back like she'd flown in with the wind itself. She had sharp yellow eyes and a voice that could slice through fog.
"Right, gather 'round!" she called. "Hufflepuffs, Ravenclaws—brooms to your left. Don't wander, don't trip, don't do anything that'll make me regret my life choices."
Elara stopped beside a worn but sturdy-looking broom, planting her feet the way she'd seen Quidditch players do on posters.
"All right," Madam Hooch barked. "Everyone, stand by a broom. Stick out your right hand, over the broom, and say:Up!"
The chorus of"Up!"echoed across the lawn.
Nothing happened.
Well—notnothing. One broom smacked Justin in the nose. Sally-Anne's wobbled uncertainly like it was deeply offended. Hannah's twitched and rolled away like a sleepy cat refusing to wake.
Elara hesitated—then extended her hand.
"Up," she said clearly.
Her broom leapt into her palm.
Not violently, not even fast—justclean, like it had been waiting for her. Like it recognized something.
She blinked.
"…Okay then," she whispered, brows raised.
Zacharias, standing two spots down, let out adisbelievingsnort. "Ofcourseit listens to you."
She looked over.
"What?" she asked, feigning innocence.
He gave her a flat look. "You're going to start glowing any second now, I canfeelit."
Elara bit back a smile and turned back to her broom.
But inside, something was stirring—like a flame catching air.
Maybe chestnut wood really does know something I don't.
"Good," Madam Hooch said, striding past. "You—yes, you with the very smug broom—excellent form. Now, when I blow my whistle, kick off hard from the ground, rise a few feet, and come back downimmediately. No heroics. If you try to do flips or touch a cloud, Iwillhex your kneecaps."
Someone gulped audibly.
The whistle blew.
Elara's heart leapt.
She kicked off—and soared.
Not high. Not far. Just enough. Enough to feel the air shift around her like it knew her name. The ground dropped away gently, not jarringly, and her body felt…right. Balanced. In sync with something bigger than herself.
She hovered for a breathless moment.
And then landed smoothly, feet finding earth like she'd done this before in another life.
Around her, several students were wobbling, shouting, or flat-out clinging to their brooms like shipwreck survivors.
Wayne had apparently gone sideways instead of up.
Sally-Anne was still yelling "Up!" like it owed her money.
Madam Hooch helped one Ravenclaw boy to his feet with a whistle and a "That wasnotwhat I meant by 'immediately.'"
Elara looked at her hands. At the broom.
She felt…
Light.
Zacharias walked past, eyeing her like she'd grown wings. "I'm starting to think you're not real."
"I'm definitely real," she said, cheeks a little flushed, but smiling.
He narrowed his eyes. "We'll see."
The warmth from Flying still clung to Elara's cheeks as the group trekked back across the grounds, feet squelching through damp grass. The giddy chatter had begun to fade, replaced by that telltale weight that only the wordTransfigurationcould summon.
"Well," Hannah sighed, holding her wand close as if it could offer moral support, "at least it's not anewspell today."
Justin snorted. "No, we just have to make amatchstick disappearand somehowbring it backas a needle. Totally reasonable."
"I got mine to turn silver last night," Wayne offered, puffing up a bit. "Still a bit matchy on the end, but it sort of… glinted."
"Minebentlike a needle," Susan said proudly. "But still very much made of wood. So… not great."
They turned the corner down a quieter corridor, where the chatter of other students faded behind thick stone walls and flickering torches. Elara trailed her fingers across the wall as they walked, the stone cool and oddly grounding.
"Think the Slytherins will still be smug about it?" Sally-Anne murmured as they approached the classroom.
"I think they'realwayssmug about it," Justin replied. "It's a birthright."
Zacharias, already walking ahead, slowed just enough to throw over his shoulder, "Don't forget—Draco Malfoy got aperfectneedle on the first try. His fan club will be unbearable."
Elara rolled her eyes as they rounded the final turn and joined the mingling crowd of first-years outside the Transfiguration classroom. The Slytherins were already clustered by the door—Draco right in the center, of course, flanked by Crabbe, Goyle, and a few snickering girls. Pansy Parkinson gave Elara a once-over, then whispered something into Daphne Greengrass's ear that earned a high-pitched giggle.
Elara didn't react. She didn't have to. Her face slipped into something unreadable—not forced, not masked. Just… fluid. Calm. She didn't look at Draco, but shefelthis glance.
Still watching me,she waiting to figure me out.
The door swung open with a precise creak. Professor McGonagall stood in the doorway, robes sharp and her expression sharper.
"Inside. Quietly," she said.
The class filed in with surprising order. Long wooden tables gleamed under the golden torchlight. Each seat had a matchstick placed neatly on a piece of parchment.
"Take your seats. Slytherin to the left, Hufflepuff to the right."
As Elara slipped into her seat, her eyes met Professor McGonagall's for the briefest of moments.
She didn't blink.
McGonagall didn't smile—but her gaze lingered, thoughtful, before she turned to address the room.
"You are here today to continue what you began yesterday," she said crisply. "Transfiguration, as I said, is one of the most complex and dangerous branches of magic you will learn at this school. It is not to be taken lightly. I expect improvement."
She began pacing between the tables.
"Your goal today: successfully transform your match into a needle. A real one. Solid, metallic, and properly shaped. You may work alone or with a partner."
"I call Elara," Zacharias whispered quickly, plopping down beside her before anyone could protest.
Elara raised an eyebrow.
"You want help or to sabotage me?"
He gave a sly shrug. "Bit of both."
Across the aisle, Draco Malfoy lounged in his chair like this was a private lesson designed for his amusement.
As Professor McGonagall waved her wand and the blackboard filled with steps, Elara gently placed her hand over the matchstick.
She didn't speak yet. Didn't cast.
She just…listened.
She let the wand rest in her hand—not directing it, but holding it like a conductor's baton, waiting for the first note. Magic flickered quietly beneath her skin, like a spark ready to leap.
"Okay," Zacharias whispered. "Let's see the Hufflepuff enigma do her thing."
Elara narrowed her eyes at the matchstick, focused—then moved her wand in a precise flick.
But as she cast the spell, nothing happened. The match simply sat there, unchanged—still wooden, still as unyielding as before.
She tried again.
And again.
But no matter how many times she flicked her wand, the matchstick remained in its original state. No glittering shimmer, no shifting texture. Just the same, stubborn stick.
Zacharias watched her, a little more hesitant now, but still with his trademark smirk. "Bit of a rough start, huh? Maybe you've got toreallyfocus on the matchstick itself—like, pour all your magic into it."
Elara felt his eyes on her, felt the pressure mounting around her. She could feel the trickle of tension in her own muscles, but she didn't let it show on her . She hadn't yet connected with it—not properly. Not in the way she knew she had to.
Taking a breath, Elara slowly set the matchstick down on the desk. She closed her eyes, her fingers gently curling around her wand's handle, her grip light but firm, like holding onto something fragile yet vital.
This is not just a tool,she thought to 's a companion. It listens.
Her mind went back to the night before, when the golden ivy had bloomed up her arm in that unexpected rush of energy. She had been unguarded then, allowing her own magic to flow freely, trusting the magic of the wand—and more importantly, trusting herself. The connection was almost instinctual, but it wasreal. And that was the key.
With her eyes still closed, she drew in another steady breath, listening to the soft hum of the room—the quiet shuffle of parchment, the murmurs of classmates, the steady rhythm of her own heartbeat. Everything fell away until only the feel of the wand in her hand remained. She could sense the unique, intertwining energies of the woods that made it—the Alder, the Apple, the Chestnut, all 12 woods, all those vibrant,livingcomponents.
She pictured the wand as a part of her, not separate, but connected. Not a foreign object to be controlled, but something that washers—an extension of herself. With each breath, she allowed herself to sink deeper into that feeling, attuning herself to the pulse of the magic that lay within the wand, within her.
Her fingers relaxed. Her grip softened.
She could feel the magic stirring, growing stronger. Her connection to it—fluid, warm, reassuring.
The words flowed from her lips this time, quieter, like a whispered secret shared between old friends.
"Acus Mutatio."
Her voice was almost lost in the gentle hum of the room, the sound of the spell barely noticeable, as if it had been coaxed out rather than commanded.
The matchstick shivered.
And then, it began to change.
Slowly. Smoothly. It didn'tpoporexplodeinto transformation, no loud flourish, no flashing light. It was subtle—a gentle twist, a soft glow, like the moment when the first leaf turns in autumn.
The match elongated, stretched—its wooden surface rippled until it was a perfect, fine needle. Its end tapered delicately, the silver sheen of metal shining in the low light.
Elara opened her eyes. She smiled softly at the needle before her, feeling the magic settle back into place. It had worked. Not perfectly—there was a slight curve to the needle's point, but it was functional. Real.
Zacharias stared at her, his mouth slightly agape. "Wait… you did it."
She nodded slowly, her gaze still on the needle, the hum of her wand's energy settling like a steady pulse. "I did."
There was a brief silence.
"Okay, I'll admit it… That was impressive," Zacharias said, sounding genuinely surprised. "I thought you were about to turn the whole desk into a bush or something."
Elara chuckled lightly, her smile lingering, but she didn't respond. Instead, she placed the needle down gently, as if it were a fragile thing—something that needed care and respect.
Professor McGonagall passed by at that moment, giving the needle a brief glance. She didn't pause or comment but gave a single, approving nod before moving on.
Elara felt a subtle warmth spread through her chest. The connection had been fleeting but undeniable. She wasn't just casting spells—she was channeling a part of herself through the wand. And it was working. In its own way, it was working.
Her fingers curled around the wand, but this time, it wasn't just the usual sensation of holding a magical object. It was different. The wand feltalivein her hand, pulsing, almost as if it were breathing along with her. Each tiny thrum of magic, each subtle shift, reverberated through her, down her arm, and into her very bones. The sensation was familiar, yet new—a delicate thread of connection between her and the wood, between her and the magic flowing through her.
It was as though her wand was calling to her, urging her to pay attention, to lean into this moment and allow the magic to unfold.
She could feel the smooth surface of the wand under her fingers, the intricate carvings of the vines and leaves imprinted into the wood. For a moment, she wondered if the vines themselves might begin to stir, like they had the day before when golden ivy had wrapped around her arm, or perhaps they were simply waiting for her to acknowledge them once again.
Elara's breath hitched slightly as the pulse in her hand grew stronger, more insistent. The wand didn't feel like an object anymore—it felt like part of her. A living thing, full of energy, full of potential. It had a quiet power, not the kind that demanded attention or recognition, but the kind that simplywas.
Her heart began to race in rhythm with the pulsating magic in her hand. Her fingers tingled. Then, as though she were unable to stop herself, the familiar golden ivy began to creep up her arm once more, winding its way up from her wrist, delicate and ethereal. It was gentle this time, like a whispered caress of magic, but the ivy shimmered with a soft, golden light that illuminated the desk in front of her, casting faint, flickering shadows on the wood.
The room around her seemed to soften, the edges of her vision blurring for a brief moment, as though the ivy's touch was reaching deeper than just her arm. She felt as though the wand's power was growing inside her, awakening something she had yet to understand.
The ivy's tendrils curled up her arm, but this time, they didn't just wind in a straight line—they began tobranchout, as if the vine itself were responding to her thoughts, her emotions. She could feel its life force—its pulse—synchronizing with her own. It wasn't just magic; it was something more, something primal. Ancient.
For a split second, Elara almost forgot she was in the middle of a classroom. She almost forgot there were students around her. All that mattered was the soft, golden glow wrapping around her wrist and up her arm, the delicate warmth that spread through her like sunlight breaking through the trees.
Is this my magic?she wondered, her mind racing as she tried to make sense of the growing this what I've been hiding all this time?
The faint sound of murmurs reached her ears, but her focus remained fixed on the wand, on the magic growing around her.
Zacharias was the first to speak, his voice cautious. "Elara?"
Her eyes fluttered open, and she immediately saw the room had shifted. Everyone was staring at her. Some of the Slytherins had their mouths slightly agape, while others exchanged confused, questioning glances. She could hear the sharp intake of breath from Susan and Ernie, and even Professor McGonagall, who was quietly observing, seemed on edge.
"I—" Elara started, but she quickly swallowed, her words trailing off as the ivy faded from her arm, the last traces of golden light flickering and disappearing into thin air.
"It's the same as yesterday, isn't it?" Zacharias said quietly, leaning back in his seat, a note of disbelief in his voice. "That same glowing ivy..."
McGonagall, who had been watching intently, gave a slight nod. "Indeed," she said, her voice steady but carrying a hint of underlying curiosity. "We did discuss this yesterday, Miss Willow. I trust you are... managing your connection with your wand?"
Elara blinked, not having expected the reminder so soon. She'd already spoken to McGonagall and the other heads of houses about the incident yesterday after her study period, but hearing it brought up again made her feel vulnerable, exposed. Her gaze flicked briefly to the ivy marks now fading from her arm.
"Yes, Professor," Elara replied, her voice calmer than she felt. "I'm... figuring it out."
The whispers around her only grew louder. A few Slytherins exchanged glances, some of them now eyeing her wand, no doubt trying to make sense of what had just happened.
"See? I told you it's like she's got some kind of... magic we can't explain," one of them muttered under his breath, though the tone wasn't exactly friendly.
The murmurs didn't bother Elara as much as they might've the day before. She was getting used to the strange attention her magic seemed to draw. It wasn't the first time something like this had happened, and it probably wouldn't be the last.
Zacharias shot her a grin, his earlier shock shifting into a sort of resigned acceptance. "So, you reallyaresome kind of wizarding mystery."
Elara's smile was tight, but she couldn't help the slight laugh that escaped her lips. "I guess so," she murmured, glancing down at her wand, still warm in her hand.
Professor McGonagall cleared her throat, refocusing the class. "Now, Miss Willow, while your display of magic is certainly... intriguing, I would advise you to keep a close rein on it for the rest of the lesson. We'll address it properly after class."
Elara nodded quietly, grateful that McGonagall's tone wasn't as harsh as it had been the day before. She could feel the weight of her classmates' stares lingering, but she pushed it aside, focusing back on the task at hand. She needed to make sense of this connection, to understand it better. Whatever this magic was, it was hers, and she needed to accept it.
"Now," McGonagall continued, "let's get back to the match-to-needle transfiguration. Everyone, please continue with your work."
The class fell back into the usual rhythm, but Elara couldn't shake the feeling that something had shifted. The golden ivy might have faded, but the connection between her and her wand felt stronger than ever.
"Class dismissed!" McGonagall called out, and the students filed out, chatting about their work. Elara lingered for a moment, gathering her things slowly. Her wand was warm in her hand, still giving off that faint pulse of energy. She could feel the golden ivy lingering in the back of her mind, like a soft whisper urging her forward.
Before she could leave, McGonagall approached her. "Miss Willow, a word, please?"
Elara turned, her heart skipping a beat. The professor's calm demeanor didn't quite ease the slight unease in Elara's chest. She stepped forward, standing by the desk as McGonagall regarded her closely.
"I understand there was an… unusual occurrence with your wand earlier today," McGonagall said, her tone soft but serious. "I've already spoken with the other heads of houses about the incident yesterday. And I believe it would be best if we keep a close eye on this... connection between you and your wand."
Elara swallowed, but nodded. "I'm not sure what's happening, Professor. But I'll try to control it."
McGonagall studied her for a moment before nodding. "Good. I trust you will. But if you ever need guidance, or if the magic becomes uncontrollable, please come to me immediately."
"I will," Elara assured her quietly.
With a final nod, McGonagall added, "Very well, Miss Willow. You're dismissed."
Elara gathered her things and exited the classroom, her thoughts swirling. The connection with her wand, the strange golden ivy, her growing understanding of her magic—it was all a lot to process. But for the first time, she felt like she was moving toward something important, something that could help her understand herself and her abilities better.
She wasn't sure where it would take her, but she couldn't deny that a sense of purpose had begun to settle in her chest.
