Agnes
hellion
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2021
- Location
- a glass house

The Great Hall was decked out completely in all its splendour, banners of red, yellow, blue, and green adorning the walls, made to seem all the more magical by the flickering orange glow of the floating chandeliers. Above them, the ceiling was transfigured to look like the night sky above, a starry, resplendent view that was strangely devoid of clouds. Down below, the four tables of the four houses were packed to the brim and buzzing with life, anxiously waiting for the new first years to make their entrance. Truly, it was a magnificent view, as the youngsters would soon attest to when they take their first steps in Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Not to Linwood Branson though. This would be the seventh time he had to stick through the whole affair, and the novelty of it all wears off after the first few years. Not to mention the pureblood had other, more pressing worries at hand than which kid ends up in what house. If anything, he'd be glad if Slytherin got fewer students this year; fewer people he'd have to reject in quidditch tryouts later this year. The last student to get into a team on their first year was Potter himself anyway. Perks of being captain; he gets to destroy the confidence of a bunch of 11-year-olds.
Sitting at the edge of the Slytherin table, befit of a leader as denoted by the shiny little badge pinned onto his robes, Lin looked every bit the conceited pureblood people would expect a Branson to be. Sharp features, sullen face, silvery blond hair tied up into a bun. People could be forgiven for thinking he looked quite the pompous wanker, as his good friend Rhys had told him. The other teen was sitting across from Lin, looking visibly more cheerful than the blond, a shining silver lapel also adorned on his chest; this one denoting that he was a Slytherin Prefect. "Lighten up, mate. Merlin's tits, you look like someone pissed on your face this morning." That earned a nasty glare from Lin. By Salazar, he wanted to punch this idiot. How he was able to be so nonchalant about signing his life away in a ministry-mandated stunt, he would never understand. Strange how they coped so differently under the same circumstances. But then again, Rhys had always been the more easy-going of the two. He chalked it up to having parents who weren't complete arseholes.
"Man, I think I'm allowed to be upset about being forced into a life-long commitment, Rhys," the blond bit back with furrowed brows, to which his friend only shrugged. "Maybe they just figured out we ain't ever getting girlfriends if they don't step in." That was... quite fair. Throughout the whole six years he'd attended Hogwarts, Lin had never really found the opportunity to date. Not that he was opposed to it, and certainly not because he was gay like his parents suspected when he was fifteen - he was a bit of a loner by nature, and committing himself to a long-term relationship had always been a bit of a hard sell for him. Not that it mattered anymore, of course. For all his complaints about not wanting to deal with girls, he would be paired up for life with one in the next few hours.
The Blood Unity act, they called it. Bit of a lame name for what was essentially a matchmaking service, in Lin's opinion. Ever since He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named's demise at the battle of Hogwarts a little over two decades ago, the English Ministry of Magic had been trying relentlessly to erase the idea of blood purity from wizardkind's minds. Muggleborns were given equal rights, and purebloods had some of their privileges taken away. Most were all too happy to accept these changes, but some, mainly the ancient pureblood families, clung tightly onto the old notions of their superiority. The Bransons were one such family. Proud, unrelenting, unbending. They kept espousing their views upon any who would listen and had the money and power to keep doing what they did. The act, passed five years ago, was more or less a direct jab at the old families, forcing the heirs of these families to muddle their blood by marrying into Muggleborns and Halfbloods.
The gall of them, said Linwood Branson Sr. The Slytherin remembered the uproar at his family home when it was announced that the act had been passed, and the ones that followed as his elder brother Lincoln was matched with a Muggleborn girl. She'd been fairly pleasant, on the occasions Lin had talked to her. Sweet, maybe a bit dull, too eager to please Lincoln, even. His brother, being the obedient dog that he is, broke off the engagement right after graduation. The backlash on social media was unexpected and intense, with a mob lynch accusing the family of still being blood elitists. It was true, of course, but the damage was controlled with carefully chosen statements and some very generous donations to both charity and Hogwarts itself. His father was more than experienced in dealing with such things. And so, for the second son, they had a new plan.
"Your parents give you the whole spiel about not breaking things off first?" he asked Rhys, hand lazily tapping the empty silver plate in front of him. "Yeah, hard not to after the whole Lincoln Branson fiasco. Make it look like the girl wanted to end the engagement. Pretty sure your folks gave them the idea." The blond nodded; it was more than likely. The Bransons had the Ellwoods tightly in their grasp, after all. Not that big of a stretch to think they'd also dictate them on how to raise their son. The thing was, while both parties had the option to break off the engagement if things aren't going well, it's generally frowned upon to do so, since it was supposed to represent unity and peace and all that. Looks even worse if it's the purebloods doing it, and most of the failed pairs so far had been the purebloods' fault.
"Well... might as well make it a bit more fun," breathed Lin, pulling himself up from his slouched position and pulling out some gold coins from the inner pocket of his robes. "Ten galleons say you get paired with someone from Hufflepuff." Rhys snorted. "Fine. Same bet for you, make it twenty." "Deal." The two then shook hands on it, both certain of being twenty galleons richer by the end of the day. Just then, the large gilded doors at the edge of the hall opened, revealing a gaggle of wide-eyed first years.
◌ ◌ ◌ ◌ ◌
The announcement came near the end of the Great Feast, when the Sorting had been long over and most students were done with dinner. "Seventh years chosen for the Blood Unity Act, please assemble at the end of your respective tables." A ministry official, a stiff-looking woman in a red petticoat, standing near Headmistress McGonagall, read out the announcement from the little sheet of paper in her hands, detailing in a long drawl the importance of overcoming their differences in their past. Linwood felt nauseous, feeling like all food he'd shoved down would come back up at any moment. Anxious, his bright blue eyes flicked to the other tables, where the other seventh years were also assembled, huddled close together. One of them would become his lifelong partner in the next few minutes. The thought was more terrifying than he would've liked to admit. He didn't even talk to half his housemates in his year. He did recognise most of the girls, though. There was ugly Eloise from Ravenclaw, slutty Crystal from Gryffindor, and of course, the Head Girl, along with some others.
"Moment of truth, mate," said Rhys in a conspiratorial whisper.
"Get out your twenty galleons," Lin taunted back. This was a terrible way to start off a relationship.
"Linwood Branson--"
Aw, hell, why was his name the first one?
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