- Joined
- Jan 11, 2016
- Location
- Pacific Northwest
Haldora Hargrave wore her heart on her sleeve. If she had a feeling, somebody knew about it. Probably several people. Most likely, every single one of her friends and maybe the people who were sitting next to her depending on how loud she was. Only a few things ever got shoved down, and even then 'shoved down' usually meant that not her entire friend group knew. One of those was the reason why she was currently stacking advanced charms classes into her schedule and trying to get Madame Pomfrey to let her help out in the hospital wing to gain experience and pick up some new spells.
And that was because the reason was a boy. Well, 'boy' was the wrong word because at 17 they were all technically wizarding adults. Which was weird, but she had stopped trying to explain that to her wizarding friends. The ones who lived on the magical side all the time didn't get it, and explaining the differences in how muggles handled themselves tended to get nods and acknowledgements that it was different but it was clear they didn't get totally it. Either way, after this year they would pick their respective paths and train in their chosen magical fields. Because there was no way Haldora was going to go do muggle work after all of this.
Which meant a lot of lying at family events. Well, more than she already had to.
"It's not fair," she complained at dinner, resting her head on Tonks' shoulder, eyes focused at the table next to theirs where the whole horde of Gryffindors that she associated with were clustered. "He's going to graduate and then go get eaten by a dragon and then I'll never get to tell him how I feel," she fussed the next morning, craning her neck to see if the freckled redhead had come in yet, while Penny carefully braided a small section of her hair. "Well you could - hold still - just tell him now," the blonde suggested, which got a small scoff in return as Haldora settled and let Penny finish with her hair. She still chased a first year Gryffindor away from sitting where she had already decided to try and get her Gryffindor friends (well, one in particular) to sit at the table across from hers when they arrived. Penny tied off the little braid with a tiny band that had a charm dangling from it and Haldora immediately slumped against the table a little, following up the movement with another dismissive noise just to emphasize what a bad suggestion that had been. "I know the things that he likes, he talks about them all the time. And he definitely doesn't talk about me."
She would know, she had been an enthusiastic audience member to anything and everything that Charlie talked about since the middle of third year when Penny had brought her in to help with something that Caelum had needed. At which point she has had been integrated into the strange, ragtag group of students who investigated cursed vaults and went into the Forbidden Forest and basically broke every rule that could possibly be broken. Which was more fun than she had expected it to be, honestly.
It wasn't like Haldora didn't have a life outside of all that. She happened to enjoy that specific friend group more than the other people she hung out with on occasion at Hogwarts. She was... acceptable at wizard chess, she was the designated replacement Beater for the Hufflepuff quidditch team - because she had played softball in elementary school - and while her interest in being a healer had admittedly been born out of a concern for someone else it was a study she greatly enjoyed and knew that she was good at. Magic sometimes responded better when the spell matched the desires of the caster, and it would come as no surprise to anyone that she was just always up for helping people. Potions had been a little bit rougher because of the patience element, but the best student potionmaker in the school was in her House and was her friend, so that was something she was working on. But she also got stuck on the things she liked and they took up a lot of her brain space, whether they were magic, games, or cute redheads with freckles.
And that was because the reason was a boy. Well, 'boy' was the wrong word because at 17 they were all technically wizarding adults. Which was weird, but she had stopped trying to explain that to her wizarding friends. The ones who lived on the magical side all the time didn't get it, and explaining the differences in how muggles handled themselves tended to get nods and acknowledgements that it was different but it was clear they didn't get totally it. Either way, after this year they would pick their respective paths and train in their chosen magical fields. Because there was no way Haldora was going to go do muggle work after all of this.
Which meant a lot of lying at family events. Well, more than she already had to.
"It's not fair," she complained at dinner, resting her head on Tonks' shoulder, eyes focused at the table next to theirs where the whole horde of Gryffindors that she associated with were clustered. "He's going to graduate and then go get eaten by a dragon and then I'll never get to tell him how I feel," she fussed the next morning, craning her neck to see if the freckled redhead had come in yet, while Penny carefully braided a small section of her hair. "Well you could - hold still - just tell him now," the blonde suggested, which got a small scoff in return as Haldora settled and let Penny finish with her hair. She still chased a first year Gryffindor away from sitting where she had already decided to try and get her Gryffindor friends (well, one in particular) to sit at the table across from hers when they arrived. Penny tied off the little braid with a tiny band that had a charm dangling from it and Haldora immediately slumped against the table a little, following up the movement with another dismissive noise just to emphasize what a bad suggestion that had been. "I know the things that he likes, he talks about them all the time. And he definitely doesn't talk about me."
She would know, she had been an enthusiastic audience member to anything and everything that Charlie talked about since the middle of third year when Penny had brought her in to help with something that Caelum had needed. At which point she has had been integrated into the strange, ragtag group of students who investigated cursed vaults and went into the Forbidden Forest and basically broke every rule that could possibly be broken. Which was more fun than she had expected it to be, honestly.
It wasn't like Haldora didn't have a life outside of all that. She happened to enjoy that specific friend group more than the other people she hung out with on occasion at Hogwarts. She was... acceptable at wizard chess, she was the designated replacement Beater for the Hufflepuff quidditch team - because she had played softball in elementary school - and while her interest in being a healer had admittedly been born out of a concern for someone else it was a study she greatly enjoyed and knew that she was good at. Magic sometimes responded better when the spell matched the desires of the caster, and it would come as no surprise to anyone that she was just always up for helping people. Potions had been a little bit rougher because of the patience element, but the best student potionmaker in the school was in her House and was her friend, so that was something she was working on. But she also got stuck on the things she liked and they took up a lot of her brain space, whether they were magic, games, or cute redheads with freckles.
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