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#belated Crab Day
dubiousduckears · 9 months
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Just remembered I missed Crab Day, so I’m gonna send a few out now.
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wraenata · 9 months
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Oh crab, it's crabs!
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@shriekingbrainrot
Thank you so much for the crabs! Ahh sorry I'm a bit late, but now I get to enjoy crabs when I'm not so sleepy! You guys are too sweet to me! And I've made you tear up? Oh my! I hope it was happy tears! Thank you so much, I love you both! /platonic <3
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respectthepetty · 9 months
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Happy crab day!
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I'm a week late, but thanks for the crabs @clairificusrex! And thanks for always keeping me updated on upcoming BLs. You are doing a service for all of us which is not appreciated enough.
Also, I now associate you with green and brown - Earthy. Chill. Dependable. Relaxing.
So why frogs?
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nachosncheeze · 9 months
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🦀🦀🦀 THANK YOU FOR CRABS. 🦀🦀🦀
You know who you are and ily guys 💕
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atrociouscreations · 9 months
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@wanderingandfound I am having SO MUCH FUN with these crabs. Thank you so much!
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eddisfargo · 6 months
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So a friend got me tumblr crabs for Crab Day THREE MONTHS AGO, and I realized when you click it it only lasts for 24 hours and then it's gone. Making it a consumable item. So I did what I always do with consumable items, whether in games or real life:
I hoarded it.
Sometimes I thought about clicking it and actually having the fun that you are supposed to have on crab day, but then the Item would be Consumed (like a health potion, or a scented candle) and gone. And what if I needed it later??
After a couple months I totally forgot the button was there.
But today!! Completely by accident... I clicked on it.
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Not gonna lie, this is pretty fun. I could've hoarded it literally 5ever, so this mistake was probably for the best.
Happy Crab Day (belated)!
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expectodragons · 7 months
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Bitter Water || Chapter 6
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✦ Summary: Guided only by a thin paper trail and a promising job offer, Catherine Hart returns to the school of her youth. Taking on the mantle of Beasts professor, the young witch must find a balance between her lessons and her continued search of the Highlands. Especially when under the watchful eye of the Potion Master. ✦ Pairing: Aesop Sharp x Female MC ✦ Word Count: 15,500 ✦ Rating: Mature, 18+ only - minors do not interact. ✦ Tags / Warnings: Age difference, colleagues-to friends-to-lovers, dual POV, language, mild injuries, slow burn. ✦ Story Playlist: Listen here ✦ Read on: AO3 || Tumblr (continue below)
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The merriment of the holiday season had faded like warm breath on a window pane and all that remained was the bitter sting of January’s fury. It doused the valley in snow drifts higher than one’s knee. Pointed icicles threatened to plunge down upon anyone who dared walk under an archway or a line of barren trees – frozen in the silence like toy soldiers amongst the desolate winter landscape.
While Catherine found herself eternally grateful for her late Christmas gift from the potions professor, even the furious heat from the warming charm in her new gloves did little to battle off the wretched chill of the stinging wind.
She hurried through her morning chores each day – finding comfort at the Fire Crab’s enclosure more often than not, though she certainly didn’t dare to stand too close. As though she needed another third-degree burn marring her skin.
Most days the courtyard remained empty apart from the students coming to and from her class. Sometimes, she would spot the bright robes of the quidditch teams as they made their way across the snow-packed path to the pitch. In a world washed out by white and gray, the blur of color was a welcomed sight.
As she fed or groomed the Unicorns and Kneazles, she would sometimes find herself lost in the practice runs and mock games of the teams.
On one particular morning, before the sun had even fully risen, Catherine was out braving the cold. Wrapped up in the warmest clothes she could manage, her eyes alone peeking out from the soft fabric of her scarf. The last of the Mooncalves were out in their paddock, prancing through the snow when she approached with their breakfast.
She checked over all sixteen of the furry big-eyed creatures. Nora’s bandages would need changing by afternoon from the looks of it. And Harold would require another bout of supplements lest he fall ill again.
“Yeah, go on then,” she says softly, patting the head of June – the newest member of the cluster.
They disappear off into their covered enclosure – likely refusing to come out until their lunches are brought about.
With a flick of her wand, the large woven feed sack floats out from the shed and levitates across the yard to the unicorn’s paddock, where five usually stoic creatures were just beginning to rise from their slumber.
“Come on, come on. Before I catch my death, thank you.”
Sometimes, she missed the temperate weather of the lower continents. As much as she had complained of the overbearing direct sunlight during her time in the Golden Coast and Cairo, she would give just about anything for a warm ray of natural light these days.
As she begins portioning out their specially mixed feed into the long wooden troughs, she hears a distant shout from the neighboring quidditch pitch.
“Come on, Parson!”
The Gryffindor team had been out practicing before even Catherine roused to tend to the beasts. She had watched the whirl of red robes ducking in and around the stadium’s towers with a belated interest. They stood a decent chance at the Cup this year if their training was anything to go by. That was, until…
“Watch out!”
She barely has time to lift her head up when a noticeable thump crashes into the top of the classroom’s wards and bounces off into the canopy of trees before slamming down onto the forest floor.
The young professor slashes the warding in an instant and takes off towards the small figure crumpled near the bottom of a towering Scots Pine.
With her scarf now tugged down to her neck, she asks in a harsh breath, “Are you alright?”
The girl tries to roll to her side but lets out a rather pathetic moan.
“Okay, easy now.”
She takes a quick visual assessment of her positioning – nothing twisted, nothing noticeably broken – before she eases out the girl’s legs. Now fully on her back, the young player lets out a long breath, her hands resting on her chest as she stares up at the empty canopy above her.
“I’m fine… I think. Just… wind knocked out of me.”
Catherine pulls up onto her knee, staring down at the student.
“No wonder, flying like you just did.”
The girl’s eyes roam across to her, a thin smile on her face, “New broom.”
With a nod, she extends her hand out to the prone player.
“Think you can stand?”
Another jerk of her head and then Catherine’s hauling her up onto her feet. She casts a wary eye upon her, almost expecting a sudden injury to emerge. After a moment, the girl reaches down to grab hold of her forgotten broomstick – a flush creeping across her cheeks that the young professor assumes isn’t from the sharp sting of the wind.
“I… I better get back.”
“As long as you think you can manage.”
She mounts the broom, looking momentarily hesitant before she gives herself a reassuring nod and kicks off.
Catherine watches her go – swaying back and forth through the trees before she dips down over the crumbling castle wall toward the pitch. With a shake of her head, she walks back over to the paddocks and finishes up her rounds.
It just so happens that she’s walking back to the castle at the same time the Gryffindor team is trudging along – likely heading back in an attempt to grab breakfast before classes were due to start.
“The hell are we gonna do?”
A blonde-haired player lingers back alongside a stout boy who strides forward with an air of confidence.
“She just needs more training – one on one.”
“Fat lot of good that’ll do. Are you sure we can’t convince Miles to –”
“That’s a null and void conversation. Don’t even bother.”
Her eyes travel through the group – counting them all off – before she realizes one sole player is missing from the troop. She glances back at the pitch and spots a tiny blur of red still circling the stadium.
As the team heads inside, Catherine pauses near the frozen fountain.
It’s a split-second decision that has her wandering through the snow drifts away from the warmth of the castle.
Standing in the middle of the field, she watches the young girl fly lap after lap – her eyes never straying far from a small glittering winged ball of gold. Only once she’s able to nab hold of it, does she even look down to see the bundled-up witch in the center of the pitch. She swoops down just a foot away from the professor.
“So, you’re the new seeker then.”
The girl’s fingers tighten around her broom’s handle as she gives a quick nod.
“Teller, well, his Mum and Dad weren’t too happy with his last grading report before Christmas and they had Professor Weasley kick him off the team. And no one wanted to try and take on the position – he’s been on for the last five years now, you know. And, well…”
“And here you are?” Catherine surmises.
She nods again.
The young witch stares down at the third-year – spotting a familiar look in her nervous features. A soft smile graces her face as she beckons the girl forward – the two beginning to walk back to the castle together.
“You know… I was Gryffindor’s seeker in my seventh year. Never even played the game before they had me doing laps at try-outs.”
She can feel the sudden gaze at her side, “Really?”
“Mhmm. Plenty of talented players, people who knew every bit of trivia about the game – all the tactics and high-profile people on the National Leagues. Felt like I was a Porlock in a sea of Graphorns.”
Catherine glances down, spotting the curious look on the girl’s face.
“What… what did you do?”
Staring forward, toward the approaching castle doors, she replies, “I put my heart into it. Studied everything I could between classes, and started following the big teams in the papers each week. And practiced. Every free moment I could spare.”
A contemplative look befalls the young student’s features. A frizzled brow and a scrunched nose.
“I don’t know if that’d work for me.”
“Why not?”
With a steadying breath, she finally says, “I know all the moves. I follow the Harpies and the Tornadoes every play. It’s just… when I get out there with the rest of my team, I just…”
Her expression grows distant and a brief moment of understanding crosses Catherine’s mind. At last, they climb the steps to the Bell Tower. But before she can push the door open, the professor pauses.
“You know, as a fellow Gryffindor and an ex-player, I would have every right to offer my… wisdom, should your captain welcome it?”
A smile, slow at first but soon stretched wide in awe, greets her.
“Would you?”
She smiles down at the girl in return.
“I’m sure something can be arranged. Miss…?”
“Parson. Laura Parson, professor.”
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Aesop peers up from the cauldrons currently resting under a stasis charm in a secluded corner of the classroom at the sound of a gentle rapping of knuckles against the door. He finds himself fighting to contain a smile as the young woman crosses the room, beaming back at him in return.
Though classes had resumed on the fifth, he had scarcely seen the Beasts professor since her arrival back from her winter holiday in France. There had been passing words in the staff lounge, of course. A curt greeting when they happened to cross paths in the tapestry corridor. But a full conversation had been waiting in the wings ever since that last chaperoning trip to Hogsmeade together in December.
“Hello again, properly,” she smiles as she crosses the flagstones.
He watches as stray snowflakes fall from her hat and the shoulders of her cape, toppling to the floor as they leave a melted trail of droplets all the way from the door to where he stands.
“It has been some time,” he admits in his gruff tone of voice.
“Well, hopefully, what I have here will more than make up for that!”
His eyes flicker down to the bright white of her smile as she licks her chapped lips and unceremoniously deposits her leather bag on his desk. Aesop folds his arms across his chest, peering down at the pouch as she begins to pull two small containers out.
“My fifth-years just sorted these this afternoon. Don’t worry – the Gryffindors collected them while my Ravenclaws handled the actual grinding.”
He doesn’t even attempt to smother his smirk as she easily pokes fun at her own House. Grabbing hold of one of the jars, he holds it up to the candlelight and examines its contents with an assessing dark eye. The Unicorn horn was a fine white powder with barely a blemish to be found within the granules.
“It was quite lucky, actually,” she continues on, unprompted. “I noticed the beginnings of shedding Saturday evening and sure enough, this morning I had three unicorns rubbing against the fencing trying to rid themselves of their own horns. Two weeks early, at that! I just hope the other two hold on long enough for my other fifth-years to get a chance at it as well.”
Sharp gives a hum of acknowledgment as he sets the container down, “My compliments to your teaching skills, Hart.”
That makes the young witch quirk her brow as a roguish smile graces her pale features.
“Oh?”
“Clearly you’ve instructed your students well. Perhaps better than even my own attempts…” he trails off, considering the state of some of his older students under his tutelage and their inability to properly slice, dice, and grind ingredients after several years of instruction.
“Ah, that. Well, I merely explained that part of their grade for this quarter was dependent on how well their potions professor found the quality of their ingredients. That might have done the trick.”
He feels his own brows rise at that.
“I mean,” she begins twisting her fingers together as her blue eyes leave his face to gaze down at the floor.
“Creature handling is usually thought of in such limited terms, but there are so many different aspects to it that I think some of my students forget. Like harvesting byproducts for potions, or rehabilitative work, even healing situations – there’s a whole branch of veterinary work out there. It’s not just all – ”
She flaps her hands out for a moment, trying to tie together her next words as if they were an invisible item just out of reach, “– pet the Puffeskein, play with the Kneazles, and earn an Outstanding. You know what I mean?”
A half-smile graces his lips, “I believe so.”
She stares up at him then with this… unreadable expression on her face. It makes him feel both put on the spot by it and equally lost in the warmth of its intensity.
And then she smooths her hands over her trousers and says, “And on that note, I do actually need to go groom some Kneazles right now.”
Collecting her bag and resettling her powder-blue hat upon her head, Aesop watches as she prepares to leave and he finds some inner part of himself reaching out – a phantom hand trying to grab hold of the invisible strings that lay between them like dust in the sunlight. They had not shared a common space and been able to fill it with familiar conversation in so many weeks that he was reluctant to see her walk out the classroom door just yet.
Just like Mirabel, Abraham, and Dinah, he found himself drawn to her presence and welcomed the warm interactions they shared together. He could not say that for many other members of the faculty. There was just something about her that made him seek out her candor. Finding a smidgen of pride bubbling up in his chest whenever he managed to pull a genuine laugh from her lips.
“I never did thank you.”
That makes her pause mid-step as she slowly twirls back around, her face struck with an air of curiosity.
“For your gift,” he clarifies.
A rather amusing blush crosses her cheeks as she looks toward the adjacent brewing station before she meets his eyes once again.
“I know it probably seemed a bit out of place from what you usually get, or what I assume you usually get.”
He smiles down at her, resting his hands behind his back, “All the more reason I enjoyed it as much as I did.”
A swell of pride swoops through his chest at the smile she bestows upon him. And he finds himself falling down a path of rambling thoughts before he can even blink back to awareness at his surroundings.
“I assure you, Hart, it was a welcome change from the stacks of brewing books and paperweights that are typically sent my way over the holiday. I must admit, I found myself looking through the portraits well past the midnight hour that evening.”
Slowly, she lowers herself onto a stool – swiping her blue pointed hat from her head, her eyes never leaving his – as if in a trance.
“Which was your favorite, if I may ask?”
Aesop ponders this for a moment as he joins her at the empty station – this was their shared free period at the end of the day, there was little more to do now besides grading papers – with his right foot resting on the spindle of the stool and his left foot placed on the ground beside the corner of the station.
In his mind, he can see many of the images from the book in near clarity. A few notable favorites, some less so. But finally, he settles on an answer.
“A Bar at the Folies-Bergère by Manet.”
And then he blinks and he finds himself focusing in on the lazy smile on the woman’s face as she stares up at him with another unreadable thing flickering around in her crystalline blue eyes.
Clearing his throat, he asks, “Out of curiosity, do you have any opinions on the art movement?”
She straightens up, resting her hands on the table as she leans forward with this ringing air of excitement, “Yes, absolutely! While I’m partial to Monet’s Water Lily Pond, I actually favor more of Van Gogh’s work.”
“Really?” he asks, leaning forward as well – drawn in by her enthusiasm.
“Yes, his Starry Night –”
Aesop gives a playful groan, rolling his eyes for the full effect.
“Why does that not surprise me, Hart?”
Her brows pinch together, clearly taken aback, “What?”
“A typical museum-goer could point to a handful of classical renderings. The Mona Lisa, or Girl with a Pearl Earring, or… Liberty Leading the Peoplefor example, and claim it to be their favorite simply by having such a limited range of exposure to the arts.”
She bites the corner of her lip and gives a little roll of her shoulders that makes it seem as though she’s preparing for a battle on an artistic plane. He finds himself even more intrigued.
“Okay, Sharp,” she begins, leveling him with a steely gaze.
“I was about to say my favorite Van Gogh is Starry Night Over the Rhone, even though it’s typically overlooked by the more famous Starry Night painting. I find the subdued colors more appealing, for a start. And his work with the lighting is impeccable: the way he has the stars reflect off the water. And the texture! It practically jumps off the painting to the point where I feel like I could actually touch the waves as they were truly there on the canvas.”
Slowly, a curved smirk rises from his lips as he folds his hands together into a fist on the countertop.
“All right, that’s a marginally reasonable answer. But you can’t deny the fact that Van Gogh wasn’t actually an Impressionist painter.”
With an audible groan, she rakes a hand through her ice-blonde tresses, “At the beginning of his career he was! Almost every Impressionist moved onto the Post-Impressionism movement beside Monet.”
“And if I might say,” she jabs her finger on the table for emphasis. “Impressionism in itself uses color as a way to represent landscape and how light affects it. Post-Impressionism just uses color to convey emotions. You can’t tell me that Over the Rhone is a post-impressionist landscape.”
“And yet, as a whole, it is Monet who is frequently accredited with the first movement. While Van Gogh is solely recognized in the post-movement,” he surmises.
“Actually,” she interrupts. “Manet is the sole founder of the movement. Does Le Déjeuner sur l'herb ring any bells?”
Aesop finds himself momentarily stunned by the graceful way the French title falls from her lips before he grins – pressing forward with another retort. He hadn’t enjoyed a conversation this much in ages.
“Which further shows your inability to accept the fact that your precious painter is not in fact a part of the Impressionism movement itself. Merely inspired by the true artists in Paris. Was it not Van Gogh himself who admitted he was completely unaware of the style until he visited the city in 1886?”
“Well, yes, but –“
“And while one could argue that an artist’s style is capable of changing over time, perhaps it can be said that Van Gogh was never a member of the original movement, merely a user of the muted Dutch palette of the time.”
Hart shakes her head in disbelief, muttering to the table’s surface, Merlin give me strength, before she fixes her gaze on Aesop and starts back up.
“Well, one could say, that Monet became stagnant in his process of painting hazy pastel landscapes while the rest of the artists in the original Impressionism movement moved on with the times and adapted their styles accordingly. Which isn’t to say I don’t enjoy some of Monet’s work, because I do – but the point I’m trying to make is –”
A flicker of fight dies from his lips as he finds his curiosity piqued.
“And which paintings would those be?”
He watches as she exhales through her nose, the frightening height of her argument brought back down to a respectable level for polite conversation – though he almost immediately misses the blaze of determination in her eyes.
“Woman with a Parasol and Bordighera.”
With a quirk of his lip, Aesop adds in an easy, soft sort of tone, “I find myself partial to Van Gogh’s Almond Blossoms and Café Terrace at Night.”
They both stare at each other for a breathless moment before Hart tips over with her wide smile and ringing laugh – one that Aesop finds himself quick to replicate with his own low chuckle.
“So,” she wipes a stray tear from the corner of her eye, her face still flushed with laughter. “What I believe we’re both agreeing to is the fact that we’re capable of enjoying many artists despite their reported in or out status within the Impressionism movement?”
Shaking his head, unable to hide his smile, he says, “I believe so.”
He looks at her then, truly looks at her. At the near-permanent smile on her face, the flicker of amusement dancing in her eyes, and something else. Something he can’t quite put a name to – there, in the depth of her expression when she blinks and looks up at him – her closed smile growing impossibly wider.
“So…” she breathes out, giving a little shake to her head as an errant curl falls across her cheek. “Is your stance firmly settled on just Impressionism, or do you have varying opinions on other eras?”
Aesop bares his teeth in a wolfish grin, “I find Impressionism to be one of my least favorite movements, in all actuality.”
Her eyes bulge and a frown begins to form on her unblemished face.
“Not to say that I don’t enjoy it, obviously,” he makes quick to explain. “But out of several centuries worth of painting, I can hardly claim it to be my absolute favorite, now, can I?”
“Okay then,” she crosses her right leg over her left knee, leaning back to fold her arms over her chest. “Let’s hear it then. Where do your loyalties lie?”
“Baroque has its merits, of course.”
She scoffs, “If you’re interested in a darkened palette and exaggerated movement, I suppose.”
“You find fault with it?” he raises his brow, sensing another well-placed debate brewing in the downturn of her lips.
“Obviously.”
Aesop smirks, folding his own arms across his chest as he stares at her.
“Then, by all means, enlighten me. What era do you find more appealing?”
She seems to mull it over for a moment, as her tongue peeks out to wet her lips before she finally settles on: “Rococo.”
He chuckles, “You’ll argue against the merits of Monet but you find Rococo-style works to be just fine?”
With a shrug of her shoulders, she says, “I prefer the palette, for one. And the more natural movement. Baroque-era styling just feels so… dramatic; heavy. Whereas Rococo brings a more, I don’t know… easy-going sort of feeling. I suppose you’d also be so bold as to say that Classicism holds a special place for you as well?”
“Nat as much, but there are some portraits that I find… welcoming on the eyes.”
Hart gives a little nod, “And your thoughts on the Renaissance era?”
At that, he snorts, “Over-rated.”
“Oh, thank Godric,” she sighs, placing a hand over her heart as if she had expected him to tell her the worst sort of news. “You’re still capable of some common sense, that’s truly a relief to hear.”
Raising a lone brow, he dryly says, “I’m pleased to find that I’ve met your high standards.”
She lets out a short laugh, shaking her head as she says, “Hush. I was just afraid you would sit there and spew some snobbish nonsense to me about how that style is far superior to any other in the entire history of the world of art.”
“Decidedly not.”
She offers him a small smile then, flicking her gaze from his face to her hands on the countertop of the brewing station.
“So… if that’s not a favorite of yours, then what exactly would you say is?”
Aesop stares up at the curved stone arches of the classroom ceiling, pondering the question for just a moment, before he replies.
“Romanticism.”
Catherine blinks; once, then twice. Her mouth forms a curious little o shape before she presses her lips together and asks, “Really?”
“Is that somehow surprising?” he wonders, uncrossing his arms as he stares down at her – trying to place the pieces of the puzzle that was her expression.
“Well, I thought perhaps you would say something more… I don’t know, obscure? Like Tonalism or something of that nature. But, Romanticism, genuinely?”
He hums in return, finding his gaze lost in the dumbfounded look upon the woman’s face.
“Wha– uhm, what artists do you favor?”
“Well,” he lingers on this for a moment before finding the answers rather easily. “Friedrich, J.M.W. Turner, Eugène Delacroix – of course –”
“Of course,” she murmurs along.
He nods, “And, perhaps… John Constable.”
“Oh, his stuff is quite good,” she agrees.
“Indeed.”
They sit there for a moment in the draping silence of the conversation before several thoughts cross through Aesop’s mind. The first of which, he is quick to voice.
“You never said.”
At the lift of her eyebrows, he reiterates.
“Your favorite style.”
“Oh.”
Hart looks away, twisting her fingers together once again. He finds a desire to uncover the reason for the strange response. Leaning forward, offering a warm expression, he teases.
“Come now, Hart. Afraid I’ll tear apart your answer as you did mine?”
She looks up, eyes bright and alert, “No, of course not. It’s just… well, it’s not a common answer.”
He gives a little hum, “Consider me intrigued then.”
Readjusting herself on the stool, he can feel the light brush of the toe of her boot against his left knee – nothing hard, or discomforting. But a gentle press as she bounces her foot in thought.
“Have you ever heard of Ukiyo-e?”
Perhaps he had been expectant of too common an answer, some strange little movement of the American or Eastern European variety. But he has to shake his head in response, “I’m afraid I have not.
“It’s a, uhm, Japanese art style. Usually in the form of printed woodblocks. Two summers back, I was trekking through Imperial Japan, and I happened upon a village in the mountains. This muggle sutler had these blocks displayed out across a cloth sheet on the ground and I was just immediately entranced by them. The color, Aesop. It just pops off the wood. The lines were so crisp, I don’t even know how to properly describe it to you.”
She shakes her head then, giving a little laugh that seemed to stem from some sort of place of embarrassment, though for what reason he’s not sure.
“I actually have one on display, down in my room. It’s a copy, obviously.”
Aesop leans forward, steepling his index fingers together.
“How did your interest in the arts come about?”
Hart lets out a low breath, leaning back on the stool once again. Her gaze grows distant for but a moment before the electric blue of her irises meets his eyes.
“Traveling, in all honesty. Certainly didn’t have the time or funds to go to a museum when I was younger. And obviously being here at the school changed those prospects for me quite a bit as well.”
She absently chews on her lower lip, teleported back to the memories of her youth. And for a moment, Aesop is reminded of the clear and undeniable fact that the girl who was once his student is in fact a fine young woman now. He would have never imagined, nearly a decade back, that he would be sitting here with the new fifth-year having an in-depth conversation about art, of all topics.
“When I was assigned to an encampment in France, at the beginning of my tenure with the Ministry, they placed me with a man – Edmund Hughes.”
Aesop found the name familiar, but he couldn’t quite place it to any particular face in his mind.
“Anyway, we kept busy most of the days we were there. At the time, we were tracking down this aggressive Bretagne Vouivre Dragon that was encroaching far too close to a muggle town. Well, one night, we were stuck dealing with negotiators from the French Ministry who felt they were better equipped to handle the situation, even though the Department had requested our assistance with the matter in the first place. Uh, sorry. Anyway…”
She waves her hand as if to clear the memory from the air.
“Hughes knew we were stuck with our thumbs in our pockets, as it were, for likely the next week or so while bureaucratic dealings went on. Just up and decided – after downing a lovely French port of wine, of course – that we should enjoy the evening on our own terms. He rounded up our little team and we apparated to Place Cachée. Led us straight down to the Louvre.”
Hart gives another little bubble of laughter, “I had never stepped foot in a museum before that night.”
Aesop feels his own heart clench at the admission. Admittedly, his own upbringing had brought about many opportunities – perhaps a few that he hadn’t been completely grateful for at the time. Not necessarily a silver spoon sort of life, but well-off in many senses of the term.
A no-nonsense governess had given him his first introduction to the world of art at the tender age of five. He was well-versed in all the classical wizarding artists: Monsieur DeBlanc, Cetus Barringer, Andorra van Kemp. It was only thanks to his own natural pursuit of knowledge that he became acquainted with the greats of the Muggle world.
While wizards and witches had the astounding ability to create life-like moving portraits, the muggle world was restricted: forced to make a painting capture a single moment, a multitude of emotions. Aesop almost considered that feat more awe-inspiring than that of their wizarding counterparts.
“Have you been to many others since then?” He wonders, his tone softened by his musings.
“A few, if I’m given the chance,” she admits with the crack of a proper smile.
“Over your travels, have you ever found your way to the National Gallery in Trafalgar Square?”
“I’m afraid I have not,” Hart sighs in admittance.
Aesop gives a half-curved smile in return, “You should go: if you find the time to do so. I find it to be an appealing institution dedicated to the arts.”
“Perhaps I should,” she gazes up at him under the flutter of her fair-colored eyelashes.
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It was not unusual to find the Beasts and Potions professors walking together for dinner in the Great Hall most nights. In fact, it was a very common occurrence, one that the general populace rarely – if ever – took note of. In the same way, Professors Ronen and Weasley could be seen making the journey together during the lunch period. Or, in the opposite case of Professor Onai and Shah, who avoided each other like a severe case of Dragon Pox.
No, it could be said that the sight of Sharp and Hart walking into the Hall together right after the food graced the tables was nothing to pay much attention to.
But tonight, Catherine noted, several curious eyes followed their path as they breezed past the outer section of the Slytherin table. She only noticed it given the fact that she had looked away from Aesop to laugh in another chastising tone.
Their conversation from that afternoon had continued, nearly non-stop, well into the evening hour. When the final period bell had sounded for the day, they had both made attempts to resume their duties and go their separate ways. Until she made a follow-up comment to something he had said earlier in their little debate, and then they were both drawn back to the brewing station – tucked into yet another conversation.
And it hadn’t let up.
They were well past the point of reasonable small talk or friendly collegial conversation. But neither one of them seemed particularly interested in bringing an end to it. And so, it continued on, all the way to the Great Hall several hours after it had first begun.
“I find quite the inspiration from Delacroix’s printing techniques.”
She snorts, “You would.”
Sharp shoots her an amused look with another hitched eyebrow as they make it to the table, “Meaning…?”
Catherine presses past him as she finds her seat. Aesop pushes in her chair for her after she sits down before he moves to the vacant spot to her left. She stares after him for only a second more.
“Meaning…” she begins, portioning out bits of roasted garlic potatoes and rosemary-scented asparagus onto her plate. “That I find it fitting that you would see greatness in a French printmaker’s work.”
She can feel his curious expression gazing into the side of her face, though she thoroughly ignores it. There’s a bitter-sounding scoff of disbelief. She thinks she can even see the shake of his head – the billowing of his chestnut-colored hair.
“Is that all?”
Finally affording him a look, she continues, “An outdated technique is where you find your muse. You have an interest in older art movements, it’s truly not all that surprising.”
Aesop snorts, “I’m not sure I would consider it to be outdated if one could still find it in use within nearly every newspaper currently in circulation.”
She faces him then, “Printmaking, in itself, is not an outdated technique, Sharp. If it was, I most likely wouldn’t be calling Ukiyo-e a current favorite art movement. But as it is, that is a form of relief printing. Whereas what you’re referring to with Delacroix’s portfolio is lithography – a far older version of printmaking that is far less frequently in use than you’d like to believe it to be.”
With a huff of self-determined breath, she looks at her companion. There she finds the darkness of his eyes staring back at her, though there’s a warmth radiating from them that leaves her feeling less than discontent.
“And the reason you find printmaking – sorry, lithography, so foul is –”
“What I mean to say is,” she sighs, placing her spoon down and leaning towards him, “It’s rather silly that a Frenchman had taken up printmaking techniques when the near entirety of the artists in his country were devoted to oil painting at the time. Now, sketches I could understand. But where was he hoping to advance the realm of lithography?”
Aesop’s lips curve into a slight smirk, giving another shake of his head, and then he picks up his own cutlery once again, “I merely said I found inspiration in those particular works, Hart. Certainly, you can’t find fault in every statement I make.”
At that, she grins.
“I most certainly can, and will, if you keep making such ridiculous statements.”
There’s a lapse in conversation, but it lasts perhaps two bites worth of food more before it continues right back up again.
Her gaze rarely strays from the man next to her, if only for a moment to look away with a laugh spilling from her lips or to give another wry shake of her head. But, she is at least aware of the instant the noise in the hall begins to fade as the students lift themselves from the benches and begin to head toward the corridor once again.
“I believe,” she leans over to say with another tired smile. “That this is a conversation we’ll need to continue another day.”
Sharp seems to agree as he stands up and offers her a hand of help – one which she takes with a grateful look.
“Professor,” he bows his head, his eyes trailing back up to her face – focusing on her own eyes for just a second more – before he takes his leave of her, heading down the stairs and making his way out of the Great Hall.
Catherine watches him go for a moment more before she redirects her attention to the remaining faculty members. A memory of her ongoing lists of things to accomplish before the weekend jolts to the forefront of her mind when she spots Aragon pressing past Satyavati.
“Oh! Headmaster? Could I have a word, sir?”
The older man’s face lights up with curiosity.
It wasn’t a particularly common occurrence for Catherine to seek out candor with the Headmaster, if ever.
“Something I can do for you, Hart?”
Even though she was nearing thirty, standing before any sort of authority figure, like Aragon, still made her body awash with nerves. As if she was about to be on the questioning of a lifetime for some accused thing she had no part in.
“I was wondering, sir, if there were any particular rules in place that would keep an outside source – say… a professor – from assisting one of the Quidditch teams.”
That inquiry clearly takes him back, but it’s a smile that graces his face as he seems to ponder over the question.
“Well…” he drawls. “To the best of my knowledge, there aren’t any rules that keep a non-player from offering assistance to a team. So long as nothing is being done to give an unfair advantage in the form of, say… self-braking brooms or charmed uniform pieces that enable higher aerodynamics, for example. Or, obviously, the use of illegal substances such as Felix Felicis. No, I should think there would be nothing that would keep a professor from offering their help.”
He pauses for a second, giving her a bitten-down look of amusement.
“Any particular reason you asked?”
Catherine can barely contain the smile that wants to shine on her face, but she makes a valiant effort at it.
“Perhaps… sir.”
An appearance of understanding falls across his face and he gives a short nod, “Of course, of course. Send my regards to Mr. Spinnet, yes?”
He then gives her a gentle pat on the shoulder before he departs.
Schooling her features into something resembling a normal expression, she heads down to her quarts with a slight skip to her step. She had a letter to write.
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Catherine rouses even earlier that following Friday, keen to finish her work in the classroom before her meeting time with Arthur Spinnet was set to take place. Bundled up in two pairs of trousers and a heavy woolen sweater, she collects her gloves and a warm hat before she ascends the stairs to the courtyard with her broom in tow.
Just as she’s finishing up her rounds with the Porlocks, she hears the familiar warble of voices across the grounds. Grabbing hold of her broom, she wanders over to the Pitch.
Spinnet already has the team working through a series of exercises up above the field when she arrives, while the young man stands contemplatively still in the center of the stadium.
“Merlin’s balls, Bell! My gran can fly smoother than that!” he calls out to a lanky-looking boy sailing by.
With a smile, she approaches the ambitious fifth-year.
“Mr. Spinnet.”
His eyes drop back down to the ground and he quickly uncrosses his arms, extending out a hand, “Professor! Thank you for meeting with me.”
She had shared a series of three notes with the Gryffindor boy over the past week. The first expressing her willingness to aid in any form of advice or training. The second was an agreement for a day that would best suit both parties. Catherine didn’t have a first period to teach today and she was already planning on taking the free hour to massage her sore muscles after whatever hell she went through at this early morning practice.
Taking on a vigil beside the boy, she watches the team up above. Their flying was fine, by all appearances. The two chasers and two beaters flew together in near synchronicity. It was the lone, small-statured player at the rear that seemed most out of place from the rest of them.
“I stand by what I said in my first correspondence, Mr. Spinnet,” she says, keeping her eyes trained on the players overhead. “It’s not just your new Seeker who needs a spot of extra help.”
He snorts, crossing his arms once again.
“I’ll believe it when I see it, Professor. No offense, of course. But this team has been a solid front for the last three years.”
“Complacency in that idea is what is causing your stagnation, Captain. Take my word for the next two hours and we’ll see how everything plays out, as agreed upon. Yes?”
With a jerky nod, the boy shoves his fingers into his mouth and lets out a sharp whistle – alerting the players to make their descent. Once the group of six students lands and takes up a half-circle formation around her, Spinnet gives a vague the floor is yours gesture and backs up to join his team.
“Good morning,” she smiles. “I’m sure your esteemed Captain has informed you all as to why I’m here today. I come offering only advice and wish to impart a bit of time-earned wisdom upon you all. I think we can all agree, we want to see Gryffindor take the Cup this year.”
“Yeah!” two boyish voices holler at once, followed by several nods of enthusiastic agreement.
“All right then,” Catherine claps her hands together, pocketing her broom in the crook of her right elbow. “Let’s see how well you know one another’s positions, yeah?”
Several confused looks are spared her way as she assigns each player a new position. Spinnet, for his part, takes it all in stride – following upon the terms of her agreement to do this little training session with them today.
“You’re a good team – I’ve seen you practice these past few months. But a player who’s only capable of doing their position to perfection isn’t a team player. You need to know the moves of your fellow players. Anticipate how your next action affects them.”
Throwing a beater’s bat to Georgina Wilkes, one of the three chasers, she pairs her off with Cassius Diggory – one of the actual team beaters. Melinda Mason takes on the role of Keeper for Theodore Bell. While Laura Parson switches places with the team captain.
When she tosses the Quaffle into play, the ensuing match is chaotic – to say the least.
While the chasers merely have to score against a single Keeper and have no real outside interference, their technique is severely underpar. But this wasn’t an attempt to watch them fully succeed at another position, Catherine wanted to press home the point that every role on the team mattered. That they needed to work together in harmony if they stood any chance at winning.
Wilkes sends the bludger directly at Bell’s head, while Oscar Clark fumbles the Quaffle and watches it fall for several feet before Parson soars after it.
She lets them go on like this for several minutes – scoring only one singular goal in the process – before she calls them back down to the field.
“Well, that was entirely pointless,” Clark whispers to Bell.
“Was it?” she asks just as dryly.
When she’s met with a mixture of sheepish and questioning looks, she rests back on the handle of her broom.
“Mr. Clark, I would hope you would gain an appreciation for the skill it takes your Chasers to garner to successfully handle a Quaffle. Perhaps, instead of begrudging newcomers to your team, you could take a moment to offer wisdom.”
Referring to the conversation she had been privy to last week when he had been bemoaning his frustrations over the new Seeker to Spinnet, seems to make the boy blanch.
“A well-oiled team knows the intricacy of every team member’s position. If your strongest player is incapable of filling in for another, then what is the point of proclaiming you are the best team in the school?”
Giving them a purposeful look, floating to every player, she continues, “Yes, you succeeded in past years. You had wonderful victories. Don’t let that keep you tethered to mediocrity. I have watched the other teams practice – they all move in cohesion. While I can offer you tips and plays, I can not turn you into a perfect machine. That’ll be up to you to manage. But for now…”
Her eyes roam across the team until they land on Laura Parson.
“I think I agreed to teach your new seeker a move that no one else at this school knows.”
The girl’s expression immediately brightens under the glow of the morning sunrise.
After a beat, she asks, “How many of you follow the international teams?”
Bell slowly raises his hand, “Sure. I went to Sydney to watch the World Cup last year with my Da.”
A few similar nods follow his statement. Catherine gives a knowing smile.
“And outside of the largest sporting event in the game’s history?”
Silence meets her in return and she grins.
“Well, it looks like this might just be a new play for you all. Has anyone here heard of the name Josef Wronski before?”
She spends the next hour introducing Parson to the Polish tactic. It was only introduced into the world of the sport seven or so years back and hadn’t truly taken off in many places outside of its country of origin. Catherine had managed to catch a game when she was passing through the country on her way into the German Empire back in 1897.
It’s a different sort of freedom when she’s flying around the pitch with the team. While her flight times with the Hippogriffs last semester had been a liberating experience, with the wind whipping against her frozen cheeks today, she felt a determined thrill ringing throughout her body. An old sensation buried after graduation. Maybe she could convince Matilda to start up a faculty league.
“That’s it, Laura!” she shouts behind her as the girl gains speed on her. “As far as you can go, come on!”
It was a matter of zigging and zagging across the pitch before taking a sharp dive down to the field – almost to the point of crashing – before you managed to pull your broom up at the last possible second. The intention was to have your opponent crash or become so distracted that they didn’t notice the true location of the snitch.
Parson had been doing beautifully in replicating her moves and as she glanced back at Spinnet, the team captain seemed equally impressed down on the ground.
After touching back down beside him, she instructed the chasers on an old tactic that had worked for her team a decade ago. Apparently, it was one that Spinnet said had fallen out of use over the years and might just prove to be a game-changer against the other houses.
In the end, there’s a group of sweaty, exhausted, but completely exhilarated students who wave their thanks to her as they trudge back through the snow to the castle. Both Parson and Spinnet offer her another few words of gratitude, and the captain gently hints at having another possible training session in the future.
“We’ll see,” is all she says in return – beaming at the feeling of tired muscles and aching bones now plaguing her body. It wasn’t every day the twenty-eight-year-old powered through a full morning of training, after all.
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With how many paces she was putting her broom through these past few days, Catherine found herself in Hogsmeade on a blustery Saturday afternoon to purchase a new set of flying gloves. While her Christmas present from Aesop had been a true treat for the winter weather, their grip wasn’t quite what she needed for early morning training sessions with the Gryffindor team. The frost had a nasty way of clinging to the handle of her broom before the sunlight managed to melt away the ice crystals.
The wizarding village was rather emptied out for a Saturday, though she placed the blame on the dismal weather entirely.
While the Christmas season had brought the joy of shopping for friends and loved ones which enticed several people to go out and peruse the local wares, January had no such draw.
In fact, most people would prefer to stay at home near the fire if given the choice.
And she would have too if it wasn’t for the need of new gloves and a particular desire to converse with the tavern boy at the Hog’s Head again.
Though, unfortunately, Aberforth had no amount of news to share with her. A sad fact that was piling up in her private life as well. There had been nothing from any of her contacts and she was trying to place it further from her mind – devoting her attention to classes, Quidditch training sessions, and art debates (of all things).
But the fact was, Catherine was desperate for a new lead in her case. Every new smuggled shipment could be her ticket. But almost all of the major operations on the northern coast of the country had ceased shipping – finding new, hidden, locations most likely to resume their trade.
Which did not bode well for her mission.
“Oh! Professor Hart, are you headed up to the Three Broomsticks as well?”
She whips around at the call of her name over the windy street. There, near Ollivander’s doorstep, stands Mirabel all bundled up in a thick cloak and a knitted pastel scarf. Her nose is as red as a rose petal as she offers up a stiff arm in a sort of wave.
“I wasn’t planning to, no. But I couldn’t say no to a warm Butterbeer right about now,” she smiles as she crosses the street to meet the other woman.
“Honestly, I was thinking just the same,” her words form a billowing stream of frozen breath.
With a nod, she finds her arm looped through the herbology professor’s who quickly leads them both up the road to the tavern in question.
The instant rush of heat once they step through the doors feels strong enough to melt the frost that clings to their outer clothes and hair. With an almost visible sigh of relief, the two women look toward one another before eyeing the vacant table near the roaring fireplace. If ever there was a place to thaw out in front of, it would be there.
For a weekend afternoon, the inn is surprisingly empty. Another thing she’ll blame the weather for. But with ripe pickings and fast service in return, Catherine can’t find much of a reason to complain.
“Helga’s heart,” Mirabel sighs after taking a sip of her steaming drink. “I feel as if I haven’t seen you since last month. Are you usually this terribly busy?”
Catherine gives a laugh as she wipes a bit of frothy foam from her upper lip. She didn’t want the news that she was assisting the Gryffindor team in their training sessions to become common knowledge. So, instead, she comes up with another easy answer.
“No, I’m afraid the Mooncalves have kept me rather busy as of late. I don’t know how they manage to injure themselves so frequently, and yet, here I am every day bandaging up one and forcing a healing draught down another.”
“So, is that why we never see you for breakfast?”
The blonde witch gives a slight shake of her head, resting her elbows upon the wooden tabletop, “That’s all thanks to my morning chores. Even if I have a first-period class, I’m still responsible for getting the creatures sorted out first thing.”
Mirabel gives a warm chuckle, “You sound so similar to myself when I first started on. I’m not sure even Matilda could pull me from the Greenhouses before or after any of my classes. There was always something to be dealt with before my students arrived.”
“I suppose plants and beasts are almost one and the same with the sense that they require a constant form of care.”
The other witch gives a soft hum of agreement.
For a short while, as they work through their mugs of Butterbeer, the two women converse on all matters of topics. From Mirabel’s current fascination with foreign tea blends to Catherine’s assessment of Mr. Macnair and how she believes the boy will surely fail her class.
Tucked into the warm corner of the tavern, the heat radiating off of the crackling fire, the Beasts professor feels truly at ease. Even when Professors Kearney, Weasley, and Kogawa walk in. With a wave of her hand, the three women join their comfy spot in the corner of the room.
“It’s rather brisk out there today, isn’t it?” Matilda comments, rubbing her arms as a sudden chill sends her body into a shiver.
“A good sort of cold though. Good for the lungs,” Kogawa smirks, resting her arm across the back of Catherine’s chair.
“So,” Roslin beams. “What are we gossiping about then?”
Catherine gives a roll of her eyes, though her sense of amusement does not fade, “We were just trying to figure out which of our students will be repeating a year and which will fail out entirely.”
Kogawa snorts, slamming her glass down, “If we’re placing galleons on it, I’d put them all on Mr. Collins. That boy still can’t hold an ounce of control over his broomstick. It’s been almost three years’ worth of remedial classes.”
Matilda, ever the mediator, gives a courteous thin-lipped smile, “Let’s save the betting for the next quidditch game, shall we?”
“Fine then,” the flying instructor sulks, crossing her arms over her chest. “But don’t be surprised when that boy’s held back for another round of third year.”
“Oh, that boy,” Mirabel sighs – rubbing a tired hand over her forehead. “I want so badly for him to take on my help. I’ve offered afternoon sessions and everything. He’s got a thumb as black as they come, I’m afraid. Even the Tentaculas shy away from him. Please tell me he fairs better in your class, Matilda.”
The older witch gives a sigh, followed by the slightest shrug of her shoulders.
“That bad?” Catherine muses, lifting her second mug of Butterbeer to her lips.
“Well,” the Deputy Headmistress smooths out her robes for a moment as if pondering the question with great consideration. “He’s not currently at a Troll if that’s what you mean. He… oh, I really shouldn’t say this, but… he’s quite on the edge of it, as it were.”
Roslin then gives a soft cough, which causes four sets of eyes to peer over at her.
“It’s just, well, if we’re referring to Benjamin Collins, I have him every Thursday as part of the choir. He has a real talent there – quite a natural actually.”
“Hmmm,” Chiyo hums. “Maybe all he needs is a recommendation to the Academy of Dramatic Arts?”
“Not the W.A.D.A, surely?” The Deputy Head says, fully aghast.
“Why not? If he can’t fly, and he can’t care for a plant, and he’s barely passing Transfiguration –”
“Poor sod,” the Beasts professor sighs with a shake of her head as she lifts her mug to her lips once again.
Matilda’s hazel eyes seek her out, almost imploring, “You don’t have him in any of your classes, Catherine?”
“No,” she snorts. “I get the likes of Adrian Macnair – ”
The mention of the seventh-year Slytherin’s name brings about a few curious reactions: pointed disgust, a compassionate grimace, and shock – which certainly said more than words could manage.
“– and Nereus Bulstrode.”
That name also pulls a similar reaction from her colleagues.
Even though she’d been teaching for barely even five months at this point, Catherine was all too aware of the fact that those particular boys were just barely scraping by in her class. No thanks to their own prideful egos that gave them a disturbing boost of assuredness that they knew more on the subject matter than the actual creature expert.
Their behavior had become so abhorrent that she found the need to split them up during the practical lessons. Usually with one sent to muck out a pen and the other sent to handle the feed.
Some people were considered naturals in the field of beasts. Others were more interested in the academic aspects of the class. Those two, however, she couldn’t quite pin down. And that thought kept her frequently on her toes whenever they were around.
Even with students like Mr. Kettleburn, she knew her animals were in safe hands. With Macnair and Bulstrode though… well, that was still to be fully determined.
“Oh, such awful boys,” Roslin frowns, downing a shot of whiskey with not so much as even a grimace.
“Talented,” Weasley placates. “But with wasted whims, perhaps.”
“Trouble’s more like it,” Chiyo mutters.
Catherine nods, tapping her glass against the flying instructor’s, “Here, here.”
“Now, now,” Matilda chides lightly. “It is our role as educators to guide them down a higher path. Not just forsake them to the wolves.”
“Wolves would be a merciful fate,” Chiyo snorts into her ear, causing Catherine to cover her mouth with her hand to avoid openly laughing.
“Matilda,” the music professor laments in a drawn-out whine, her accent coming out in longer grasps as she finishes off a third shot. “Ye can’t exactly fault us in our beliefs when someone like Abraham even finds nothing of promise to say about ‘em.”
“If it came from Aesop, perhaps it’d be more understandable,” Mirabel chimes in.
The young witch feels her brows rise as she quickly butts in, “Why’s that?”
From across the table, the redhead meets her gaze with a rather curious quirk on her lips, “Well, Aesop never speaks too highly of any particular student – even within his own house. It takes a true talent to get him to sing any sort of praise.”
“A certain Hero of Hogwarts, you might say,” Matilda grins none-too-subtly as she sips from her glass.
“Now that I find serious doubt with –” she starts to say.
“Oh no, it’s quite true. It must have been after the well…” Mirabel blinks, clears her throat, and changes her angle of approach. “After your fifth year. I think all of our opinions of you changed quite a bit, Catherine.”
At that, she stares down into the bottom of her mug where a thin layer of amber-colored drink resides.
Her silence must settle a little too heavily over the group because Matilda is quick to clear her throat, “So, what are the going bets for next week’s game? I want to know who’ll be going up against me this round.”
She drowns out the debate over the two teams – Gryffindor and Slytherin, quite the infamous match-up if ever there was one.
Instead, she shuffles the glass between her hands. Letting the warm drops of condensation slip between her fingers as she contemplates the earlier conversation. The title had followed her up until graduation, even trailing a little further on to her job at the Ministry. In fact, it had been some time since she had last heard the name being directed her way.
The name, that silly godawful name that the Prophet had coined twelve years back, had taunted her. She certainly hadn’t felt much like a hero in the aftermath of the repository battle.
Catherine raises her near-empty mug in agreeance when Matilda claims Gryffindor will be victorious, but otherwise keeps to her thoughts for the remainder of the meet-up.
So much has changed since then. Perhaps too much.
From a factory girl to a witch overnight. Destined to fight a war she didn’t know she was signing up for. Taking on a goblin rebellion at fifteen. Was it any wonder her professors looked at her differently after Fig’s memorial? They had been truly oblivious to her… extracurricular activities at the time.
Maybe they just thought she held promise – discovering magic so late on in life and having to work incredibly harder than her peers to catch up to five years worth of studies.
But no. She had just been fooling them all. Taking classes by day, a few supplementary lessons here and there to catch her up to speed, and then there she was taking down poacher encampments and goblin mining facilities by nightfall.
Was that the act of a hero or an act of reckless insanity?
Even after all this time, she’s still not entirely sure.
“We really must do this again,” Mirabel smiles as the five women finally push up from their seats, grabbing hold of their cloaks.
Matilda nods, “This was quite fun, really. Just us girls.”
Catherine hums in agreement as she wraps her blue cloak back around her shoulders. Pulling her chestnut-colored gloves from within her pocket as she braces herself for the bitter wind outside of the tavern’s sanctuary.
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The swoop of wind catches her breath as the tip of her broom handle slams into the ground, rocketing her forward into a somersault that leaves her head aching and her bottom even worse off.
“Professor!” someone screams from behind her.
With a quick shake of her head, she brushes her tangled curls from her eyes and peers up at the triumphant smile of the young third-year floating just a few feet above her.
“You pull that off tomorrow, and you’ll be sure to win,” she smiles.
It takes a moment, pushing up onto her left foot before she manages to fully stand upright once again. Oh, there were certain to be bruises come morning.
“Are you all right?” Melinda Mason questions with a clear voice of concern.
Catherine supposes it would be rather unfortunate to be the cause of injury for one of your professors. But she turns and gives the girl a warm smile.
“I promise that I’m quite well, Ms. Mason. I have sustained far more grievous injuries in my time than a flying fumble.”
As Parson dismounts, holding the snitch in her tight grasp, the Beasts professor surveys the team with a pleased eye and a nod of approval.
“I think you’re all more than prepared for the game. But, if I may offer a final parting piece of advice?”
Spinnet nods quick and sure. The young captain had, admittedly, surprised her. She had expected a certain cockiness, perhaps similar to her own team captain back in her seventh year. But this boy was destined for something great in the future, she was sure of it.
“Never underestimate the power of deception.”
When she’s met with a sea of confused looks, she elaborates.
“If you come into the Hall acting like you’re the kings of the game, they’ll double down even harder to get you knocked out of the match. But, if perhaps, a rumor was to be placed around the school… your dismay at the prospects of your new player, or the state of your team without your old seeker? Then their guard will be lowered and you’ll have the higher ground when it comes to the actual game. They won’t know what hit them.”
Sly smirks and secretive glances finalize her words into a proper plan. To be fair, her advice had been intended to bolster the team, but it would also give her and Matilda a bit of advantage with the betting that was to take place in the faculty stands tomorrow.
But the Gryffindor players certainly didn’t need to know that fact.
Her advice clearly met the landed mark she had hoped it would, as when she appears in the Great Hall the following morning for breakfast – passing by the Slytherin table – she notes that the green team is looking particularly smug as they sit together. While the Gryffindor team is dispersed across the length of their table, looking thoroughly annoyed with one another.
Catherine knew it was an act, despite what the rest of the populace would believe.
She had watched the way that they had bonded these past few weeks during their training sessions. Parson had been accepted as part of the team and their synchronicity was almost unparalleled.
“Ah, Hart. What a rarity.”
Offering a smirk toward the potions professor, she takes her seat beside him.
“It would be a shame if I was ever fully predictable.”
She can feel his turned gaze upon the side of her face as she fills up her bowl with porridge and syrup. His black coffee steams in a mug beside her left hand, the aroma of roasted beans filling her senses.
“Would it be right to assume you’ll be attending the match today, or would that be too predictable?” he muses in a rich, gravelly tone of voice.
“No, in this case, it would be completely predictable. And rightfully so. I intend to watch the dismal expression that will crest your face when Gryffindor wins.”
His warm chortle feels like wading through honey.
“Oh, quite the optimist today, aren’t you?”
She hums in return, savoring another spoonful of her warm meal.
“Is it wrong to have pride in one’s house?”
“Maybe not. But if you have any intention of keeping your money purse full, perhaps you’ll avoid the betting pool this time around.”
Catherine lets her gaze fall upon his dark eyes for a moment, as she sighs, “Meaning…?”
Aesop scooches his dish forward, the plate nearly cleared of his breakfast, “Well, if you must know, word travels rather quickly through the castle; even in the dungeons. Though perhaps you don’t hear it all the way out there in your paddocks.”
She blinks, curious to see where this will go.
“The prevailing rumor seems to be that your team has had quite the trouble filling their seeker position after the holidays. In fact, I don’t even think they’re speaking to the poor girl,” at that, he points his chin toward the Gryffindor table where Laura Parson is sitting, dutifully, alone – pushing her eggs around her plate.
Playing the part exceptionally well, actually.
Catherine snorts, returning to her meal, “I never placed much faith in rumors, Sharp.”
“Yes,” he murmurs. “Of that, we’re quite in agreement.”
Their conversation takes a momentary lapse as the sound of owls hooting in the rafters takes their focus. The great birds swoop down over the tables, depositing mail and packages. A large gray owl drops a rolled-up Prophet onto Aesop’s empty plate. Nothing arrives for Catherine, much to her dismay.
She had been hoping today would be the day she would get another tip-off.
Pulling the twine free, she watches as the potions professor unfurls the newspaper. On the front page, a rather large moving image captures her attention – making her lean across the table, shoving her head beside his shoulder, to peer at the article.
SON OF MERLIN KILLER CAPTURED
There, on the front page, the repeating image of the distressed-looking man with his hands tied behind his back with shimmering strings of magic screams on the front steps of a dark shopfront. Beside him stands two stoic-looking Aurors in their work robes and the very familiar face of one of her dearest friends.
“That’s Natty!”
Sharp seems to scrutinize the image for a second more before he looks across the staff table.
“Mudiwa, you might wish to seek out your own copy of the Daily Prophet.”
The seer smiles, waving her hand in dismissal, “Bah, I already know all about that.”
“Of course,” Catherine groans – the woman probably knew about it weeks before it even happened.
“Natsai sent me a letter last night. She wished to keep me from happening upon it myself in the morning edition.”
Oh, well, that was slightly surprising.
“Shall we be expecting the wedding invitations soon then?” the young witch calls out to her.
Mudiwa merely offers her a knowing smile as she resumes drinking her tea.
Aesop offers her a bemused look before the two of them begin to read the article together. He at least has the courtesy to angle it to the right so she can see it without straining too far out of her seat.
“A man has been arrested in Knockturn Alley in connection to a series of killings that have plagued the Great London area for the past year, authorities announced in an interview with the press late Friday evening.
Robert Dryer, 38, was arrested overnight while “out celebrating,” said lead investigator Natsai Onai in an interview with the Daily Prophet with Minister for MagicVenusia Crickerly and Head Auror Simon Hendrick. He was discovered outside of The Golden Thestral pub in an inebriated state where he was heard, by passersby, saying he was going to “carve up every [redacted slur] witch this side of the Channel.”
Dryer is facing several charges in regard to the 47 bodies that have been discovered in the city baring what investigators called his “signature” – a series of dark runes that Dryer burned into all of his victims. The last victim, a Miss Eugenia Drood, 25, was found near the banks of the River Thames, which required the assistance of Obliviators after the local Muggle police force happened upon her branded body.
Aurors confirmed that he is the sole suspect at this time.
During the interview, Investigator Onai revealed that Dryer has lived in London for nearly six years. He has a criminal record, though Aurors did not reveal the details of his past crimes.
According to trustworthy sources, Dryer holds criminal convictions in both Scotland and England for charges such as: performing magic in front of Muggles, improper use of Horklumps, drunkenness in a public venue, and destruction of private property.
Minister Crickerly said that the public will now be able to move on without fear and that public safety is her number one concern after obtaining office.
“Let it be known, to the people of Great Britain, your world is safer now than it was yesterday. When the wizards and witches in our community work together with our law enforcement agencies, anything can be accomplished. The scrum of society will be cleaned off our streets and people will know peace once again.”
Dryer will be facing trial at a later date while he is held in Ministry custody. Head Auror Hendrick said that the Wizengamot is working to determine the charges against him.
Officials are still unsure of the extent of his intentions behind the killings but said his patterns were consistent.”
“Godric’s heart,” Catherine sighs in disbelief as she watches Natty’s stern, but clearly pleased, expression as she watches the other Aurors lug Dryer down the steps, over and over again.
“I’ll be surprised if he’s not sent for the Kiss itself after his trial.”
“Or,” Catherine nods. “If you don’t see one of the victims’ family members trying to enact justice beforehand.”
Aesop gives a sullen hum of agreement, folding the paper in two.
“What horrid business,” she finally settles on, pushing the paper as far away from herself as she can manage.
“But, he’s in custody now. At least tonight the people of London can rest easy.”
“And perhaps receive some justice in a few months’ time,” she adds.
Sharp gives a nod, “Indeed.”
Looking out over the hall once again, Catherine notices the empty seats dispersed across the tables as more and more students head out into the corridor.
“The match should be starting within the hour,” Sharp comments dryly, offering her a pointed look.
The change in conversation washes over her like a cleaning charm, pulling with it the awful images that the article had created in her mind.
Allowing a teasing smile to befall her lips, she looks over at him, “Well then… shall we?”
Sharp stands before she can even scoot her chair back, pulling it away from the table for her as he offers up yet another hand of assistance.
On the way out to the pitch, wrapped in a warm cloak and a fur-lined coat, respectfully, they pass by several students on their way to the stadium. With painted red and gold or silver and green faces, carrying felt flags, and large hand-made banners. She can hear cheers for both teams from large groups of teenagers.
“We are the Lions!”
“Mighty, mighty Lions!”
“We’ll kick your arse in!”
“Better flying Lions!”
“They really could do better than that,” she teases, looking over in Sharp’s direction to gauge his reaction.
The potions professor shakes his head, calling out over the large pack of students, “That’ll be twenty points, Mr. Bartlett, for the use of foul language!”
The boy in question flushes a brilliant shade of red as his friends all tug him in, ragging on him like he’s a triumphant gladiator in the ring and Sharp is nothing more than a maniacal Roman emperor.
“Twenty points, really?” Catherine gently pushes against his right arm. “Are you just trying to start a feud before we even get there?”
Sharp scoffs, glancing down at her, “I don’t recall hearing any Slytherins shouting profanities at the top of their lungs, Hart.”
No, they were more than likely setting up dungbombs in the Gryffindor stands before the match began. Or perhaps enchanting a cloud of rain to follow around certain students. Gryffindors, for their part, were loud and brash when it came to their gloating. Slytherins were far more subdued and tactful about their approach.
The path to the pitch is slick with ice. The recent snowfall masked the dangers, though many students were wise enough to press through the drifts along the sides of the path instead.
Catherine was barely that lucky, as she felt her boot glide across the frozen ground with absolutely no traction. Her heel lifted up and nearly sent her tumbling backward if not for Sharp’s quick hand flying out to catch her arm.
She stares at the blanket of gray sky above her as snowflakes begin to settle across the grounds. Her chest heaves with the exhilaration of almost falling when she looks over at her savior.
He chuckles as he pulls her upright, “Careful.”
She blinks once, twice at him before the embarrassment clouding her vision simmers.
“I do endeavor to be, Sharp.”
“Of course,” he smirks, offering his arm to her once again.
She lets her gloved fingers grip the fabric of his gray coat sleeve before they begin forward. The journey is slow-paced. Not just in thanks to the man’s noted injury, for once. But it doesn’t matter, as only a portion of the stadium is filled out when they arrive at the faculty’s section.
Together, they find a spot to sit in the center of the allotted seating, where a clear divide can be drawn once the other professors join them.
Rubbing her gloves together, Catherine pulls her cloak tight over her shoulders so it can drape across her knees which she presses together as the wind picks up over the valley. Beside her, Sharp radiates off a warm aura of heat that she finds herself leaning into.
They do not speak, as there is nothing further to stumble through. The silence is comfortable, as it usually is between them. And she can sense his gaze when he looks down at her over the bridge of his nose. She can feel the rumble in his body when he clears his throat, or the press of his foot against her own.
Slowly, one by one, familiar faces make their way up the stairs. With the majority of the staff choosing to sit beside Sharp, showing their clear favoritism in the betting pool this time around.
Next to Catherine, Matilda, Mirabel, and Mudiwa find a spot to sit. Maybe it would be more apparent where the outcome of the game was set to lie when the noted seer chose your team. But alas, she watches as the rest of the staff fills up the left side of the wooden benches.
“All right, all right,” Roland beams as he stands on the lowest level of the stands. “Let’s hear the bets, people!”
The blonde witch watches as her colleagues quickly place their easy bets for the match.
“Put me down for 10 galleons, Sterling,” Crestwell grins, leaning back on the bench as he nudges Waterford.
“And eight for me, please.”
Sharp glances down at her, “You still have time to switch sides, Hart.”
She fixes him with a sturdy glare before she calls out, “Forty galleons on Gryffindor!”
“Forty?” Sterling exclaims, furiously writing it down on his pad of paper. “Willing to risk it all today, are you?”
Catherine settles back on her seat with a knowing look at the stadium. She can feel Aesop’s warm breath on her left shoulder as he stares down at her with a scrutinizing eye.
“What do you know?”
With the most innocent of expressions, she looks up at the potions professor.
“Me? Why, nothing more than house pride, Professor.”
Sharp lets out a huff of breath, biting his tongue as he looks away, “That remains to be seen.”
“Mark me down for twenty galleons, Roland, if you would please,” Matilda says in a rush of excitement, looping her arm through the Beasts professor’s.
Perhaps Aragon had let his Deputy Head in on Catherine’s plans to assist the Gryffindor team after all. And what could a true lionheart like Matilda Weasley do if not place down a heavy amount of money on her house’s team?
Mirabel, noticing this, quickly adds twenty-five galleons to the pot and offers a cheeky wink at them both.
The other faculty members, sitting firmly on the Slytherin side of the staff tower, fix the three women with equal looks of bewilderment and – in Sharp’s case especially – suspicion. But Catherine merely holds onto Matilda’s arm as the student announcer settles into place.
“Welcome to the first match of the new year: Slytherin versus Gryffindor!”
Cheers of enthusiastic team pride ring out through the stadium and she can’t help but smile as the wind picks up – sending her blonde locks billowing backward – as fat snowflakes rain down on the pitch.
The dark green robes of the Slytherin team fly out first, in a perfect arrow formation as they glide past their house members down in the lower stands. Beside her, she can barely make out the predictions being laid out by the male professors, though Sharp remains oddly silent. With his arms fixed across his chest, he flexes his fingers as he watches the students slow to an easy glide in the center of the pitch.
What starts out as a dull throb of noise turns into raucous shouts as Gryffindor soars out onto the field in a surprisingly synchronized V-formation with Spinnet leading the charge.
They fly directly over the heads of the Slytherin team – earning more cries of excitement – before they turn into a left-flanked spiral, breezing past the Slytherins in the stands. They turn their heads away in a clear sign of disinterest as they zoom towards the opposite side of the stands where the noise level is at its highest.
Red and gold banners blur together as the student section cries out.
Catherine can’t help but clap in delight, sharing an equally excited look with Matilda who gives a quick shout of encouragement toward the team.
As Kogawa flies out into the center of the pitch – her light-colored robes barely visible against the beginning of a true blizzard – Sharp leans toward her. Lowering his mouth close to her ear so that his words can be heard over the noise.
“What did you do?”
She glances over at him with another doe-eyed blink, “Why, whatever could you mean by that?”
“Mhmm,” he murmurs, eyes trailing back to the start of the match.
The young witch beams when he pulls back, unable to contain her joy.
“And it’s an immediate fight for the Quaffle as Captain Cygnus Black secures the ball! Ooh, that’s quite a hit by Macnair – Gryffindor better watch their backs this match. The Slytherin team will not be holding back this time.”
Catherine can feel her breath catch in her throat as Black soars past, nearing the goalposts. But as the storm picks up, Bell swoops down and kicks the Quaffle away before it can make it through the hoop.
“Yes! Come on!”
“Spinnet’s in possession of the Quaffle now. Can the Gryffindor captain keep a better hold of it than Black? Here come Mason and Wilkes, forming a blockade on either side of their captain. Will Slytherin be able to break it down?”
Warrington and Macnair team up, smacking one of the bludgers at the trio of chasers, but Cassius Diggory flies up at the last moment and sends it right back at the two Slytherin beaters.
“Gryffindor scores! That’s ten points on the board!”
Matilda lets out a whoop of pure thrill at the announcement. Catherine can’t even look away to spy on her fellow colleagues’ faces as the three Gryffindor chasers begin tossing the ball back and forth between each other.
“Tabitha Walsh is on a collision course with Spinnet, and she – yes! She has the Quaffle. Quite the nasty concussion for the Gryffindor captain.”
A line of Slytherins careens down across the lower half of the pitch, avoiding the Gryffindors who were soaring much higher above them. But as they approach the goals, they’re slowly picked off one by one as Wilkes kicks Cygnus Black directly in the stomach – sending the poor boy spiraling into a freefall – with the Quaffle back in her safe grasp.
“And that’s another ten points!”
Blasts of ice and freshly fallen snow are tossed up into wide arcs across the stands as the players fly past – desperate to maintain a hold of the ball for more than a minute. Catherine’s cloak is coated in a thin layer of snow and flakes dangle from her eyelashes as she blinks furiously to see through the blinding white blizzard.
“Yes!” Aesop gives a sharp call, followed by thunderous claps as Slytherin makes their first goal of the game.
She glances over at him, at his newly decorated snow-white beard and hair. The flakes cling to the fur of his coat, though he doesn’t seem to mind as he squints to see through the storm.
“Third-year seeker Laura Parson has spotted the snitch!”
Catherine freezes in her spot as she watches the blur of red robes soar across the stadium at lightning speeds, with the trailing of green not too far behind her. And then, to the gasps of shock from the stadium, she takes an immediate nosedive next to the Slytherin’s central goalpost.
Swirling around the metal pole, she drops to dangerous heights with the Slytherin seeker immediately on her tail.
With a giant whoosh of snow flying up on either side of her, Parson pulls up at the last possible second. Even having a moment to spare as she looks behind her, just in time to see the other seeker slam into the ice-covered ground.
“Marcus Vance is out! And, what’s this? Has Parson lost sight of the snitch?”
An immediate grin of victory crosses Catherine’s face when she realizes that the young seeker had just played the entire stadium, as she leisurely glides past, offering a wave to the Beasts professor in the faculty stands.
“What on Earth –” Matilda begins, staring at her with wide brown eyes.
“That was the Wronski Feint.”
“Oh! How clever!”
“Yes,” Sharp sneers to her left, fixing her with a pointed dark gaze. “Very clever.”
Before she can form a proper retort, the announcer calls out yet another goal for the Gryffindor team.
“That was a close call for Parson! Macnair is not happy that their seeker’s been fooled.”
With bated breath, Catherine watches the back and forth as the two green-robed beaters send bludger after bludger at the Gryffindor team. Determined to strike one of them out of the match entirely. After Parson’s little play, the other team holds absolutely no punches back as the game becomes increasingly bloody.
By Gryffindor’s seventh goal, Spinnet is sporting a blooming purple bruise over his right eye and Wilkes has a massive seeping cut across her cheek. Bell gives a roar as he slams the Quaffle right back into play, repelling yet another attack from the Slytherins.
Warrington goes after the Keeper then, zooming past the rest of the players as he sends the next bludger directly at Bell. It slams into the boy’s helmet, tossing him back into the goal and he nearly slips off his broom.
Dangling by a single hand, Cygnus Black manages to throw the ball through the right-hand post before the Keeper manages to straddle his broom once again – a clear face of annoyance on his features as he claps his hands together, ready for another assault.
“That was a little too close for comfort,” Matilda worries her hands together, watching with a concerned gaze as Spinnet soars past Berle and Walsh – knocking the Quaffle from her hands.
“That’s eighty to twenty! It’s anyone's game now with the snitch still in play. Though how anyone can see it out there in all this mess is a mystery to this announcer!”
Catherine couldn’t agree more as the sky opens up with another torrential downpour of thick snowflakes that nearly whites out the entire pitch. Her body shivers against the bitter sting of the prevailing wind – even under the canopy of the tower. She holds onto Matilda’s arm even tighter as Mason goes careening past – having been hit with a bludger straight to the back.
The girl slams into a neighboring tower, ripping through the outer fabric, before falling several stories down to the ground. Her unconscious form topples out onto the snow-covered pitch. Both her and Matilda stand up then, peering over the edge of the stands with gasps of worry.
“Gryffindor’s now one chaser down, but Spinnet isn’t calling for a substitute! He’s barreling toward Black now with clear intent! Yes, ooh, that’s quite the hit! Another ten points!”
Blainey, down on the ground, bundled up in a thick red coat, levitates the seventh-year girl off the pitch on a stretcher as the match continues on above them.
“Kogawa has called on a foul on Macnair! That’s five points from Slytherin and the Quaffle is back in Wilkes’ possession!”
Blasting through one another, the chasers battle for the ball. The duo of Black and Berle manage to toss Slytherin ahead two more goals, while Diggory and Clark send an onslaught of bludgers at the opposing chasers. Their keeper, Rosier, ducks out of the way to avoid a particularly powerful swing, giving Spinnet another shot at the goal.
“Vance has spotted the snitch!”
Her gaze flies across the pitch just in time to catch the Slytherin seeker soaring after the tiny ball that even her own eyes can’t quite see through the whipping winds of the snowstorm.
Like a shot of lightning, Parson takes off after the boy.
“Come on, come on,” she mutters under her breath, standing up to watch as they travel across the pitch – circling the blue and bronze flag of one of the Ravenclaw towers.
Shoved together, side by side, the two seekers zoom past – sending up an arc of frigid cold winter air. Catherine cranes her neck to follow their path. Up and over the Slytherin goal posts, down into a near nosedive in the center of the pitch. Parson leans forward, her arm extended out.
“Warrington has sent a bludger at the seekers! Did he intend to knock out his own teammate? And there goes Black, soaring after them both – what on Merlin’s magic does he plan to do?”
Vance kicks at Parson’s broom, sending the girl off course for just a minute before she manages to righten herself back. Behind them both, Cygnus Black is flying at breakneck speeds to catch up to the pair.
Pulling her hands together to her lips, Catherine mutters a silent prayer.
Black slams his foot into Parson’s broom, giving her side a shove as well.
“In a never-before-seen move, Captain Cygnus Black has doubled up with the Slytherin seeker to nab the snitch!”
Beside her, Aesop and the rest of the faculty stand, watching as the Gryffindor team throws the Quaffle to the ground and zooms down in an immediate dive formation after the two players in green.
Vance jerks his broom to the left, before making a near 180° turn. Shouts of anger and determination can be heard from the cheers of the student section as Spinnet throws himself off of his broom and tackles Black in midair. Kogawa’s whistle blows, but no one on the pitch pays any heed to it. Diggory slams his bat into Vance’s broom, just as the rest of the Slytherin team joins the fray.
“Fucking hell,” Sharp swears from beside her and it shocks Catherine so much to hear the potions professor properly cuss that she swivels her head around to stare at the man.
He shakes his head in disbelief as Macnair sends a bludger at Wilkes' head, with the poor girl barely being able to twist her broom out of the way, just for the vicious ball to slam into his own teammate’s right arm. Tabitha Walsh gives a howl of pain as she loses grip on the handle of her broom – falling to the pitch as the madness of the other players plays out over the top of her.
Kogawa charges down to the mess – trying to grab hold of arms to pull the students off one another, but she gets kicked back much to the absolutely outraged look on her face.
And, on the other side of the pitch…
“Vance and Parson are in a sprint to the snitch! Not that the rest of their teams have noticed!”
No, in the chaos of the other players trying to bludgeon one another to death, only Spinnet had managed to look up for a second – before Warrington slammed his fist into the captain’s head – to notice the two seekers.
“Yes, yes!” she cries, watching as the two robes of red and green blur together across the spray of blinding white snow.
But Vance slams into Parson’s side and the girl’s grip on her broom slips and she tumbles off the side, over a hundred feet in the air.
Catherine grips Aesop’s arm, slamming a hand over her mouth.
Laura feebly flings her arm out, kicking her legs as she tries to regain control over the broom, but Vance twists to the side – pressing into her once again, and then the seeker falls.
Matilda lets out a cry and Mirabel gasps as they watch the girl, with one hand still on her broom, fall for several feet.
The stadium grows silent as she careens to the ground just before she manages to righten the handle and twist her body in such a way that she straddles the broom once again.
Followed by many cheers from the Gryffindor stands, Catherine finally feels like she can let out a single breath of relief.
Parson flies down, managing to surpass Vance who is still several feet above her, reaching her hand out just in time to nab something from the air!
“After her almost death plummet, Parson has caught the snitch! Gryffindor wins, 270 points to Slytherin’s 65!”
Matilda immediately grabs her arm, pulling her off of Sharp, as she hugs the younger professor with nothing short of pure happiness.
Across the stadium, cheers of joy ring out. With the announcement, the scuffle on the pitch finally comes to an end with the majority of the players looking far worse than a normal game would cause. Kogawa has both Spinnet and Black by the arms, tugging them down to the ground before unceremoniously dragging them off the pitch with cries of discomfort.
But Catherine can’t stop smiling as Parson does a quick lap around the pitch, holding the snitch up like a trophy. When she comes past the staff’s tower, she does a little bow to the Beasts professor – which Catherine gives right back to her in return.
“So, you’re to thank for their sudden abilities,” Sharp muses in a thin voice as he peers down at her.
“Well, as far as the official rule book goes, there’s currently nothing in place to stop a professor from aiding a team. Didn’t you know?” she gives him a wink before she turns back around to Matilda to give a little squeal of delight.
In the end, Sterling dismally hands the three women forty-seven galleons, each. She finds it a little bit funny that Sharp gives her a bemused smirk as she pockets her winnings, but he says nothing further to her.
Together, Catherine and Matilda walk arm-in-arm back to the castle, following the roaring cheers from the crowd of Gryffindor students who swarm the victorious and bloody team.
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super-predictable98 · 3 months
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The Galaxies of Gallifrey
Chapter 2: This is Ace
Word Count: 1,8 k
Warning: SPOILERS FOR THE GIGGLE
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2023: Guarujá, Brazil 
"Not bad, huh?" The Doctor stepped out of the TARDIS and then held his wife's hand as she followed. "Seems like a nice place. Perfect for our very very very belated honeymoon. Do you like it?"
"I love it, Doc," Gallifrey wrapped her arms around his neck and kissed him lovingly. "I can't believe we are finally getting some peace and quiet... it's like a dream." 
"We just gotta keep the TARDIS nearby to translate for us, Portuguese is not one of the languages I speak."
"But I do," she nudged his arm. "My father was Brazilian. I've been here before, that's why I suggested it." 
"You have? What other secrets have you been keeping from me?" The Doctor stared at her in disbelief. 
"Guess you'll have to find out... if I remember correctly, there was a pizza place with the best pizza in the world, we can order that later. And I need to find the Cafe I used to go to, they have the most divine cake, just a ferry ride away. Oh, look! The bakery and the newsstand are still here, it's been ages!" 
"Alright then, for once you're the one leading the expedition," he chuckled as he looked around, taking in the scenery and the delicious smell of the sea.
"How about we have a walk on the beach then? I miss it so much." 
"Sounds good, but we need to be careful. I don't want sand in the TARDIS."
"We don't need to go back to the TARDIS so fast... My grandma has a flat right there, we can stay for as long as we want."
"Gal! What else don't I know about my wife? A whole flat? We'll need to bring Mel, Donna, and the family sometime."
The couple held hands and made their way to the seashore. For the first time in their lives, they felt normal, a normal couple enjoying their time together without worries. 
"Are you going mad already? Regretting your decision?" Gallifrey asked before picking up a shell off the sand hoping to find a hermit crab inside.
"Not one bit, this is our new adventure. Living one day after the other, having our family, finding jobs, buying a house, having your mother over for dinner, visiting Donna... I never thought that's what I wanted, but I've been fighting all those battles and now I know what for. I've never been so happy in my life," the Doctor smiled, genuinely satisfied with the feeling that he was exactly where he was meant to be.
"Speaking of my mother, we should probably call her soon, she's been worried. I can't imagine her as some fearless, rebel adventurer."
"Your mother was insane, she wasn't scared of anything! Well, almost anything. I often had to tell her to back down, or she would've exploded the universe already."
"That doesn't sound like her at all! I need to see this side of her... I admit I'll miss adventuring, we had some awful times but some really good times as well. We can never forget it, never let these memories die." 
"Don't worry about that, I have an exceptional memory, I remember every second with you," he wrapped his arm around her. 
"Every second?" 
"Every second." 
*
Late 2006: London 
Gallifrey Gale McShane woke up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat, her Charitable Earth shirt was soaked and she cried. She sobbed uncontrollably, enough for her head to hurt.
"Mama!" 
"Gallifrey!" Dorothy barged into the room and took her daughter in her arms. "Gallifrey, what's wrong? Are you hurt?" 
"It hurts, Mum! It hurts my heart! My chest feels like it's on fire." 
"Did you have a nightmare, sweetie?" 
"Not really..." she took a deep breath and coughed before being able to talk. "There was a beach in Norway, the Bad Wolf Bay, there was a blonde girl, she was crying. There was the man in a suit, he disappeared. I don't know what I was looking at, but I know it hurt. It was forever." 
"Forever? What was forever?" 
"Their goodbye." 
"Aw, Galli... it was just a dream. You're always dreaming of the man in the suit, he can't hurt you."
"I don't think the man will hurt me, Mama, he wouldn't. But I can't reach him, he's in my dreams and I can't reach him. I feel like I'm meant to be there, I'm not meant to be here!" 
"You're meant to be in your dream with the man?" Dorothy chuckled. 
"Yeah! He's... he's the answer." 
Gallifrey was a very sensitive girl, she had just turned 20 and had plans to start university pretty soon. She wanted to study history and maybe teach or... or end up working in her mother's charity as Dorothy always had planned, no pressure of course. 
"Sweetheart, you're half asleep, you're not thinking straight. Just let me get you a new shirt, and you can get some sleep. The man in the suit won't come back." 
"That's what I'm scared of. He needs to come back. He can't leave me here." 
"Mummy's here, love," Dorothy kissed her forehead. "Now let's get some rest, big day at the charity tomorrow." 
Gallifrey switched her shirt and fell back against her pillow. It had been over a year since she started having those dreams. Dreams of other worlds, time travel, aliens... and love.
The next morning Gallifrey was feeling very tired, she wasn't able to rest at all. Not after that dream. She just cried and cried for hours until she practically passed out. 
"How are you feeling, Galli?" Dorothy asked. 
"Like hell." 
"I'm sorry, do you wanna skip the event today? Get some sleep." 
"I can't sleep right now. I wanna go, it'll keep me distracted. Just give me ten minutes and I'll be ready." 
Gallifrey fixed her hair in a ponytail, she put some makeup on and a dress. It was December so her mother warned her to get a coat. 
"Can I borrow that blue one you have?" She asked. "It's the only one that matches this dress."
"Of course, it's in the wardrobe," Dorothy mindlessly said.
The wardrobe looked the same, it had the same clothes as always, but this time... this time Gallifrey's hand didn't find the blue coat, instead it was instantly attracted to the very back where she found a black jacket covered in patches and pins.
"This is so cool," she breathed before putting it on. "Wow, who knew Mum could be cool?" 
Having that jacket on felt different, it felt electric. So much energy surging through her and she had no idea why... couldn't possibly be the jacket. Right?
*
Early 2006: London
"Jesus Christ you scared me!" The Doctor jumped when he entered the TARDIS and saw her standing there. "Wait... where's Rose?" 
"Rose? I... I don't know. Where the hell am I? What happened?" 
The Doctor analyzed her carefully and suddenly his face lit up.
"I know that jacket... you know Ace!"
"Who?"
"Ace McShane of course."
"I don't know who that is. This is my mother's jacket, you must be mistaken."
"Your mother?"
"My mother, Dorothy McShane from Charitable Earth, you might've heard of her."
"Ooooh yeah, I get it," the Doctor nodded, remembering what happened and how Ace's memory was wiped before she was returned to Earth. "What's your name?" 
"I'm Gallifrey," she mumbled. "Wait a second... You're the man in the suit!" 
"I suppose I am. Gallifrey?" He chuckled, a big goofy grin on his face. "Guess she didn't completely forget me after all." 
"What am I doing here? What is this place?" She started freaking out a bit. "I was just in my mum's bedroom, I blinked and I was here. How did that happen?" 
"You're in the TARDIS, time and relative dimension in space. It's my ship, it travels anywhere and to any time you want. Usually I have a companion, but she seems to be lost right now..." 
"Is your companion the blonde girl?" 
The Doctor nodded, hating the way her voice trembled. The idea that something might've happened to Rose broke his hearts.
"Have you seen her?" 
"Yes... in my dream. I- I'm sorry, she's gone. To another world." 
"What? When?"
"Last night, December 20th." 
"Gallifrey, today is February 5th." 
"2006?" 
"Yeah, you saw my future and somehow changed my present, but how?"
The Doctor thought for a moment. If there was a way to get Rose back, he would take it, but if their future was a bitter goodbye in which she was forced into another world... did he even want that? Wouldn't it be better to save them the heartache? 
"Rose went to another universe? So it's possible her existence was completely erased from this one. Her time with me... it's all a memory."
"Maybe we can find her!" Gallifrey suggested. 
"We can try, but the timeline is already fixing itself. It required someone to fill her place and you were just soaked with time travel radiation because of the jacket. So it sent me you, the TARDIS knows you." 
"Radiation? Is that dangerous?" Gallifrey looked down at herself terrified. 
"No, it's completely harmless. It's just the sort of radiation that accumulates as a result of one traveling in time. Your mother had lots of it and she must've passed it onto you too."
"My mother? She traveled in time?" She laughed, it was such a ridiculous notion. Her mother, the biggest homebody she knew, the most cautious person ever!
"Oh yeah," the Doctor grinned. "With me, when she was younger and went by Ace. We were best friends!"
"Yeah right..." 
"Why else would you have the name you have? Do you know what your name means?" 
"No, always thought she got it from a fantasy book or something."
"Gallifrey is the name of my home planet, I'm a Time Lord. Unfortunately, I can't show you since I'm all that's left of that planet, but she knew about it. Her memory was wiped but in the back of her brain she remembered." 
For some reason, she wanted to believe him. She did believe him. It was like somehow she knew him of old, like they were connected by this invisible string. The man in the suit wouldn't lie to her, she was sure of that just as she was sure he wouldn't hurt her.
"So what now?" Gallifrey asked.
"Now we look for Rose like you said, it's worth a try... I'm the Doctor by the way." 
"Doctor, Doctor who?" 
"Just Doctor." 
"Alright then, Doctor. Let's find Rose!"
"You seem excited already," he teased. 
"Well, I finally found the man in the suit I've been looking for in my dreams for a year. This is ace! Let's go, Professor."
"What did you just call me?" His eyes widened.
"Um, I don't know..." her brows furrowed, but she shrugged with a smile. "Wicked."
Tag list: @jozstankovich
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elavoria · 9 months
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Happy belated birthday... and crab day! :D
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Aww hehe thank you so much! <3 What an adorable little guy. ^^
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alex51324 · 9 months
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Is there anyone who didn't get any crabs for Crab Day? We have 16 minutes left, and I have 3 bucks to spare.
Edit: I have now sent out two lots of Belated Crabs, and my Crab Budget has been fully expended. Thank you!
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educatedinyellow · 9 months
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Hi friends, so I will be moving over the next few days and therefore unable to gift crabs or respond to such gifts from others, but fear not! Once the dust has settled I will do my belated part to keep the hellsite in operation. Coming soon-ish, skitter pinch pinch. <3333
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zybynarx · 9 months
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You were literally the FIRST person I sent crabs to on Crab Day, but tumblr Support told me there was a glitch and they didn't make it to you! 💔 Please enjoy these belated crabs, and my appreciation for your wonderful blog on this silly hellsite. I love visiting your corner of the internet! ❤️️
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Omg thank you so much!! 😭😭😭 This was such a nice surprise and a real mood booster for a pretty hectic week. And I'm so happy you like my little tumblr corner! Thank you again my friend! ❤️❤️❤️
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lilbugprincess · 9 months
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Happy Belated Crab Day! :D
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CRABS........... TRUTHFULLY... when they were first shown off I never made it to desktop... I've never seen the crabs... I am so happy...
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sarah-sandwich · 9 months
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Thank you!! I've been hanging onto my crabs for a rainy day and just realize I could post this without activating them lmao happy belated crabs day!! 🦀🦀🦀🦀🦀🦀🦀🦀🦀
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purplespacecats · 9 months
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Happy Belated Crab Day!
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thank you! i feel included now haha 💖🦀😊
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laylainalaska · 9 months
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Happy Crab Day! (And belated happy birthday, fellow July Leo)
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The carcinization of my dash continues! 🥰 Thank you!!
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