Once in
a Lifetime
For Suzyblack
A raven-haired young man with bright green
eyes foraged his way up a steep incline, his horse faltering for a moment
before it crested the small hill that overlooked the modest estate; but it
managed to reach it, as it had done so many times before.
A second pair of hooves caught up with him a
short while later:coming
from the long route that winded around the hill. A wiry young man with red hair
as curly and thick as sheep's wool breathed heavily atop his steed, his fingers
loosening the silk cravat at his neck. “It's unsportsmanlike to begin a race
when one's opponent has been disabled, Albus.”
“I thought you were just pissing against a
tree.” He snorted, his eyes taking in the perspiring face of his wheezing
cousin.
“It matters not,” the red-haired young man
chided haughtily as he began to blush. “It was still a blatant disadvantage.”
“You sound just like your mother, Hugo!” The
dark-haired boy laughed as he dug his heels in and started off down the hill
towards the stables. This time his cousin had a fair chance, and with his
superior steed would be likely to win. It was a good idea to let him have the
small achievement, otherwise he'd be impossible for
the rest of the day.
Predictably, Hugo thundered past him and Albus arrived at the stable just in time to watch Hugo
dismount from his steed.
“Ah, I see you've finally arrived, Albus,” Hugo smirked.“I
thought you might have stopped by your mother's parlor and had a spot of tea
before you made your way to the stables.”
Albus opened his mouth to
retort, but stopped at the crunching of wooden wheels on the gravel of the
courtyard. A blond man sat atop an uncovered cart, two smaller, hooded figures
sat beside him; their meager belongings piled on the cart they were guiding in
the direction of the stables.
“Has your father taken on more help?” Hugo
asked, appraising the cart as it grew nearer.
“Family named Malfoy,”
Albus confirmed as he swung down from his steed.
“They're here to oversee the breeding of father's new stallions.”
“Malfoy?” Hugo narrowed his eyes.
“Why does that sound familiar?”
“They were a prominent family for centuries,
but managed to choose the wrong side during the trouble they had when our father's were boys.”Albus gave his horse an affectionate pat before he picked up
a brush.
“Perhaps mother knew them in some way.” Hugo
mused as began grooming his horse as well. “I don't believe father has ever
mentioned them.”
“I bet she did,” Albus
said under his breath as the cart grew closer.
The unpleasantness wasn't talked about much;
time and propriety erasing the unpleasantness of it all. If the Malfoys had been on the wrong side they had been stripped
of their titles and lands; their wands broken when it was all over; doomed to
live as the Muggles they once persecuted.
Hermione Granger-Weasley
wasn't a Muggle, but as a child of Muggles, she had found herself hunted alongside her
parents. If not for the help of the Weasleys they
never would have survived. Of course, the Grangers had showed their gratitude
by allowing their daughter to marry one of the youngest Weasley
sons. No money or lands made the
newlyweds powerful in such a rigid society, but they had impressive titles and
a doting rich grandfather (who quite liked his grandson's wife, no matter what
her breeding) to take care of their needs through generous gifts and deposits
to their accounts.
As the cart came to a stop the man atop it
nudged one of the figures beside him and gave it meaningful look.
The hooded cloak came off and James raised
his eyebrows at the young man that was hurrying over.
“You shouldn't be doing that, my lord!”The young man's face was a mask of horror, his shaggy
hair falling about his face in a tousle of gold. “Let me get that for you!”
“Not today.” Albus
said firmly. “Father said you were to have a day of settling in and I'm not
about to displease him.”
The young man's face relaxed with relief as
he pulled his body up to his full height. “As you say, sir.”
“And your name?” Hugo asked with an air
of haughtiness.
“Scorpius, sir,” Scorpius said politely, his eyes trained ahead.
“You may go assist your parents, Scorpius. Your mother shouldn't be lifting heavy things.”Albus gently chided.
“Of course, sir.” He bowed slightly.
“Thank you, sir.”
The young man scampered around to the other
side of the stable, where his father would be housing their horse and cart.
“Eager to please, that one,” Hugo remarked
as he brushed his horse in long, even strokes.
“The last boy father had managed to evade
his chores whenever possible; and managed to strip the fruit from an entire
apple tree in the course of a week.” Albus snorted.
“It's about time he got someone willing to work a full day.”
-+-
Albus sat in a window high
above the courtyard. The Malfoys had worked out well.
Draco was as talented with horse breeding as he was knowledgeable, and his son,
Scorpius. was showing the same talents.
It was the son Albus
watched now, loading hay into a cart for the showing tomorrow. The event might only be held a
few hours away, but Draco had convinced Lord Potter that unfamiliar hay might
make the horses act less than their best and Albus'
father had agreed.
Albus' eyes seemed to skim the
page in front of him, but they were really looking past the book and towards
the young man loading hay.
He had stripped his shirt off when it had
started misting, the overcast day casting a veil of dampness over everything it
touched, and Scorpius was beginning to develop a sheen on his bare skin.
Albus felt his body respond
and he started in surprise. He frowned at his book and adjusted himself so no
one could see it if they entered the room. It wouldn't do to be caught ogling
the help, let alone the new stable-boy.
He felt his cheeks flush as he continued to
watch Scorpius work, his perspiration mingling with
the mist that clung to him.
Scorpius stopped working for a
moment, wiping the sweat from his brow and leaning on his pitchfork.
He stretched, giving Albus
a good view of his fine form, honed from years of physical labor.
Albus let his eyes linger a
moment before his gaze trailed up to Scorpius' face,
and the blue eyes looking back at him.
He started for a moment and instinctively
jumped away from his seat at the window and the inquisitive eyes of the
stable-boy.
-+-
Albus sat at the small table
with his cousin, Rose. The air was sweet and warm and the umbrella the servants
had set up was sufficient to block out the rays of the sun. Albus
sipped at his tea while Rose recited poetry. Scorpius
was in a small fenced off area with a small black foal, his father looking on
encouragingly. He was trying to make the small animal walk in a circle, but it
was more interested in trotting towards him and giving him a
nuzzle, making Draco laugh and Scorpius cross.
“You haven't heard a word I've said!”Albus looked up to see Rose frowning at him, her unruly
brown curls framing her delicately featured face face.
“Of course I have,” Albus
said non-noncommittally.
“Well you ought to have!” Rose fumed as she
put a marker in the book and set it down with a thud.
Albus started at this
emotional outburst and looked at her bewilderedly as she got to her feet and
huffed off.
He picked up the book curiously.
<i>'The world was
on us,
My love and I took and
swore,
Against the world, to be
Poets
and Lovers evermore.'</i>
His heart leapt into his throat as he read the words over.
She knew. Rose knew Albus had been
watching Scorpius and this was her way of telling him
she knew.
But what would she do? Did she approve? Was she disgusted? Would
she keep it a secret? Would she start calling him a confirmed bachelor in
polite company; the title that titters and jeers followed behind so closely.
Would his family be ruined?
He felt his blood run cold. There was no telling what might happen now.
-+-
Rose and Albus
were taking a turn in the garden when she broke into a wide grin. “There's
another note for you.”
Albus felt his cheeks turn red
as he spotted the scrap of pink paper folded cleverly among the roses. He
snatched it up quickly and stuffed it into his pocket.
“You're not going to read it?”She scowled at him.
“You wouldn't be able to read it anyway,” Albus chuckled. “The paper is attuned to me only.”
“Well, isn't that just fine!”
She snapped her fan shut and fumed. “All that trouble, and for what?”
Albus snickered at his cousin,
her angry face starting to match the deep pink of her bonnet. “You wouldn't
want me reading letters from your suitors, would you?” He
quirked an eyebrow at her.
“Mother already does,” Rose snorted in a
very unladylike way. “She says it's for
my own good. I swear she knows more about my life than I do.”
“The burden of femininity,” Albus said in a patronizing tone. “To be protected and
sheltered away from harm's way.”
“You wouldn't last a week as a female.” Her
look was far more patronizing than Albus' words.
“From your food, to your clothing, to your thoughts; every moment is being
scrutinized for improvement.”
“At least you weren't sent away like Lily,” Albus said as he spied his mother over his cousins shoulder, a scowl on her face and a bottle of
hair-oil in her hands. “And Mother's willing to drown me in oil rather than
have a hair stick up out of place.
Rose eyed her cousin critically. “She might
just have to, considering the shape of your head.”
He sighed in exasperation as he plodded
towards his mother and her frown. “Sometimes I think I'd be happier as a
servant. At least they don't have their mothers trying to force their hair into
unnatural shapes and their persons into unnatural matrimony.”
Rose snorted. “Just be glad you have the
freedoms you do. I'll be getting into my wedding dress before I know I'm
engaged.”
“It might be a precaution against flight,” Albus teased his cousin. “It's that wild Bohemian blood in
you.”
“There hasn't been a Bohemian in my
bloodline for five generations!” Rose protested.
“And it's all bubbling to the surface now.” Albus grinned at her. “Helping forbidden
courtships, grumbling about getting married. Don't tell me there isn't a
touch of gypsy to you!”
Rose giggled as they neared Albus' mother who was already unscrewing the top of the
bottle and pulling her wand out. “Better to be a free bird than a caged one.”
“I wonder how that feels,” Albus mused.
“Me too,” Rose said glumly.
-+-
“I honestly don't know what you've been
about,” Hugo said haughtily as he put his cap and coat into a charmed
dust-proof box in the stables before picking up a saddle. “You're acting like
Aunt Luna during one of her spells.”
“Just a bit distracted lately,” Albus snorted. “Been thinking of getting
a job.”
“Whatever for?” Hugo looked aghast.
“Well, what's the point of having a fine
education if you never use it for anything?” Albus
would never tell him the real reason for his distraction. It should have never
happened and now the fates were held in the balance. He hadn't planned the downpour
and he didn't plan on Scorpius being in the stables.
The dampness had crept into everything, the
smell of hay and horses thick in the air and now when Albus
was in the stables his head swam. The taste of Scorpius's mouth on his own. The fleeting moment
when his breath caught in his throat and his heart leapt in his chest.
“So you can carry on a conversation with
gentlemen of social power.” Hugo snorted.
“What about everyone else?”
“What?”Hugo
frowned at his cousin.
“What does that education mean to everyone
else?” Albus asked.
“I think all that that study has finally
addled your senses.” Hugo said firmly. “An hour astride your mount will have
all those cobwebs cleared out.”
“You're probably right,” Albus
said, but he truly doubted it. “Maybe a fox hunt.”
“That's a good chap!” Hugo smiled at Albus. “Time to take a break and get some
wind in your hair to forget it all!”
Albus very sincerely doubted
he'd be able to forget it at all, but went along with his cousin just to get
him to shut up on the subject. “Of course.”
-+-
“He can't wear that!” Albus
mother sounded horrified. “He'll look
like a beggar, not a footman!”
“So change them.” Albus
frowned sternly.
“What else would we put him in?”Albus' mother snapped impatiently. “These are the only trousers
we ordered and they can't be mended with magic. The material is too fine.”
“What about those gray trousers from that
suit I outgrew last season? I know you were planning on having it altered, but
that fashion is never going to come back around,” Albus
made a face he hoped his mother would believe.
She pursed her lips as she looked Scorpius over. “They could work... they might be too
big...”
“It's better than showing up with only a
driver,” Lord Potter said lazily. “We can enjoy a spot of tea in the garden
while he changes into more appropriate clothing.”
Lady Potter pursed her lips as she mulled
this over. “Fine. But we leave within the hour and no
later!”
“How long does she think it takes to change
a pair of trousers?”Albus muttered under his breath
as he made his way to the manor house steps, the stable-boy in tow.
Scorpius snickered as they
climbed and Albus had to stop himself
from scowling and turning red.
“So this is where you do whatever it is you
nobs do,” Scorpius teased Albus
as they walked down the mahogany-paneled hallway to Albus'
rooms.
“Sleep.” Albus quirked a corner of his mouth
at Scorpius. “This is where I sleep.”
“Apart from in the stables after--”
“Shh!”Albus quickly looked around.
“The servants have left. Your mother dismissed
them after her hat was
arranged properly.” Scorpius cocked a smile at Albus.
“Be that as it may, they might have not all
left,” Albus said warily.
“I wouldn't stay longer than I had to in
this place.” Scorpius looked around. “Looks like a
museum.”
“And what would you know about museums?” Albus asked haughtily.
“Cleaned the chimneys for the National
Gallery when I was seven,” Scorpius defended himself
as he gave Albus a swat. “Probably
seen more than you have.”
Albus laughed in spite of
himself. “You always have to do me one better, don't you?”
“You shouldn't make the goal so simple.”Scorpius said snootily.
Albus grabbed Scorpius' hand and they ran down the long hall to the
bedroom where Albus rested his head.
“Oh!” Scorpius
said in mock surprise. “A real bed! How posh! Why,
this time I'll wager we won't even have to rid ourselves of fleas!”
“You shut it.” Albus
grinned as he pushed Scorpius into the bedroom. He
waved his wand and the door shut firmly behind him.
“Your mother won't notice if she comes up
here and the doors stuck shut?” Scorpius laughed as Albus pushed him towards the large bed.
“Been trapping it for a week now,” Albus said as he pulled his shirt over his head. “If it's stuck now no one will be the wiser.”
“Planning ahead now, are we?” Scorpius raised an eyebrow as Albus
fumbled with his clothing.
“It isn't every day someone in this family
gets married. The house is usually never empty.”
“Poor Rose. She's a nice girl. Wasn't very fair to spring it on her like this.” Scorpius lifted his own shirt over his head. He peered at Albus.“It wasn't by chance that my
trousers ripped today, is it?”
“I charmed one of the bolts in the carriage
to jump out and bite them, if that's what you're eluding
to,” Albus sniffed as haughtily as someone in their
pants and socks can.
“Can't trust you magic lot,” Scorpius shook head sadly. “Next thing you know you'll be
making spring-loaded corsetry.”
“You're a wizard, too!” Albus
protested as he fell to the bed, Scorpius in his
arms.
“Fat lot of good it does me.” Scorpius snorted. “I can't use magic.”
“One day that will change,” Albus soothed him. “We can leave here. Go to America. I'll
teach you myself at home.”
“Goody. I'll just grab my hidden fortune
under my mattress and we'll be off,” Scorpius said
with a sarcastic look.
“We can take mine.”
“What? Are you serious?” Scorpius'
eyes went round.
“You know how mother's always complaining
about how much money I spend on entertainment?”
“What, your drinking fund?” Scorpius chuckled as Albus pulled
him near.
“The only brandy I drink is Fathers.”Albus admitted. “I've been saving the rest.”
“Since when?” Scorpius
asked with a shocked look on his face.
“Since forever,” Albus
admitted. “If the family's assets were ever frozen...” He trailed off as he saw
the look on Scorpius' face. “Well, I don't need to
tell you about what happens then.”
“I see,” Scorpius
said slowly. “Think you're going to get into trouble like that anytime soon?”
“Good heavens, no!” Albus
looked shocked. “I just thought we could run off.”
“How long have you been planning this?” Scorpius asked, his eyes wide.
“Running off? Forever.”
Albus admitted. “Having you accompany me was a more
recent decision.”
“Decision or pillow
promise?” Scorpius sat up, a frown on his face.
“Decision, I swear it,” Albus
said pleadingly. “I want you to come with me. We can pretend to be cousins
traveling west.”
“West?” Scorpius
barked a laugh at him. “You want to be a
cowboy? Have you gone completely mad?”
“Not that far west.” Albus
shook his head and laughed. “Chicago! I have a cousin in the newspaper
business. He'd help us!”
“Even if he was told not
to?” Scorpius asked skeptically.
Albus coughed. “There aren't
that many people in the family that talk to him.”
“Oh!” Scorpius
exclaimed. “Well... well, I don't know what to think.”
“Say you'll come with me!” Albus said furtively. “Say you'll call me family for the
rest of your life.”
“My parents--”
“My father wouldn't get rid of the only
decent horseman he's manage to get his hands on
because their sons decided to strike out for America. I'll leave a message
telling them that you're coming as my servant. My father would think it a jolly
adventure.”Albus said excitedly.
“And when we tell him where we're going?” Scorpius asked, one eyebrow raised.
“We don't.” Albus
said firmly. “We get a mailbox in New York and only correspond with him from
there.”
“New York?” Scorpius
choked out a laugh. “Do you have any idea how far apart New York and Chicago
are?”
“Round and about fifteen minutes,” Albus said softly. “We can use magic. There are no
restrictions over there--”
“Yet.” Scorpius
interjected.
“Well, there aren't any for now and it might
be our only chance. What do you say?”
Scorpius looked down at Albus and sighed. “My employ requires me to serve the young
Lordling in any pursuit he may need assistance in.”
“Did you just call me a Lordling?”
Albus laughed and grabbed one of the fine pillows on
his bed and hit Scorpius with it.
Scorpius laughed as he grabbed
the other pillow. “I said I was going!”
“As my servant,” Albus
said with a twinkle in his eye. “And I've got a job for you.”
Scorpius felt his breath catch in
his throat as he saw the expression on Albus' face.
“Does it involve giving in to your every whim?”
Albus started undoing the
front of his trousers. “I think it just might.” He looked Scorpius
up and down, licking his lips as his eyes wandered along the pale skin of his
chest. He always thought Scorpius tasted like
rainwater.
-+-
“I thought one was supposed to become
accustomed to the sea!” Albus shouted over the noise
of the crashing waves.
Scorpius vomited into a
decorative brass pot as he lay crouched on the floor of their cabin. “I'm just
thankful we're here instead of down with the rest of them. I could be sharing
this pot with twenty other people.”
“We need to send mother a hat from New York,
remember,” Albus said as he began to write in a small
leather book.
“It was quite kind of her to Apparate down to the docks when she found the note,” Scorpius groaned. “If she hadn't talked to the captain and
given you that money--”
“I'm still disturbed by the notion that she
knew the docks well enough to Apparate to them,” Albus grumbled. “And she preformed
a memory charm on him. Highly unethical.”
“Either way, God bless your mother for
arranging our cabin. This could truly be so much worse.”
“Indeed.” Albus
smiled pityingly as Scorpius attempted to fill the
pot once more.
-+-
Albus and Scorpius
sat on a small worn love-seat, it's fuzzy velvet
covering worn thin in many places.
“You don't have to worry here!” Sidney
Potter yelled over the din of the crowded club. “You can be yourself!”
Albus looked past his cousin
and blushed at the scene behind him. “I think I'm already quite a bit like me,
thank you. I'm not sure I'm so much like that chap who is... who is...”
“Polishing every knob that walks in the
door,” Scorpius said in wonderment, his eyes fixed on
the lurid scene.
Sidney laughed at the pair and took a swig
of his drink.
“It might be normal for some to want to
engage in this sort of behavior, but I assure you I'm not interested in taking
twelve--”
“Thirteen,” corrected Scorpius,
tilting his head as the scene shifted.
“Thirteen,” he gave Scorpius
an irritated look, “men in a night. I just want to find a nice place for us to
go without being bothered.”
“You're a merry pair of old uncles, aren't
you?” Sidney laughed, his drunken blush starting to spread to his large ears.
“Come all the way to the city to sit around having a nice cuppa!”
“Well, we certainly have learned a lot,” Scorpius said, squinting his eyes and contorting his
position to see better.
“And we're sincerely grateful for the
employ,” Albus added quickly. “But I'm not quite sure
such a lurid display is...”
“Appropriate,” Scorpius
filled in with a wink to Sidney.
“Yes, quite.” Albus
agreed as Scorpius snickered at him.
“Always the appropriate
one!”
Sidney rolled his eyes at the pair.
“What's the point of swearing off the misery of women and marriage if
you're going to do the same thing with a fellow?”
“You've missed the point!” Albus snapped at his cousin.
“And what's that?” Sidney asked, his eyelids
drooping from drink.
“If you marry the right person it's not
miserable!”
Sidney rolled his eyes. “That's what they
all say.”
-+-
Albus looked up from the dirty
tub of water as the hoof beats grew closer.
Scorpius approached on the back
of a brown mare, her hoofs restless, like she was fighting the urge to buck him
off. “I told you I could break her!”
“Congratulations!” Albus
smiled. “Who would have ever thought we could just wander the wilderness and
pick up a stable of horses? Leaving Chicago was the best thing we ever did!”
Scorpius snorted. “I remember it
being more difficult than just wandering out and gathering them up.”
“But you've gotten so much better with your
wand!” Albus smiled as he resumed washing a pile of
dingy shirts.
“Speaking of which, why aren't you using
yours?” Scorpius asked as he dismounted the skiddish horse and gave her a gentle pat.
“I left them going too long the last time
and they ended up all shredded.” Albus made a face.
“Forget your head if it wasn't screwed on,” Scorpius snorted as he approached the tub and picked a
shirt up. “You need to teach me that shearing spell your father taught
you. We'll need new clothing for winter.”
“As soon as I'm convinced you can do a spell
of that magnitude without butchering them.” Albus
grinned at him. “We can't just wander about and find wild sheep.”
“We can if we're good enough at it,” Scorpius
muttered under his breath.
“You're not to use your new powers to
torment the Muggles!” Albus
chided him.
“How about borrowing their sheep?” Scorpius asked hopefully.
Albus frowned at Scorpius. “What do you have in mind?”
-+-
Scorpius looked down at Albus, the line around his eyes creasing and his mustache
twitching as he sat atop the giant machine. “It threw a bolt into the works!
Have it up and running in no time.”
“You see, Mrs. Miller. Everything will be on
schedule. No need to worry.” Albus wrung his hands
together as he was stared down by a tiny woman with steel-colored hair and a
scowl.
“I came here because I heard you were the
best.” Her frown deepened.
“Even the best weavers have machinery that
breaks down.” Albus smoothed down the small beard on
his chin. “We allow extra time for such occurrences.”
“See to it the fabric is delivered by
Tuesday.” The woman said firmly as she turned on her heel and stormed out of
the small factory.
“Sour old cow,” Scorpius
snorted as the door closed behind her and Albus
bolted it. He pulled out his wand and started moving around large pieces of
machinery. “Thought she'd stand there all day.”
“What do you expect from someone that wants
an entire hotel reupholstered for her daughter's wedding?” Albus
chuckled.
“Speaking of weddings,” Scorpius
said cheerfully as he grinned down at Albus.
“I know.” Albus
groaned. “Margret's is in three months.”
“Rose just might kill you if you don't go.
She's been after that girl for years and her siblings seem to be following her
example.” Scorpius disappeared into the large
machine, clanging noises following him.
“If you think that invitation was only for
me, you've gone completely windy-headed.” Albus
laughed as he heard Scorpius hit his head inside the
machine. “If you're my gentleman's gentleman you'll be expected to be there.”
Scorpius poked his head out and
gave Albus an even look. “Is my father still working
for yours?”
“Of course,” Albus
grinned. “I'm sure he'd be happy to see
you. Truly.”
Scorpius groaned as he went back
into the bowels of the machine. “That's what I'm afraid of. Back to Britain
after all this time? Why not just send for Margret and her new husband? A merry trip to San Francisco for their wedding present from their
fine pair of merry uncles?”
“Because I'm expected to check in every decade...
or so,” Albus said sourly. “Especially since tongues
have stopped wagging about me running off with the stable boy.”
“It's been far longer than a decade. “ Scorpius snorted. “At least we don't have to take a boat
this time. The new Floo route will make things so
much easier.”
“I suppose so,” Albus
muttered. “We can get there in less than
a day, can't we?”
“I'll have to make us sets of new clothing,”
Scorpius said as he climbed out of the machine and
waved his wand at it, putting it back together. “I need to start now if we're
going.”
Albus took a deep breath
before he made a grumbling noise.
“I'll get started, love.” Scorpius said, his eyes dancing with amusement.
-+-
Scorpius took the letter from the
owl, his gnarled fingers giving the owl a scratch behind it's ear tufts before giving it a treat and
dismissing it.
“It's a letter from your mother!”Scorpius called.
There was a shuffling from the next room
before Albus padded in, a measuring tape around his
neck and glasses perched on the tip of his nose. “What does she have to say?”
Scorpius opened the letter and
squinted at it. “Rose is a grandmother.”
“Again?” Albus
chuckled. “What does this make? Five?”
“Eight.” Scorpius
laughed at Albus' expression. “She's got five from
Margret and three from the others so far.”
“Good lord,” Albus
peered at the letter. He looked at Scorpius who just
raised an eyebrow at him. Then he grunted and turned away.
“You know we're overdue!” Scorpius called after him. “You think I like mucking out
the stables and putting up with your cousin Hugo?”
Albus turned to look at his
partner and snickered in spite of himself. “It may be well worth it after all.”
Then he skittered out of the room, avoiding
the Tickle Curse Scorpius cast at him.
-+-
A pretty girl with long red hair sat in a
chair near a bed, stirring soup slowly before she gently held the spoon to the
lips of the elderly man laying
near her.
He swallowed and she dabbed the corner of a
linen napkin at the corners of his mouth.
She looked around before she slipped a
potion bottle out of her pocket and poured the contents of it into the soup.
The man's eyes seemed to twinkle in amusement.
She continued feeding him, each spoonful
becoming easier for him to swallow.
“Bless you, Joanne.”
“Mother is afraid you're going to become
dependent on them but...”She faltered for a moment.
“Who cares when it's so near to the end?”He smiled at her.
“I'm sorry.”
“Don't be, dear.” He reached out a hand to
pat her knee. “You remind me of your grandmother. Now there was a girl with
some fire. She came up with the flower trick, did you know that? It was how we
talked to each other in the beginning. Folded up a scrap of pink paper all
pretty and slipped it into your Grandmother Ginevra's
roses.”
Joanne grinned. “I didn't know that.”
“Saucy little thing too,” he said with a
twinkle in his eye. “Always used to kiss me on the cheek.”
She peered at him doubtfully and giggled
before she leaned over to kiss his cheek.
He closed his eyes and his breath seemed to
hitch for a moment.
“Are you all right?” She looked alarmed.
“I'm fine. Pretty girl like you took my
breath away.”
“You can't fool me, I've heard all about
you.”
“I bet you have.” He would never tell her it
was because her lips were shaped like Albus'; when
they pressed against his cheek for a moment he let the disorientation of the
potion overwhelm him. For a moment he remembered what it was like to have Albus in bed next to him. What it was like to feel his arms
wrapped around his waist in the morning.
He'd be with him soon enough.
“Did you really run off together?”
“We did.” Scorpius
smiled at Albus' grand-niece. “He'd squirreled away
some money and we stole off for America together. Very
romantic. Up until I got seasick and puked onto his
shoes for weeks.”
She giggled.
“You don't let your mother talk you into
marrying this Fletcher fellow. I've got my suspicions about where their fortune
comes from.” He said firmly. “If she gives you any sass you send her to me. No
one can deny a command from a deathbed. Even if it is just a
servant.”
“You're so much more than that,” she chided
him.
“I'm glad you think so.” His hand was still
on her knee. He realized how much it felt like Albus'.
How peculiar family traits were, the way
they seemed to manifest themselves. Just the other day he
could have sworn he had seen Albus' backside attached
to an attractive young man with a wolfish grin that had been eying up a certain
young man that drove the family car for the family.
He had restrained himself from giving it a
pinch as Joanne had wheeled him by in his chair. Albus
would be horrified to know his memory was being used to excuse unwarranted
bottom pinching.
“I think I'm going to make the most of this
illicit potion by getting some decent sleep.” Scorpius
winked at Joanne.
“I don't blame you.” She set down the soup
bowl and pulled his blankets up to his chin. “Sweet dreams.”
“I'm sure I will,” Scorpius
assured her. The potions made his dreams more vivid and more often than not, he
was dreaming of Albus. It were
as if he were just stopping by to check on him before he crossed completely
over.
Scorpius snuggled down into his
bedding, the lines of his face relaxing as he quickly slipped into sleep.
He was unafraid. Albus
was waiting for him. It would be just like going to America.
His dream began to overwhelm his senses, Albus' face becoming more clear in
his mind's eye.
“You waited for me.”
“Of course I did. What would I do for eternity without you
nagging me?”
“Cheeky.”
He felt lips on his cheek and this time he knew
it was Albus. The hands he felt on him were strong
from years of lifting heavy bolts of cloth.
“What do you think he dreams of?” Rose's
daughter stood near Joanne, her arm around her daughter's waist.
“I don't know.” Joanne sighed as she looked
down at Scorpius. “But he always looks so happy.”
“He does, doesn't he?”
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Poetry attributed to the writing duo known
as Michael Field.
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