The Sea of Confusion
Disclaimer: I am not making any money off of this. All characters and even some of the dialogue come from JKR's magical world of Harry Potter. If you sue me because you think I'm profiting in any way from this meager little fic thing, then you really should check yourself into St. Mungo's, perhaps share a room with Gilderoy Lockhart.
Author's Note 1: I wanna thank all my betas for the hard work. I really have awful grammar. Rini and Nic, thank you, and special special special insanely special thanks to Jane for all the bad grammar you corrected, and for keeping your temper while I worked you like a slave driver into the wee hours of the night. I hope this fic was worthy of you, although I doubt anything or anybody will ever be worthy of you, even though you're Canadian. *runs*
Author's Note 2: This fic was written right after Book 5 came out, which means basically that it is a million years old. I'm posting this here…I don't know exactly why. Perhaps because I vaguely remember someone saying that there was a rec for this on the Portkey forums, although I never got a chance to check it out because I wasn't a Portkey person back then. I was stuck at fanforum.com. Heck, I'm still stuck there.
Keep in mind that I was in a very melodramatic mood when I wrote this, having just finished reading two melodramatic books.
*~*~*~*~*
The Sea of Confusion is seductive. She isn't seductive in an obvious way; She doesn't enthrall like the Sirens, their song so loud and clear, the malicious harmonies outwardly intending to commit you to your doom. No, the Sea of Confusion seduces you slowly…you aren't even aware that you're drowning. By the time you realize the tide has completely pulled you in, you're in a whirlpool, all rational thought lost in the intense sensations that come from not being able to breathe, knowing that your fall is at hand.
Yes, the sea is traitorous. She is malignant, cunning, and she knows what she wants, and inevitably, she makes her desires your own.
*~*~*~*
The first recollection I have of feeling the sea's waters dance around my ankles was the second I walked in on those two on the train, at the tender age of eleven.
I was eleven. I was young. I was blissfully ignorant. But walking into that compartment I suddenly felt something. I didn't understand it then, though now it makes complete sense. It is that feeling you get when you know that fate has intervened in your life and has directed you towards a new path. Although I was smart, I was still a child, and thoughts like these were beyond me. But this glorious intervention, this moment of serendipity, it was what made me stay that extra second longer. Normally, I would've just popped in, asked for Neville's toad, watch the redheaded one botch his amateur spell, and quickly left. But no, something made me stay and babble endlessly about spells and houses, and it was in those few, precious moments that I finally noticed him. Yes him, the person I know best above all others, and perhaps the person who knows me best as well.
Even at the age of eleven, I knew, and indeed comprehended. As soon as my eyes met his, traveled to his infamous scar and then to his equally infamous hair, I knew that my life would forever be intertwined with his. The feeling was a remarkably powerful one for a child, and it was that feeling that moved me to introduce myself. Granted, that feeling alone wasn't all that drove me to get to know him; I had read about him all summer, but that was beside the point. He was never a figure of mythological proportions to me, at least not in the same way he was to the rest Wizarding World. No, to me he was just Harry, and he has always remained so.
I had already introduced myself to the redheaded one, and even then I knew Ron and I were to have a volatile relationship. I could tell it took all his self-possession to keep from gagging every time I breathed, but he was a young boy, and most young boys are daft. He was part of that "most."
It was on that day that I took my first tentative steps into the Sea of Confusion, completely unbeknownst to my innocent, childish mentality. I don't think I realized how deep in the Sea I was until I was fourteen, when I suddenly began to analyze our relationship.
*~*~*~*
Ron and I have always been, well, Ron and I. I think it was obvious to everyone from the very beginning that our relationship was definitely one to watch, if not for the hopeless romance than for the sheer entertaining value.
I was well aware that he detested me for half of our first year, and I was completely fine with this. In fact, I detested him back! I always thought he was a horribly bad influence on Harry (that was until I realized that Harry was equally horrid).
Out of everyone in Hogwarts, Draco Malfoy included, I disliked Ron the most. Draco at least had a reason to be such an awful prat; he was a Slytherin after all. But Ron was a Gryffindor! He was supposed to be courageous and kind…(Apparently, he never received that memo. Or else, he was too stupid to read it.)
Even after the whole troll incident, the relationship between Ron and I remained unstable. I could never seem to win with him! I said left, he said right. I said white, he said black. I said up, he said down. It was a constant battle of wills! And don't think this battle has ever diminished. In fact, it's bloody grown!
Sometimes it grows vicious, like in third year during what Harry lovingly calls "The Pet Wars."
Then again…it's grown to a point where I'm fond of it. Yes, I am fond of our passive-aggressive relationship. Sometimes I second-guess myself, thinking that being fond of something so negative and relatively unhealthy is proof of my insanity, but then again, I think of it as our trademark.
You see, Ron and I have cultivated our banter. It has gotten to the point where it's sometimes rather enjoyable. It kills long awkward silences and is a form of entertainment. It makes the long moments of lethargy…of worrying…of waiting…more bearable.
Then there's the righteous feeling of satisfaction when I prove him wrong. Winning an argument is always more fun when it is won against Ron because he thinks he's always right, though more often than naught he's wrong. It is quite an exhilarating feeling to poke a pin through his big, arrogant head; he isn't Dumbledore after all.
We're proud of our banter, and we're even offended and slightly insulted when Harry tells us to shove it because we're irritating him.
When I realized that I was beginning to enjoy our arguments, and look forward to the next one, alarm bells begin ringing in my head. Oh no, I thought. I've gone and done it…
I had stepped too far into the Sea, and now I couldn't get out. It was too late now; I had let the tide carry me in to far. And the Sea kept calling me further; the waves beckoned me on. As I thrashed with all my might to escape her horrible grasp, I found that…I didn't want to go back.
*~*~*~*
At the start of forth year I was unhappily aware that there was something between Ron and I that completely went against the boundaries of a platonic relationship. I really couldn't understand it myself; perhaps my hyper-intelligent brain felt some sort of odd, misguided attraction to his relatively stupid brain, the classic chemical attraction of a negative and a positive.
Of course Ron, being the fool that he is, had no clue about this most odious situation. Again, I really don't understand how he missed this, as he seemed to explode every time he heard the name "Viktor Krum," in conjunction with mine. Then again, I might be as stupid as he is, for there was a period of time when I thought he finally did get a clue. He was oogling Fleur Delacour in such an obvious way that I really did think he was deliberately trying to make me jealous. As if I could ever be jealous of her! I really detested that witch, so ungrateful, vain, and selfish! She reminded me of a female Draco Malfoy…and now that I think about it, I really don't hope that people thought my obvious dislike for her was actually jealousy. What an absurd thought!
But a large portion of my ponderings over Ron's daftness was not strictly designated to his love life; Ron was daft in many areas of his life that year (every year, really). He was at his shining daftnest during his self-imposed estrangement with Harry.
The momentary lapse of judgment proved worthless, as all momentary lapses of judgment prove to be. Ron was wrong (yet again!). And the inseparable triumvirate was now restored.
At least it was according to them. The first night that Harry stayed in the Hospital Wing after the last task, I snuck back in under his invisibility cloak after everyone was gone. I remember kneeling next to him and staring at him for a long while. He was very bruised…there were scratches all over his face and arms and hands…I grabbed his right hand and held it tight, tears stinging my eyes. Now that I was alone I felt I'd be able to grieve over his loss of innocence more freely, for indeed the ordeal was his loss.
I sat there, clinging desperately to his hand trying to picture all the horrible things he had endured over the past 24 hours, over the past 4 years, over the past 14 years…
I could forgive Ron just about anything; he could insult my cat, my obsession with schoolwork, my personality, my looks, anything. But I had been with Harry all year; I had seen how much it pained him to be without Ron and how much joy it brought him to have him back.
And I knew that I could never forgive Ron for causing Harry that pain. Harry was the person that least deserved to feel any more pain than he already did.
And as much as I knew I was being a melodramatic, childish female, I knew I would never forgive Ron that, never, ever, ever.
And I never have.
*~*~*~*~*
I spent that summer with Ron, and I can't say that it was a completely unpleasant experience. As much as I remained true to my vow, Ron was still my friend, and I still felt that unusual attraction to him. Still, he remained just as clueless as before, and I found that this bothered me less and less as time passed.
Despite Harry's absence he remained a large focus in my mind, as he was for the past 4 years. Harry never strayed from my mind. This has never been a problem for me, at least until that very summer, when I realized that Harry was more in my mind than I was conscious of, and this began to irritate others…namely Ron.
"Gods…I wish Harry were here. He really would've enjoyed your mother's treacle tart," I remember telling Ron once after supper, "It's his favorite you know."
It was a simple statement that I really didn't think would cause any sort of reaction from anyone, at least I thought so until Ron jumped from his seat and started yelling.
"That's it! If you mention Harry one more time I think I am going to leave this place! Yes Hermione, we all wish Harry were here, but that doesn't mean we have to voice this sentiment every 5 minutes! It gets irritating after a while! As well as the constant, 'Do you think Harry is mad at us? I'm positive he'll do something stupid if we keep him in the dark forever…do you think we should go visit him? You know that boggart your mum keeps worrying about, I'm sure Harry would know how to get rid of it!' Harry this, Harry that, Harry Harry Harry! Yes Hermione, I'm pretty sure Harry will be furious with anger once he gets here since we've kept him in the dark for so bloody long, and we all know that Harry is the bloody friggin messiah and that a simple boggart won't be that much of a problem for him, but you don't have to remind us of this constantly. So if you don't mind, I am going up to my room and try to not think about Harry for the first time in ages, since apparently, I can't have any peace in my life when I'm with you!"
After that tirade he just stalked off without looking back. I turned to Ginny, Fred and George to see if they had anything to say, but Fred and George just apparated away and I was left with Ginny. Ginny closed the book she was reading and stated coolly, "He's only jealous, you know."
With that, she walked out of the room and left me to ponder. As you can tell, I'm quite fond of pondering.
Was Ron being jealous of Harry, in the usual way? The way he's always been jealous of Harry, because of his fame and fortune, yadda yadda yadda…
Or did this sudden burst of jealousy have something to do with me? He wasn't outwardly jealous this past year, what with Rita Skeeter's preposterous insinuations about Harry and me in her articles, so what had suddenly changed that?
Something was pulling at the back of my mind, something I did that could have probably changed the situation, and that was when it hit me; I kissed him.
It wasn't like it was a big deal! I just kissed Harry's cheek when we parted ways at the end of term on Platform nine and three quarters…why would this make Ron angry? Perhaps it was because I didn't kiss him as well…
I giggled at the idiocy of it all, and I resolved to kiss Ron's cheek sometime during the next year, sometime when it was appropriate, just so that Ron could get such barking mad ideas out of his head. Honestly! Harry and me, Pfft.
*~*~*~*~*
I remember feeling extremely relieved when I was finally able to wrap my arms around Harry the second he got to Grimmauld Place that summer. After months of worry he was finally there!
Of course, my worry was not without cause, for Harry was indeed as angry as I had anticipated him to be; I hadn't been going "spare" (as Ron says) for nothing. I remember his angry tirade so well…I'll never forget it. I was close to tears hearing him…hearing the pain underlined in all that anger. I almost felt like I was back in the hospital wing the night of the third task, making my vow that I would never forgive Ron for hurting him…
And here I was, hurting him all summer.
It was a really horrible feeling; it made me feel both very guilty, and depressed. But the depression lifted as the year progressed and righteous indignation began to take its place. Why was he taking all his anger out on us for?
Then again I couldn't really blame him, could I? All the horrible things that had happened to him, that were still happening to him; as I had voiced before: if it were me, I'd be angry as well.
I did, however, know that I did the right thing by pitching the idea of Dumbledore's Army. Despite the heavy consequences born by our folly, the D.A. meetings gave Harry a renowned sense of dignity, long lost by the constant humiliation he was subject to, and also gave him a feeling of purpose; he was doing something "for the cause," no matter how small.
It wasn't lost on me that he thrived under the attention. He loved being able to share something he was a Master at, the way he shared his Quidditch abilities on our House team, though you'd be hard pressed to make him admit he was good at it.
The only downside to D.A. was an incident that happened around Christmastime; this incident, so young and innocent as it was, was not only a downside, it was my downfall.
*~*~*~*~*
I was perfectly content being Harry's friend, and only that. Over the past years, Harry had grown to be my most trusted friend, and I knew I was his; I was the only one who had never betrayed him, and once or twice he laughingly remarked to me that I was his voice of reason:
"Honestly Hermione, every time I'm about to do something stupid, I always hear your voice in my head enumerating the many reasons why I should stop. Sometimes I don't listen and I ignore you, and I always regret it later. But for the times I have listened…thank you. I'd be dead if it wasn't for you."
I've always valued the trust that is the backbone of our friendship. During our first year, it was just the two of us in that little chamber with all the bottles, and he trusted me enough to know that I wouldn't let him go through those flames if I wasn't positive he wouldn't get burned; during our second year, he trusted me enough, while I was Petrified, to know that I had found the answer to our serpentine puzzle; during our third year, it was just him and me saving Buckbeak and Sirius from execution; during our fourth year, it was just us trying to find a way to get past the dragon, it was just us sitting up at all hours finding spells, pouring through books, and almost dying of fright.
During fifth year I was glad that, once again, it would be Harry and me. When Ron was named prefect I almost died. For one thing, Ron wasn't fit to be a prefect; he had no sense of responsibility, which Harry, having the burden of the fate of the world on his shoulders since birth, did. Secondly, it meant we, Ron and I, were going to alienate Harry, which is something I really didn't want to do for he had felt alienated enough this past summer. Thirdly, I really wanted to work alongside Harry again, just as we did in the past. It has always been us, which is why I not only thought Harry would be named prefect, I secretly wished for it.
Nevertheless, Harry and I still found a way to collaborate; I think its something we just can't fight, really. D.A. was our collaboration, our effort. I strategized, he executed, exactly the way it's always been. Ron, being busy with Quidditch on top of his prefect duties wasn't present for the vast majority of the decisions involving D.A., so I began to see D.A. as our project, completely independent of Ron.
D.A., which inspired in me a general spirit of friendship and camaraderie between Harry and me, eventually had an adverse effect that completely changed the course of my life.
*~*~*~*~*
I was sitting in the Common Room with Ron waiting for Harry to get back from our D.A. meeting. Ron was finishing his Transfiguration essay, and I was writing a letter to Viktor Krum. Yes, I had maintained contact with him. I found that he was rather easy to talk to. Harry and Ron were…vastly daft and immature, and they really didn't understand the female psyche at all. Krum, however, was actually quite shrewd, (Being an older, popular Quidditch star and well known Casanova, he'd had the practice.) and I found him to be the best person to rant to.
Poor Krum! He probably sat there for hours reading parchments with exclamations like "Ron is such an idiot! He should get a clue!" Or "Poor Harry, why must he suffer these woes?" With Krum I found myself able to voice these sentiments without worry; I knew that if I talked about them to Harry and Ron, or any of the other girls in school, that it would leak back to them anyways and I'd end up friendless.
Most of the time Krum would be a gentleman, and try to explain to me the inner workings of the young, male mind, seeing that when they are young they are at their most complex time, and the only way to understand one was to actually be, or have been one (And I don't really think I've had the pleasure of experiencing that…).
But sometimes Krum would become an insufferable git and reply with a short "Screw Ron and date Harry! You know it's what you really want…"
When that was the case I'd pull my hair out and shriek madly. Why was everyone obsessed with the idea that Harry and I were to fall madly in love with each other and live happily ever after? Krum, Rita Skeeter, even Ron had the occasional stabs of jealousy…
I was writing a long, angry letter to Krum, denoting all the reasons why Harry and I would never work out, when Harry walked in looking like a hen who had just gotten her feathers ruffled by a naughty rooster.
I knew it the second I laid eyes on him: she had kissed him!
Perhaps I should explain who she is first. Her name is Cho Chang, a pretty, Ravenclaw sixth year that Harry had been mooning over since our third year. Last year Harry had managed the courage to ask her to the Yule Ball, only to find out that he had been beaten to it by the late Cedric Diggory, the other Hogwarts champion during the Triwizard Tournament and the boy Harry had seen killed by Voldemort's command.
Yup, I knew that Harry was setting himself up for disaster by pursuing Cho. It was obvious that their relationship was going to amount to nothing; Harry was the closest thing Cho could find to a confidant, a person who could grieve over Cedric alongside her and understand her feelings. The fact that Harry had a nice personality and was extremely attractive only added drama to what could have been a really healthy friendship. Cho ended up liking Harry, and Harry already liked her back. But Cedric Diggory's ghost remained between them.
As I said before: Disaster. But still, I was one of Harry's best friends, I had to try and help him however possible, despite knowing that it was a hopeless cause. So I gave him advice whenever I deemed necessary, whether he took it or not was up to him.
But…when I saw him walk into the room and sink heavily into the armchair next to mine, I instantly regretted every single piece of advice I had ever given him.
Ron was the first to ask the obvious, "What kept you?"
I tried to remain completely nonchalant, but I couldn't help staring at him, trying to assess his emotions. So far he hadn't really expressed whether he was happy or not; he just appeared shocked.
Typical Harry.
"Are you all right, Harry?" I finally asked. It was simple enough question, and I tried to ask it while retaining the outmost calm, though I couldn't help a negative suspicion from creeping in.
I wanted to ascertain his feelings by asking him that simple, yet guarded question. I didn't want to ask him if he liked it; for he hadn't told us that he kissed her, I just knew. But I also knew that if he told us he was all right, that meant he did like it, and if he told us he was not, then he was obviously displeased.
For some odd reason I found myself favoring the latter outcome.
But to my utter frustration he only shrugged. I felt like slapping him.
Ron continued his interrogation, "What's up? What happened?"
Harry still wouldn't answer, and I felt the need to get up and shake the answers out of him. Yet I remained calm, and decided to question him directly. Otherwise, we'd be sitting down here forever!
"Is it Cho?" I asked, trying to retain an air of aloofness. "Did she corner you after the meeting?"
Harry nodded, just as I expected he would. I heard Ron snigger at that, and I felt like slapping him for interrupting the conversation. I glared at him, and naturally, he stopped.
"So-er-what did she want?" Ron asked overdoing the casualness in his voice. Amateur.
I really wanted to take the reigns and interrogate Harry myself, but I thought it'd look too suspicious if I didn't let anyone else talk.
"She-she-er-" Harry tried to answer, but I couldn't take it anymore so I interrupted him.
"Did you kiss?" I asked him briskly. This time I couldn't hide the emotion out of my voice, and I couldn't stop a frown from forming on my face. The idea of him kissing her made me want to dash off and rip the pretty little head off her body.
Harry nodded.
Ron yelled an uproarious "Ha!" and began laughing raucously. I saw Harry grin, obviously pleased with himself, and I felt disgust beginning to bubble up inside me.
I turned to my letter indignantly, only to find that I couldn't continue it. I couldn't think of any more reasons as to why Harry and I would never work out, and as I read the reasons I had written earlier, I found them to be completely absurd.
Still, I needed to do something to keep myself from exploding, so I decided to doodle on the parchment instead. Doodling didn't require much attention, so I was able to keep up with the conversation Harry and Ron were having without a hitch.
"How was it?" I heard Ron asking Harry.
"Wet," Harry answered. I felt a lurch in my stomach that had nothing to do with the treacle tart I had eaten earlier that day.
"…Because she was crying." I heard Harry finish.
Ah, just as I expected.
"Are you that bad at kissing?" Ron asked, and I thought I might throw a book at him for asking such a ridiculous question.
"Dunno, maybe I am."
"Of course you're not," I heard myself answer unconsciously. When I realized I had said I felt my ears turning pink; luckily, they were hidden by my hair.
"How do you know?" I heard Ron ask sharply.
Before another replay of the past summer happened, I thought up a reasonable answer quickly to get his mind re-focused.
"Because Cho spends half her time crying these days. She does it at mealtimes, in the loos, all over the place." It wasn't like I was lying; this was the truth.
"You'd think a bit of kissing would cheer her up," said Ron.
I again felt like slapping him, but I accredit this violent need to the bad mood Harry's news had unpredictably put me into.
"Ron, you are the most insensitive wart I have ever had the misfortune to meet."
He really was a complete dud when it came to the fairer sex.
"What's that supposed to mean? What sort of person cries while someone's kissing them?" I could hear the indignation in his voice, but that hardly ruffled me the way it normally did.
"Yeah, who does?" echoed Harry desperately.
I sighed. They really were clueless.
"Don't you understand how Cho's feeling at the moment?" I asked.
"No," they said together.
I sighed again, and laid down my quill.
"Well obviously, she's feeling very sad, because of Cedric's dying. Then I expect she's feeling confused because she liked Cedric and now she likes Harry, and she can't work out who she likes best. Then she'll be feeling guilty, thinking it's an insult to Cedric's memory to be kissing Harry at all, and she'll be worrying about what everyone else might say about her if she starts going out with Harry. And she probably can't work out what her feelings toward Harry are anyway, because he was the one who was with Cedric when Cedric died, so that's all very mixed up and painful. Oh, and she's afraid she's going to be thrown off the Ravenclaw Quidditch team because she's been flying badly."
The boys greeted this tirade with heavy silence, and I felt like a great weight had been lifted off my shoulders. If only they knew…
"One person can't feel all that at once, they'd explode."
This comment obviously came from Ron, and this time I really did feel like I was going to get up and hex him until next Thursday. Luckily, I managed to maintain my serene, if not distant demeanor, and merely retort with, "Just because you've got the emotional range of a teaspoon doesn't mean we all have."
"She was the one who started," said Harry, and silently I was pleased that it wasn't him that initiated it. "I wouldn't've - she just sort of came at me - and next thing she's crying all over me - I didn't know what to do-"
"Don't blame you, mate" said an alarmed looking Ron.
Seeing the innocently frightened look on Harry's face as he tried to describe the situation made me melt inside with sympathy. So I decided to put my inner jealousies aside and give him advice, what are best friends for?
"You just had to be nice to her. You were, weren't you?" I looked up at him anxiously, secretly hoping that he hadn't been nice and had been a mean and horrible boy and that this whole crush with Cho would be over.
"Well, I sort of - patted her on the back a bit."
Idiot! Did he have to be this amusingly boyish with her? I tried to keep from rolling my eyes in disgust (and envy), and give him more advice.
"Well, I suppose it could have been worse," I said, attempting to keep the fact that I really did wish things had gone worse out of my voice. "Are you going to see her again?"
I was hoping for a no here.
"I'll have to won't I? We've got D.A. meetings, haven't we?" Harry answered cluelessly.
"You know what I mean," I said impatiently. Honestly! Did I have to spell everything out for him?
As he obviously thought over the possibility, I kept my fingers crossed for a "No."
"Oh well," I said, trying to keep myself calm while I furiously doodled all over Krum's letter, "you'll have plenty of opportunities to ask her…"
I had to be supportive of Harry and Cho, or else they'd begin to suspect. Thank God for Krum's letter! It kept me occupied and focused, at least focused on something that was not stabbing Cho with my quill.
"What if he doesn't want to ask her?" Ron asked suddenly. This possibility had never occurred to me, but the idea of it appealed to me immensely. I had to make sure.
"Don't be silly. Harry's liked her for ages, haven't you Harry?"
That was it, the million-galleon question. Did Harry still like Cho? Somehow I felt the answer to this question would dictate the events of the rest of my life…but I dismissed this feeling as a hallucination.
Harry never got a chance to answer; as per usual, Ron interrupted the conversation.
"Who are you writing that novel to anyway?"
I knew that if I told him whom I was writing to, it'd spark a jealous rant from him. Good. I'd been jealous enough the whole night, now it was someone else's turn.
"Viktor," I answered, quite pleased with myself.
"Krum?" Ron asked, obviously disgruntled. Ha!
"How many other Viktors do we know?" I asked. A small smile of satisfaction curved itself on my face.
The next twenty minutes we spent in silence. Then I excused myself to go to sleep; only I couldn't go to sleep that night. I rolled around in bed for an hour, and then I realized that it was useless and decided to go out for a walk.
I snuck into the boys' dormitories and borrowed Harry's invisibility cloak.
While I was rummaging through his trunk, I was close enough to hear Harry sleeping; it didn't sound peaceful. He kept tossing and turning, and moaning. My first instinct was to wake him up and calm him down, but I second-guessed myself and decided not to. If I woke him up, he might not go back to sleep, and Harry needed his sleep, no matter how fitful.
As it turns out, that was the night Harry had his dream about Mr. Weasley; it was lucky for the Weasleys that I didn't wake Harry up, or else Mr. Weasley would have ended up dead.
*~*~*~*
Hogwarts during winter has always been a breathtaking sight. During the day Hogwarts resembles a perfect picture-postcard, a child's fantasy of a distant, far-away castle surrounded by a scenic forest made less ominous by the beautiful white snow on the trees. The hustle of students; students playing outside, students skating on the ice-covered lake, (enchanted, so that there would be no accidents with students unceremoniously falling into thin ice) makes the grounds look like an ancient fairy land where the cares of everyday life are forgotten; effects of the enchantment the fairies created in order to maintain and protect the beauty of the land.
During the night…Hogwarts is breathtaking in a completely different way. It's still beautiful, still an ancient fairyland, but it isn't the happy picture of a child's fantasy; it is the enchanting setting of a young girl's dream. The snow does not make the forest less-ominous in the darkness, it makes it more mystifying; the snow on the trees reflecting shafts of moonlight makes you want to enter the forest, makes you long to find the answers to its seductive mysteries.
Trampling outside the snow-covered grounds, the forest calling to me and the chill night air reminding me of the warmth I left behind in the castle, I instinctively headed towards the lake, the lake that Harry and I had circled many times in deep conversation, now gleaming the light of the moon.
My thoughts were a complete mess. What was rational thought only a few hours ago I now found completely ludicrous and out of place.
I was jealous of Cho.
As I stared at the ice-lake, resting my back against a freezing oak tree, I realized that that was the clearest thought to pass my mind in hours.
I was jealous of Cho.
But why?
Duh, Hermione! For kissing Harry!
But why would I be jealous of that? Harry is only my friend…
Really? Are you sure of that? Viktor Krum doesn't think so…
Shut up! Sod Viktor Krum! It doesn't matter what he thinks, it matters what I think.
And what do you think, hmm?
I think…I think…I think that I don't know.
Wow. How insightful. This from the girl that scored 113% on her Charms final during her first year.
Don't be spiteful! Can't you see that I'm confused right now?
I know you are. I am inside your head, you know? And right now, things don't look so pretty in here…
Well you try realizing that you might have feelings for your best friend, eh? See how you like it…
Aha! So you admit you have feelings for him?
I do no - well…I don't know!
Yes you do, you just said so yourself!
Ok then, fine! Maybe I do! But why? Why? And how? And when…?
Why? How? When? You daft girl! This has been happening all along!
All along? Insanity! This couldn't have been happening all along…I was supposed to be liking Ron! And I did…I did like Ron…
I remembered the day I kissed him. Granted, it was on his cheek, and I did it to wish him luck. But the skin of his cheek was so smooth, and the look on his face made me grin with feminine satisfaction…
Yet you turned right around and kissed Harry as well.
Well, yes! So? I did it for luck.
The way you only kissed Ron for luck?
No. Yes. I don't know!
*Sigh*
Well, they're completely different things! Completely different people! Kissing Harry is not like kissing Ron. My lips felt pleasantly smooth against Ron's cheek, like they would be quite content there. Kissing Harry's cheek…
Which you've done twice now…
Yes…which I've done twice now (you nosey lout) is…different…
Different how?
I don't know!
Clueless!
But I DO know (wench) that kissing Harry is revitalizing, like whatever powerful magic that dwells within him is somehow transferred to you, and it makes you feel…
Different.
Right.
And again I say…Clueless! Completely clueless. You might as well be as clueless as Ron…
I am not as clueless as Ron! Nobody can be as clueless as Ron…
You're right there.
I began to think about the conversation in the common room, the conversation that completely threw me off in a direction that I wasn't sure I wanted to go.
Poor Cho, I thought. Now I know how you feel…
"…she's feeling confused because she liked Cedric and now she likes Harry, and she can't work out who she likes best…"
How much of that speech I made was really about Cho, Cedric, and Harry?
Not much of it. You know the whole time you were thinking about yourself…
Shut it! Who asked you for your opinion? And so what if the situation applies to Ron, me, and Harry…
Harry…
So there, I was admitting it. I had feelings for Harry. But again, the same questions: How? Why? And when?
I mean, I was always encouraging of Harry and Cho. I never felt jealous before -
That was because you always knew it wouldn't work out.
Excuse me?
I thought you didn't want my opinion.
Sod what I said!
Not until you apologize.
I'm sorry…
I don't believe you…
I said I'M SORRY! Get on with it!
Fine. As I was saying, you were never jealous of Harry and Cho because you always knew they wouldn't work out. But tonight, you were surprised. They took a step you never thought they would venture to take, and that spurred your jealousy.
Ooooh, I understand! Pure rubbish.
What?
You heard me. Pure. Rubbish.
I'm sorry dear, but it's not rubbish. Aren't you forgetting? I'm you. I'm here, inside your head, and this is what your head is saying.
Blast my head! Tell me, if my head is so smart…
It is! It got you your good grades…
…If my head is so smart, tell me, what should I do now that I'm stuck in this nasty, horrid little rut where I have fallen for my two best friends where one of them likes me back but is too stupid to notice, and the other one is chasing after another girl.
Follow your heart.
What?
Your head is telling you to follow your heart you foolish girl!
Bite me.
That was the night that I was torn away from the coast and thrown into the depths of the sea. Slowly, the currents carried me towards a whirlpool from whence I knew there was no escape…Charybdis. And her keeper had green eyes…
*~*~*~*~*
The year had mercy on me. I didn't have to dwell on my feelings for my two best friends; Ron was unhappily occupied with Quidditch, and Harry was happily occupied with D.A., and the opposition, (Which opposition, specifically, there is no name for. It seems he was opposed to everything.) and Cho…
Grr! Cho! Every time I thought of her kissing him I got the oddest feeling in my stomach…like I had just eaten a Horseradish Every Flavored Bean.
But I took everything with a grain of salt. I decided that I couldn't be selfish and begrudge Harry…Cho. He liked her, and Harry deserved whatever happiness he could get, especially with Umbridge running loose.
So I decided to help him in any way I could. There were many times in which I had to pull Ron and myself away so that Harry and Cho could talk privately; there were many instances in which Harry needed advice, and I had to grudgingly dole it out, always keeping my best friend façade. The second I lost that I knew it'd be over.
The most memorable advice-giving moment for me was right after Valentine's Day. Harry and Cho had a date on that day, and I had asked Harry if I could interrupt it, only because it was the only day Rita Skeeter could come in and do the interview for the Quibbler with Harry (though I won't deny the fact that some morbid, twisted part of me wanted to see how happy he was with her).
I was pleasantly surprised to find Harry came alone, and by the look on his face I knew something had happened. I tried not to let the elation show on my face, and by that time I had become master at hiding my emotions, or emitting false ones whenever the mood called for.
Later when I asked Harry about his date with Cho, I was surprised to realize that I was the reason why Harry and Cho got into an argument.
I was ecstatic! But I soon felt my happiness die when I saw how miserable Harry was.
I sighed and put on my "best friend advice-giver" façade. I was determined to make Harry happy. And if Cho was his happiness, so be it.
"Oh Harry," I said sadly. I had succumbed to the idea of him and Cho. "Well I'm sorry, but you were a bit tactless."
"Me, tactless? One minute we were getting on fine, next minute she was telling me that Roger Davies asked her out, and how she used to go and snog Cedric in that stupid tea shop - how was I supposed to feel about that?"
He was furious. Even though he could sometimes be scary, he always looked good furious. But best friends don't think like that.
"Well, you see, you shouldn't have told her you wanted to meet me halfway through your date."
"But, But, but - you told me to meet you at twelve and to bring her along, how was I supposed to do that without telling her-?"
"You should have told her differently! You should have said it was really annoying, but I'd made you promise to come along to the Three Broomsticks, and you really didn't want to go, you'd much rather spend the whole day with her, but unfortunately you thought you really ought to meet me and would she please, please come along with you and hopefully you'd be able to get away more quickly? And it might have been a good idea to mention how ugly you think I am too."
I knew that that last statement was a bit bold…but I couldn't help myself. I just had to know what he thought of me, physically.
"But I don't think you're ugly," he said. He looked bemused, as if it was insane that I thought he thought me ugly, or that I thought myself ugly.
I don't think I could've been happier if Umbridge was killed by a niffler.
I laughed, but it was nervous laughter and I hope he didn't notice it. Then out of nowhere I made the most asinine comment:
"Harry, you're worse than Ron…Well no, you're not."
As if I had called him, Ron came stomping into the great hall looking all muddy and grumpy after what looked like an unsuccessful Quidditch practice.
I spent another sleepless night pondering that comment…what the hell did I mean?
Lately I had been focusing all of my attention on Harry, and my sudden (not really sudden, you know?) development of feelings for Harry.
I mean, I've been aware that I still have lingering feelings for Ron, but…
But what were they in terms of my newfound feelings for Harry?
I was always used to thinking of my individual feelings for them as two separate entities, just as they are two separate people. But I never really stopped to analyze what they were in terms of each other.
Who did I like more…Ron, or Harry?
I've always gotten along with Harry the best, I've always worked with Harry the best, and I've always enjoyed their company equally, but who did I like best, in the romantic sense?
Did I like Ron more? Did I like Harry more? Did I like them both equally?
First, I had to enumerate the reasons why I liked them both beyond friendship in the first place.
But I found I couldn't do that. It wasn't like there were a number of set reasons as to why I felt about them the way I did, it was just something that was. I was attracted to both of them in their entirety, not because of a loose selection of adjectives. I liked the collective adjectives, their whole selves, and it was hard enough to like them both at the same time.
How was I to go about figuring out whom I liked best?
Follow your heart!
Shut it! I know what I'm doing.
*~*~*~*~*
The summer between fifth year and sixth year was the summer that I lost the ability to breathe. I had spent too much time beneath the waters of the Sea of Confusion, and I was beginning to think that I would die in her treacherous waters.
Ron asked me to be his girlfriend that summer.
I don't think I'll ever forget that day. We were at Grimmauld Place, a month into our summer holiday, and the lot of us, (well, Ginny, Harry, Ron, and I) were sitting in the Drawing Room, each preoccupied with our own agenda: I was reading, Ginny was switching stations on her Wizarding Wireless, Harry was drawing plans for renovating Grimmauld Place for when the war was over, (As he had inherited the estate from Sirius Harry said Ron and I would move in with him right after the war was over, and we could renovate together. He even made us choose the rooms we wanted way in advance. Of course, I figure that this madness is Harry's way of trying to reassure himself, that he will survive the war and kill Voldemort. But then again of course he's going to survive. Why should I worry?) and Ron was just…staring into space.
That in itself should have warned me. He had a horrorstruck look on his face, as if he had done something stupid and wished he could take it back. He was probably imagining the whole scenario in his head: he asked me to be his girlfriend, and I in turn slapped him, said no, and stormed out of the room.
To tell you the truth I almost did that.
Instead, I tried my hardest not to look at Harry, and ran out of the room.
I didn't run to the room I shared with Ginny because I knew she would follow me up and interrogate me. No, I ended up in the attic with Buckbeak, hiding in the same place Harry had the Christmas before. I needed to think.
Should I say yes? I mean, I did like Ron, I'd liked him since forever…I should've been thrilled that he asked me, finally, after so very long…
But what was stopping me from saying yes?
Care for me to elaborate…
No thank you! You've done enough.
Now, as I was saying, why couldn't I say yes? I liked Ron. He liked me back. Where was the rocket science?
And then I remembered the insane urge to look at Harry and see his reaction while Ron asked me, and then it all made sense.
Harry was stopping me from saying yes.
But how?
It wasn't like Harry was my boyfriend, and it wasn't like he liked me back at all. What did it matter what he thought, or if he approved. We aren't involved in that way at all!
It was in that moment of self-righteous indignation that I decided that I would say yes to Ron! Screw Harry! If he didn't like me back than fine, I wouldn't like him either! He could just run off after any skirt he wanted for all I cared…I had Ron now! And I liked Ron…right? I mean…I was doing well with my decision, right? Everything would turn out fine…right?
Right?
But that is the wile of the sea; she lulls you into a false security, only to destroy you when the time comes.
*~*~*~*~*
For a while, everything did turn out all right. We returned to Hogwarts with a new mission in mind, and the year transpired in the usual way; Harry was in mortal peril, Ron and I bickered, classes were hard, (though nowhere near as hard as last year during O.W.L. season) we got a new Defense Against the Dark Arts teacher, (named Antony Alexandrius, and no, he was not insane) and Quidditch was the most important thing on earth.
Harry was named Quidditch captain that year, (as no one else was as qualified to fill the position) and Ron remained Keeper. Ginny became a Chaser, along with Lavender and Parvati, (Who swore they only did it to appeal more to boys, who liked girls who were Quidditch enthusiasts. They were good nevertheless, having had years of practice preparing themselves for this day, so Harry had to accept them.) The Creevy Brothers took over Fred and George's job as Beaters, and Dean succeeded Lee Jordan as commentator.
In the past, I never really fancied Quidditch. For one thing, I couldn't fly. I was afraid of flying. And since Quidditch was a game where you flew, I didn't like to watch it because A) It made me fear for the safety of the players (at least the non-Slytherin ones) and B) I always felt a slight pang of jealousy when I watched them fly, knowing that I could not. Another reason why I never liked Quidditch was because everyone got so riled up about it! They completely forgot about all the important things like school, and the Resistance, and completely concentrated themselves on Quidditch! Lastly, I hated Quidditch because of Harry. I always ended each game with either stinging nail marks on my face because of Harry's near miss, or in tears because Harry almost died.
Sixth year I practically loathed Quidditch. I hated it with, excuse my triteness, the passion of a thousand fiery suns! I don't even think that banal phrase is powerful enough to encompass the extent to which I hated the damned game. Nothing, not the gold of ancient Egypt could make me want to go to a bloody game!
But nothing, not the gold of ancient Egypt, could stop me from going.
During Quidditch games one got a chance to witness Harry in his element; when playing Quidditch, Harry was at his truest. And he was at his truest truest when he played Quidditch, while simultaneously being his team's captain.
It was then Harry became Caesar. His teammates were his men, his army, his legions, and he was their glorious leader, because Harry indeed looked glorious while he played. He was the General, the Imperator, his word, his command, was law, and while in the air, his word never failed. Gryffindor never lost a match while Harry was Captain, the same way Caesar never lost a war.
And just as Cesar regarded his legions as his family, Harry regarded his team as his family.
The team became Harry's support group, all united in loyalty under their Imperator. And Harry loved it, loved them. Harry needed love, respect, and loyalty unlike any other, not only because he was denied these for half his life, but because of the never-ending burdens placed on his strong shoulders for the other half of his life.
Quidditch was Harry's mistress; his escape from the trivial, (and the not so trivial in his case) and the team, his family, was the fruit of their love affair.
And I was utterly jealous. I was jealous because I wasn't partaking of this; I wasn't partaking of any of it. I wasn't part of Harry's family!
I always prided myself on the uniqueness of mine and Harry's friendship; I was the only one to remain completely loyal to him in times of chaos; I was the only one with enough courage and trust, trust in Harry and in our friendship, to tell him the blunt truth, no matter how unbearable, whenever he needed to hear it. And here he was, holding counsel, with his Quidditch team.
Without me.
Whatever happened to the ever powerful and unstoppable triumvirate? Of course, Ron didn't feel the desertion of Harry's favor since he was part of the Quidditch team himself, and that left me to bear the full blast of neglect by myself.
I never spoke to Ron of my true feelings. I knew that if I did, the truth would come tumbling out and I'd regret it to my last day!
But why was he doing this? He hardly ever spoke to me anymore, and when he did it wasn't very enlightening. I really couldn't understand the situation at all! Why did he disrupt the perfect balance we have fought so much to keep between the three of us?
Why was he ignoring me?
The answer to this question became apparent (at least to me) when a most undesired predicament (at least to me) began to develop.
I remember recalling that back in fifth year, when Harry met Rita, Luna and I at the Three Broomsticks for Valentine's Day that some sick, morbid part of me that liked to see myself suffer wanted Cho to accompany Harry to meet us because I wanted to see for myself how happy they were together. Despite my heavy loathing towards the game, this same insane curiosity carried my feet to every Quidditch game that Gryffindor played throughout the year; sod the fact that Ron, my boyfriend, was Keeper.
It is said that Cleopatra once remarked that it was in the female psyche to investigate the women of the man they loved in order to make sure that they were worthy of the man, but not surpassing one's own worthiness. I couldn't agree with her more. For this innate reason, if reason it should be called, compelled me to the Quidditch pitch.
Because she was part of his family, they were able to connect.
I remember Ron bursting on me with the happy news; what he had always wanted had come to pass.
And when I heard, I never thought I'd be able to feel ever again.
No emotion would be strong enough; no triumph would be great enough, no kiss passionate enough, no death sad enough, no pleasure powerful enough for me to ever feel it. All sense of being was lost, and in that instant I became a shell of myself, a ghost Hermione, the kind that went through the motions, but remained unattached to the events.
So this unattached, emotionless Hermione made her way down to the pitch every game to see them together, Caesar and Calpurnia, and I, the lone Cleopatra, knowing it my right to be by his side.
Oh, goddess of the Nile! How I understood you then!
Ron would always wave to me, and I would smile and wave back, making sure my façade was never broken. I was here to watch my boyfriend play, and for no other reason.
But I watched them; I watched them with an obsession that was definitely not healthy.
Before the start of every game, before Harry and the other captain would shake hands, they would kiss each other. A quick peck on the lips, and she would always squeeze his shoulder and shut her eyes tight, every emotion conveyed in that split-second public display of affection.
She was a great Chaser, and she never failed the team, she never failed her Imperator. But that didn't stop her from shooting him the fleeting glances, like the ones I would give him when ensconced in a sticky situation. And then there were the ones he gave to her…sure, as captain he was required to make sure of everyone's welfare, but the glances he gave her were by far the longest and the most emotional. You could always read his mind through his eyes…and it was obvious his heart was with her throughout the game.
After the game, always emerging victorious, they would always seek each other out first.
Before it was always I who reached him first, whether to laugh with him in happiness over a win, or to help him in any way I could when he was injured.
But now it was not like that, they always found each other first, and celebrated with each other first, and the team would then carry Harry on their shoulders to the common room for celebration. Harry always pulled her up with him, and so they rode on triumphantly; the victorious general and his lovely prize.
It was almost enough to make me root for the opposing team.
And it did not end there; I was constantly watching them. Constantly.
Before, Harry and Ron would wait for me to come down to the common room before we would descend to the Great Hall for breakfast. Now, only Ron was there to meet me and we would descend together, without Harry. Harry usually came in after us, making his grand entrance, with Ginny at his arm; like an Emperor and an Empress visiting their subjects.
It almost made me want to puke.
Yet I endured it. I took it like a Queen should, never letting her perfect demeanor falter. I continued on, smiling and looking adoringly at Ron while finding something to bicker with him about. Let no one know of my true feelings.
And there it dawned on me, the reason why Harry no longer talked to me, why I suddenly became an invisible thing unworthy of notice, except for the occasional accidental bump.
He had replaced me.
It was as simple as that; Harry had replaced me with Ginny.
I felt like dying!
And Charybdis was aiding the process; surely I would die a sailor's death in her mouth.
*~*~*~*~*
During my long, unholy exile, several things began to clear themselves up in my mind.
I had completely fallen in love with Harry.
My previous assessment that I only had a crush on Harry was wrong. This wasn't the way it was with Ron; he was fun and exciting to be around, and I esteemed his friendship very much. He was only a crush.
Nu-uh, with Harry, it was full on love.
I suddenly realized that his absence from my life made me completely miserable.
Alas, Cleopatra, smart woman, was once said to described Antony's absence from her side like losing a dimension to her life; life still went on, but something pleasant was missing. But when Caesar was gone he left a great gaping hole in his place, and she felt so utterly distraught when he went off that it took all her will to continue living.
And that was how I felt with Ron and Harry.
Not having Harry around was making it hard for me to breathe. It was becoming hard for me to do anything; to walk, to talk, to act. All my energy was expended with trying to live. I sharpened my acting skills pretending that I was OK, but the longer Harry was away, the harder it became.
I never felt like this in fourth year when Harry and I isolated ourselves from Ron. Au contraire, I relished the closeness with Harry; I got to see a side of him that he is afraid to show around Ron, the side of him that is thoroughly Muggle, the side of him that is afraid of Magic, of what it does and what it can do, and what he can do with the magic that he possesses. This Harry was the Harry that found Magic to be something mysterious and fascinating, completely alien territory he was eager to conquer. This side of Harry was never present when Ron was around; Harry feared what Ron would think, and he was afraid of showing him any vulnerability.
But I hated being away from Harry. I didn't mind Ron's absence, but Harry's was quite literally driving me mad.
That was how I knew I loved him; he was driving me mad. Not mad in the way Ron drives me mad when we argue, but the kind of mad that most women are driven to by the man they love, the kind they fear they will never recover from.
Harry was the sea, and I was slowly drowning in his waters.
*~*~*~*~*
That summer, the summer between sixth and seventh year, all the sufferings of the previous year were alleviated.
The three of us (Ginny included, unfortunately) were again carded off to Grimmauld Place. This time we saw less of Harry then usual, and we just knew he was off getting trained to fight Voldemort.
Harry's training was never spoken of; it was almost like an unspoken pact that we shouldn't speak of it. Because the end loomed so near, it was almost as if we wished to ignore the subject all together, as opposed to before when it was all we could talk or think about. Then again, I hardly ever spoke at all, so maybe it was just me.
It was getting harder to ignore Harry ignoring me. I felt the waters tugging at my legs, and I knew that if I didn't speak soon I would definitely drown!
But I was saved this unpleasantness by some angel of mercy, (or perhaps it was Isis).
I stayed awake one night; way past everyone else had gone to sleep. I wanted to get a head start on reading all the books for seventh year, and I stayed up in the drawing room in order to do so. It was too hectic to really do anything constructive during the day, and nighttime allowed me the solace I needed to study at my own leisure (this was the year of our N.E.W.T.'s you know!)
I didn't even have to look up from my book; I felt him in the room. For some odd reason, I felt my stomach start to turn in knots and my skin begin to tingle and warm.
Normally, Harry would never elicit such reactions within me. I was usually most comfortable with myself when I was around Harry, and this odd reaction I had to his mere presence was proof enough of how much our relationship had changed; I didn't know him anymore.
He was slow moving; he took his time, walking to my place by the fire. He stared at me for a while, and I could feel the heat, heat not having anything to do with the fire, begin to glow within me. Quite frankly, it was unnerving to be observed so meticulously. But again, I did not let it show; I could not let him know how he affected me, or else, all would be lost, and I'd never be able to repair our friendship.
And his friendship meant more to me than anything else; despite the way he'd treated me all year.
He sat down next to me, and still I did not move the book away from my face. For a second there, I thought this was just going to turn out like any other day where we sat side by side and didn't say a word to each other, or acknowledge each other in any way.
But then, breaking the still of the room, he utters the three magic words, the three words I'd been longing to hear for an entire year!
"I am sorry."
I continue to pretend that I was engrossed in my book, while fighting hard to keep myself from breaking down into hysterical tears. But by this time I had learned to manage my emotions past mastery, and I remained composed.
"Hermione, aren't you listening? I said I'm sorry!" He grabbed the book out of my hand and flung it to the ground. It almost landed in the fire.
All I could do was look at him. His eyes were shining, effect of the fire no doubt, and I could tell that this encounter was causing him major amounts of mental distress.
I couldn't stop myself from causing him more. After all, he deserved it.
"You're sorry? Sorry for what?"
He threw his arms up in frustration and glared at me. I succeeded at hiding my smile.
"Sorry for what? Hermione are you crazy? Aren't you the least mad at the abominable way I've been treating you for the past year?"
He was yelling, yelling at me as if this was all my fault.
It took every ounce of will I possessed not jump up and slap him.
"Abominable treatment? Harry, what are you talking about?"
He started pulling the hair from his head. I was pleased; I hoped it hurt him.
"Hermione! I've only been ignoring and neglecting you for the past year!"
"Oh, you mean that abominable treatment." I refused to let even a hint of how much he hurt me show on my face.
"Aren't you the least bit upset?" I saw his face fall, as if he expected me to rage at him and feel angry for what he did to me. And when he saw I didn't, he felt saddened.
"Upset? Why would I be upset? You did me a great favor! This past year has been like heaven for me, don't you know? COMPLETE HEAVEN! I haven't had to worry about you all year! I didn't have to join you in some impossible crusade, I didn't have to live with your sporadic fits of rage, I didn't have to spend all my time on you! I actually had a life this year! My life didn't revolve around you so for that I'm grateful! GRATEFUL!"
The sad look on his face was quickly replaced with a look of anger and indignation.
"Well I'm happy that you were able to benefit from my lack of friendship! If I had known you had felt like this all along, I would have severed ties with you long ago! If I was such a burden, why did you never tell me? I wouldn't've wanted you to endure such an AWFUL TYRANT LIKE MYSELF!"
With that, he stormed out of the room, slamming the door along the way.
I crumpled to the ground and burst into tears.
The next morning was awful. We all filed down to breakfast in the usual manner, but we were all awfully quiet; the others probably sensed something was amiss.
What was amiss became clear throughout the day, as Harry and I tried our hardest to outdo ourselves with our significant others.
I doted on Ron all day; being extra nice and forgiving him things I would have usually cut his head off for. I didn't tell him to tie his shoes properly or to button his top button, or to stop speaking with his mouth full of food. I also upped on the public displays of affection
Perhaps not as much as Harry though. It seemed like Harry was determined to keep Ginny attached to his hip.
The fury between the two of us was astounding; usually we ignored each other in a pleasant manner, almost as if we weren't aware of each other at all, but today the angry energy was palpable.
So it was no surprise to me when Mrs. Weasley pulled me aside and asked me if there was anything wrong between Harry and I; had we had a little spat of sorts?
I assured Mrs. Weasley that there was nothing going on between Harry and I. It wasn't as if I lied!
Later that night, I stayed up alone again reading late. And almost as if it were a déjà vu, Harry made his way into the drawing room. But this time, Harry made quick, determined steps and when he reached me; he tugged the book out of my hand and deliberately threw it into the fire.
"Why on earth did you do that for? You'll have to buy me another book you know…"
"Oh Hermione sod the book!" He grabbed me by the arm, and forced me to look at him.
"Listen to me! I am sorry. I am really sorry for the way I've treated you, not just this past year but the entire six years of our acquaintance. I have never appreciated you the way I should have, and the fact that I had taken you for granted became blatantly clear throughout last year, when the many times I needed you and I could not find the courage to come get you. The past year has been hell without you, Hermione, and I've come here to implore your forgiveness. I also hope to reestablish our friendship, because I cannot bear the thought of another day without your support or amity. So please, Hermione, please. Please forgive me."
His eyes! They would be the death of me! But I had hardened my heart…
"Let go of my arm," I growled. This time, I could not stop the tears from running down my face. I had waited too damn long…
"How dare you? How dare you think that you could will a friendship back into place! All the years of working side by side, thinking our relationship a special one…only to find you could discard me without a second thought, and then come back and easily pick me up when you find it useful! How dare you?"
"Hermione, wait, I have to tell you, I-"
"Just stop it! Please, just shut up! I don't want to hear it! I just don't! Please! Please leave, and never speak to me again! Now go."
"Hermione I…"
"GO!"
And he went, this time not as dramatically. He practically crawled his way to the door, shoulders slumped, like a chastised puppy. And instead of slamming the door shut, he hesitated and looked back at me. This time I didn't wait until he left to start bawling like a child, I let him see me in my full glory.
I did not call him back, and so he left, closing the door behind him quietly.
I could not sleep that night, as I could not sleep the night before, as I could not sleep any night since I first found out about my newfound feelings for Harry and the sea of confusion began raging in my head.
Why didn't Ron vex me like this?
Because you do not love Ron.
Oh, it's you again.
What? You're not happy to hear from me?
Oh no, I'm absolutely delighted!
Well, you don't sound delighted. Are you lying?
Of course not! I don't' lie!
Yes you do. You've been living a lie, darling.
I sighed. I really didn't want to deal with myself tonight.
You know what? Just tell me what you want to tell me and let me have a good night's rest for once!
Well, I only wanted to tell you that you should forgive the boy, and be done with it.
Forgive him! What, are you mad?
Of course I am! I'm you.
Oh stop it! You know very well I can't forgive him, the ungrateful wretch!
But you know you want to. Well, your heart wants to, it's your head that has you slightly confused.
But you're inside my head.
Why yes I am! I am the part of your brain that is connected to your heart, so I speak in truth.
Wait! I thought you were inside my head!
Well, yes, the brain is inside the head…
Don't be a smart aleck!
I can't help it.
So you're saying I should forgive him. But how do I know I won't end up hurt again?
Well, you don't.
I sighed again. I was beginning to hate thinking.
The next morning was just like the last, but instead of there being an angry energy between us, there was another kind. It was inexplicable, just as palpable, and still affecting odd behavioral patterns into our unconscious minds.
For some odd reason, Ron and Ginny were acting extremely possessive. I honestly have never seen them like this!
It was like role-reversal! Whereas the day before Harry and I tried outdoing each other, it seemed that today they were both trying to outdo Harry and I, almost as if to make it a point how much they cared for us.
Strange, it looked like they were trying to prove to us how much they cared for us, as if to stop any weird ideas from getting into our heads…
Madness.
I stayed up again that night, this time completely ignoring my books. I sat there waiting for him, hoping that he would come so that I could forgive him and we could make up and this entire nightmare would end.
I was completely depressed when the clock struck 3 a.m. and he still hadn't come.
I sighed and got up slowly, not caring that I left my books strewn about all over the place.
When I got to the door of the drawing room, I found I could not open it. Something was slumped against it and that something barred my departure. I guess this something realized I was trying to get out, for I heard scurrying and then I was able to open the door with ease.
I wouldn't say I was surprised to see Harry standing there looking like a fish before a curious swimmer.
"Harry, I-"
"Shut up Hermione, and listen to me. I'm sorry, you were right. I should have never presumed to be able to will our friendship back into place, it was arrogant of me."
"Harry-"
"Let me finish! Perhaps you found that you were better off without a friend like me, that you're life was easier and jollier, that you never missed me at all. But you must believe me when I tell you that I really did miss you, that the past year has been the furthest part of Dante's hell, and that this was all a result of our estrangement. Even though you can live without me, I definitely can't live without you. And this has nothing to do about me "finding you useful" once in a while, no; it has nothing to do with that. It has everything to do with me valuing you as my most trusted friend and ally, and about me loving you as my most trusted friend and ally."
"Harry!"
"I'm not finished yet! If you decide you don't want to forgive me, then know that I shall keep coming back to you, on my knees, begging for your forgiveness until you do forgive me. You are one of the most important people in my life Hermione, and I won't let you get away again."
"Harry! I've been trying to tell you all night. I forgive you. And also that I'm sorry, I'm sorry for all the stupid things I said before. I was just a bit miffed, 'tis all."
Harry's sorrowful expression turned into a happy one, and his lips morphed into a "Harry grin," the kind that melts Arctic ice with its warmth.
As he pulled me into a hug, I knew everything was right with the world. And as I felt his strong arms around me, I could not help the threatening tide of tears.
*~*~*~*~*
That summer saw a growth in our friendship comparable to no other time in my life up until then. Every day that passed seemed to take away a day of my horrible sixth year; that was how powerful our reunion had been.
The change in our relationship was immediate; the next morning at breakfast everyone saw the Harry and Hermione that had co-existed from first year to fifth year. We joked, smiled, teased, and laughed gaily, and our happiness seemed to permeate brightness throughout the whole house (at least in my eyes).
Mechanical Hermione was dead and buried; Harry had restored her to her former glory.
Our renewed friendship strengthened my feelings for Harry, and I still had to hide my feelings and keep myself distant at times. But I was no longer acting my every waking moment, and this proved an agreeable respite to my play-weary brain.
Nevertheless, I was happy. During the day I felt like everything was the same as it was before, and I felt quite content and comfortable with everything.
Still, I couldn't help the feeling that things had changed. The unbalance of our illustrious triumvirate was not only caused by "The Estrangement," but by Ron and me as well.
And I could not deny or ignore Harry and Ginny anymore, as that situation was still there, glaring at me in the face.
And this change became most apparent at night. I still stayed up late studying, and Harry always sought me. It was during these clandestine meetings that we tried to make up for out lost year. I call them clandestine because clandestine they were, they were never referred to during the day.
During those nights, we would talk to each other about anything and everything; how we would restore the house, (Harry wanted all the dark green and silver serpent trappings OUT, to be replaced with Lions and scarlet and gold, a tribute to Sirius who detested everything about the house) our futures (Harry wanted to be an Auror, and his excited talk about the profession excited me, and along with him I vowed we would become Aurors).
Our most serious conversations, though, revolved around our goings on of the past year. We found we were rather different people from last summer; a year had changed us quite a lot.
An odd thing was that we never talked about romance; this in itself was a glaring proof as to how things had changed. The lines of trust had to be re-drawn, and we were still working our quills to the parchment.
The ink was splattered all over the place one night, however, when Harry, after a deep conversation about the odd announcement that we were to keep Professor Alexander (as he liked to be called) for another year as our DADA teacher, candidly announced that he was on the verge of ending things with Ginny.
"WHAT!?" I asked, completely shocked out of my mind. A part of me hoped that- but no- that was ridiculous. Why would this have anything to do with me? It's not like Harry liked me in that way.
"It's just that…well, this is the year Hermione! This is the year it ends, the year I've been waiting for all my life. At the end of this year, I'm ending it! I am prepared to kill him Hermione, and die trying if I have to! And I don't think its fair…I might not…and she deserves…"
Ah, I understood. He loved her so much that if he died, he would cause her unhappiness, and he was unwilling to sacrifice her happiness for his own selfish needs. How noble.
God I hated him at that moment.
"She deserves someone who really loves her Hermione! I…I'm sorry to say that I don't. I never have. Sure, I think she's pretty, and I enjoy her company, and her support this past year has been incomparable but…I can't get past that nagging brotherly feeling I have around her, you know? Even more now than before, because I've dated her, she feels more like a sister to me. Ron and I became brothers through her…and instead of inciting any sort of feelings for her, it's turned me into another one of her brothers."
I opened and closed my mouth many times; this was not the speech I expected.
"Besides, I only started dating her because Ron was so vehement about it. Rumor had it that Ginny had discarded Dean for Draco Malfoy, and I definitely wouldn't have allowed that! Let alone Ron. So when Ron came to me with this scheme, I accepted. I feared some harm might come to Ginny in an effort to attack me, and I could never allow that Malfoy scum the satisfaction. I know Ron has always wanted the farce to actually pay off and that in the end, I really would like her, but it's been no use. I don't. And I know I never shall."
I was quite stunned when I heard all this. I was really speechless…and I wasn't sure it was because of the new information, or his simple eloquence. Suddenly, he looked so much older…so mature. Ron was a thousand miles behind him, and I wondered if either of them realized it.
"Does- does Ginny know, of any of this?" I finally managed to squeak out.
Harry's brow furrowed making him resemble a General pouring over maps trying to win an impossible battle. "No, she knows of none of this, and she never will if I can help it."
"Then what are you going to tell her when she questions you as to why you wish to break things off?"
"I'll tell her that I'll be too busy preparing for Voldemort and the war; she'll understand, and accept. After all, she is on my Quidditch Team."
And then Harry smiled like a General while inspecting his legions, finding them all to be loyal and obedient.
"The one you should be worried about is Ron," I said jokingly.
Harry's grin grew wider. "I know. He might just kill me!"
And with that, we started laughing, laughter uninhibited by dark thoughts of evil wizards.
*~*~*~*~*~*
Harry broke it off with Ginny at the start of term, and their break ended amicably enough. Harry was right; she understood and accepted.
Ron was of course furious, but a glare from Harry and his constant rages were silenced.
Seeing Harry break up with Ginny, my eyes, of course, were immediately turned on Ron.
Oddly, right after Harry and Ginny's falling out, I began to see every vice that Ron has to offer, and they annoyed me to no end. I used to think the way Ron chewed on his quills was endearing, but the sight of it made me scream at him to stop! The way he talked with his mouth full was always a sore point in his etiquette, and for the most part, except for a few memorable occasions, I ignored it, but suddenly I found myself yelling every time he dared try! The way his shoes were constantly untied made me want to sit him down and chide him for being a foolish boy, and his voice was beginning to be a constant irritation!
I knew I could pretend no more; this was long in being over.
But what could I do? If I broke up with Ron so soon after Harry had broken up with Ginny, people might begin to be suspicious. They might suspect that Harry and I had planned this, or worse, that after seeing Harry break up with Ginny, I broke up with Ron to seize my chance!
Never!
So no, I knew I had to endure Ron for a short time longer, no matter how hard it might play on my nerves. Or else I had to make him want to break up with me…
No, I could never be that cruel. I'd just have to wait for the right time.
Besides, it wasn't like my relationship with Ron had changed any; the only difference was that we kissed every now and then and attended Hogsmeade weekends with each other exclusively.
I could deal with that for a while; it wasn't like he was a bad kisser.
Oh, but to compare them to Harry's…
Not like I had kissed Harry! But I just knew I would enjoy his kisses better, only because they were coming from him and no one else.
Would I ever enjoy such pleasures?
*~*~*~*~*~*
Strangely enough, the year flew by in a blur. Perhaps this was cruel fate's trick, as nobody wanted the year to end. The end of the year meant the end of the war, and as much as everyone wanted the war to end, they were not prepared for it to be Harry's end.
I wasn't prepared for it to be Harry's end.
I would rather have a war that lasted forever than twenty million years of peace without Harry.
I know this was a stupid feeling, but what of it? I'm human; I'm selfish. I would rather have Harry than world peace, and I'm pretty sure I'm not the only one that felt this. I'm sure Ron, the rest of the Weasleys, Lupin, and especially Dumbledore felt this. Although I hope they didn't feel it in the same context I did, or I'd be deeply disturbed…
We had kept up our custom of late night conversation. It was fairly common knowledge that the common room should be cleared by midnight for our use (It was easy for us to spread the word, since we were Heady Boy and Girl. Dumbledore finally let Harry have what was rightfully his after seeing the disaster Ron was as prefect. Oddly enough, he kept Ron as prefect, perhaps seeing the advantage the three of us would have if we ever needed excuses to keep out of trouble after our latest adventure. Of course, Dumbledore proved again how wise he is since yes, seventh year we had many adventures…).
Even Ron would steer clear of the common room, and I always wondered why this never bothered him. But now that I look back, knowing everything I know now, and having lived everything I have, I've come to realize that I've severely undermined Ron's intelligence and how astute he is. He knew better than I did…
But as I was saying, Harry and I maintained our late night conversations. Again, in the beginning it was a glaring attempt to make up for last year, but after a while I found it to be an extension of fourth year. Ron was not there, and we would walk around the lake. This year, Ron was there, and our lakeside walk-arounds were replaced by comfortable armchairs and warm fires.
On such a night, Harry looked forlornly out at the night's sky, and dully remarked, "I don't want you and Ron to follow me to the Last Battle, nor anyone else. I want to go alone. I want to die alone."
There it was. I had been expecting it for some time now, and although I was prepared to refute the statement, I could not for the life of me remember the speech I had written down.
You might think it odd that I knew in advance Harry would address me with this, but I knew this was something that he could only speak aloud to me. It turns out, I was completely wrong in my views of Harry's relationship to the Quidditch team.
True, a General's soldiers are like his family. They are close beyond compare, and survive things together that bond them in an inexplicable and irrevocable way. They see each other in the worst of environments and therefore suppose that they know each other best, and this may be true from soldier to soldier.
But a General is the father. All good fathers, as much as they love their children and are completely real to them, want the best for them. They want to spare their kids hurt and anguish, therefore a lot of the times they pretend that everything is ok when sometimes things are obviously not.
So is the lot of the General; the General has to keep his morale up so that the morale of his troops does not fall as well.
I had never lost Harry completely to his Quidditch team last year because I'd always get to see a part of him that they never could.
I like to call him distressed Harry, or deep in despair Harry. Sometimes he's Grieving over Sirius and/or Hagrid Harry. Other times he's panicked Harry, or even Hopeless Harry. Right then, he was a mixture of them all.
"First off," I began, "You are not going to die. Second off, Ron and I are coming. Period. Third off, I don't care about anyone else. Fourth off, you are not going to die. Fifth off, if you even try to counter anything that I have said you will get hexed. Sixth off, come here and give me a hug."
He came obediently, like a sad little puppy coming to his owner for food.
Feeling my arms wrapped around him, I vowed then and there to never again take Harry's hugs for granted. I had done so for the past few years of my life…but in that moment I came to realize how precious they are. They're like a rare jewel, not rough and edgy, but a jewel that is found perfect and has no need of being shaped or shined.
Then again, all of Harry can be likened to that jewel.
"How do you know I'm not going to die?" Harry asked, his voice muffled by my hair.
"I just…know."
"But how do you know?" I could hear the sad, resigned, frown in his voice, and I felt like running off and destroying Voldemort myself. Why him?
"Because you can't die."
"Why can't I die?"
I sighed. He was not going to give me a break.
"Because you just can't."
What I really wanted to say was "If you die, I'll die with you, and I'm not ready to die," but the smart part of me took it for the melodramatic pronouncement it was, so I just stayed hushed.
*~*~*~*~*
True to what I said that night, Ron and I were there.
It was during that momentous night in front of the Riddle House that I finally found myself completely submerged under water. I submitted myself to the sea, knowing that it was useless to fight it. The hold it had on me was firm, and to my utter disbelief, I found it had always been there.
I had thought that the sea was slowly taking hold of me, and that it was up to me to fight the seductive grip that almost felt like a loving embrace.
But no, the sea had me before I even began to feel her foamy shore. And contrary to what I thought, the sea did not lead me to complete and utter chaos.
No. She brought me enlightenment, the clearest moment of my life.
The confusion was brought upon me by myself; I kicked and screamed and tried to escape the tide. If I had just let the current take me, as I let it take me then, I would never have suffered so…
All along I had been following my head; my head that told me that the proper thing was to let him go, to let him be happy, even without me. But my heart, my heart knew…and I disobeyed…
And when I saw the crumpled figure on the floor, triumphant, but nearly dead, I knew that I could never listen to my head again! (Well, except for practical purposes…)
I fell on him.
Ron and other members of the order were dancing around, fighting the last remnant of the Dark Regime; I had previously been helping them.
Yet I could not bring myself to help them further; my entire being was concentrated on Harry. I inspected him, a body almost completely devoid of life, and I felt like bursting into tears of despair.
But I had to protect him.
Every which way Death Eaters kept trying to get at his body, and I knew that if they succeeded, it would be his end.
So I continued fighting, perched on the floor next to him. A sudden fury overtook my body, empowering it, where grief would've crumpled it.
First came Lucius Malfoy. I knew he would be first; there was no other wizard alive (now that Voldemort was dead) that hated Harry as much as Lucius, and of course he'd find it fitting to finish Harry Potter off as his last service to the fallen Lord.
I just had to hit him with a spell that would catch him off guard, so I hit him with Rictusempra.
As much as I was worried about the outcome of this final battle, the sight of Lucius Malfoy laughing hysterically in the middle of a war zone, where bodies were strewn about flying this way and that, was quite funny. It momentarily made me forget where I was and what I was doing, but that only lasted a split second. Out of nowhere I felt Bellatrix Lestrange lunge towards me and my worst fear became a reality.
She grabbed Harry and started dragging his body across the cemetery. They were out of sight by the time my senses came back to me. I got up and scurried off to find them in a daze. This could not be happening…
I saw that nobody followed me; they were all fighting their own battles. The Order was concentrated on getting every last Death Eater locked up and sent to Azkaban. A part of me understood that they were doing what they were set out to do, but a part of me felt bitter that they didn't seem to be helping Harry. They probably all thought him dead. And since he had completed his job, why waste your own life helping him?
I knew I was thinking nonsense, but those were the thoughts that gripped me as I made my away across ornate headstones and mausoleums in the dead of night to try and find them.
And when I did find them, the site almost made me want to run away in horror.
She had Harry tied to a headstone, and was currently stabbing a small blade through the crook of his arm. There was a big smoking cauldron in front of them, and Bellatrix added Harry's blood to it.
I was riveted to the spot as I saw a replay of what Harry suffered during fourth year. Instead of a short mousy wizard, however, there was a tall malevolent witch.
Could this be happening? Could this actually happen?
Voldemort was dead! Harry killed him! Nothing could bring him back! He wasn't immortal when he died! By taking Harry's blood during fourth year, he made himself mortal which had the happy side effect of allowing him to die.
No, Bellatrix could not bring him back.
So what was she doing?
Later on, we would find out the death of her master had driven her mad, and this last, desperate attempt was just an act of insanity.
But at that moment none of this mattered. The longer Harry had that deep wound in his arm, the more blood he lost, and he was already weak. He was beyond weak.
At the sight of Harry, a pent up fury burst forth through me, and I knew what I had to do.
Harry once recounted the night he tried to use an Unforgivable Curse on Bellatrix Lestrange. It didn't work.
"You need to mean them, Potter!" she told him. "You need to really want to cause pain…"
Seeing Harry there, more dead than alive, and seeing Bellatrix cackling madly over her cauldron, I did. I wanted to cause pain. I wanted to cause her a lot of pain…
I jumped from behind the mausoleum I was using for a hiding spot, and turned my wand on her.
"Crucio!"
I heard my voice utter that nasty word, and I felt satisfaction when I saw her fall the ground screaming.
"Hermione, STOP!" I heard someone yell my name, but I couldn't stop, I didn't want to stop. This was for Harry…I was doing this for Harry…
Someone jumped on me and I fell to the floor. It was Ron.
"What did you think you were doing? Are you mad?"
"GET OFF ME!" I yelled. And as if I had stung him, he jumped right off me.
I had the full intention of picking up my wand and resuming the torture on Bellatrix, but Lupin had already stunned her and was looking at me with concerned eyes.
"NO!" I screamed at him. "Let me at her! Let me have her! Let me finish her off…"
In my rage I struggled to get to her, finding it hard to do so since Ron was holding me back.
"She killed Sirius! She almost killed Harry! Let me kill her…"
"Hermione. Hermione…HERMIONE! It's over! Let it be; it's over…" I heard Lupin's soothing voice say to me.
"Where's Harry? Is he alive!?" I asked, breathless. An insane energy was running through me, as if my body refused to accept that the battle, the war, was over, despite what my head said.
"He's still tied to the headstone, and still alive. Barely," Lupin murmured.
I made my way over to him, and not caring who was watching or how childish I might be acting, I fell on him and burst into tears.
Oh I cried that night, so very hard. I don't think I've ever cried like that in my life, not even as a child.
I had almost lost him…and the pain of that truth was unbearable, and the relief that it never came to pass was extreme.
Right at that moment, that moment of deep emotional anguish and elation, I knew it; I felt it.
That was the moment I finally decided I must follow my heart. I knew that I could never go back to the way things were, I knew that I would never be content being his friend and only his friend.
*~*~*~*~*~*
That night at the infirmary, I refused to leave his side.
Oh Madame Pomfrey tried! She had the nerve to try and get me out of the infirmary, but I was adamant about remaining with him. We had a blazing row, she insisting that Harry was still in a critical condition and that it could turn either way. I insisting that this was precisely why I should be allowed to stay; I was his best friend and I wanted to be there if…if…
Right before I threatened her with an Unforgivable Curse, Dumbledore swooped into the room and told Madame Pomfrey Ron and I could stay.
As the night progressed, I became increasingly irritated with Dumbledore's pronouncement. Why did Ron have to stay?
Normally, I didn't have any problem about being affectionate with Harry in front of Ron. I actually never really thought about it. He was my friend, why shouldn't I be?
But tonight it felt…different.
Tonight I knew I was being scrutinized, that my every breath and movement was being watched. So I stayed still, Ron on one side of Harry's bed, I on the other side. I didn't do so much as grab a hand, fearing that…
What did I fear, exactly?
I waited until I heard Ron snoring softly.
I seized my chance and grabbed Harry's hand. I pressed it to my lips, to my forehead…I didn't even realize I was weeping. All I could think about was how much I loved him…
I kept saying it over and over in my head, "I love you." I didn't realize I was whispering it out loud. "I love you, please don't leave me…"
"Mmm…Hermione…"
I froze. That was Harry. Was he awake? Did he hear me?
He didn't say anything after that, and he didn't stir.
I sighed in relief.
"You know, if I didn't know any better, I would reckon we were back in fourth year, on the night of the final task."
I froze.
"I saw you, you know? I was here sitting in a chair in a corner, cloaked by darkness. You appeared out of nowhere, and rushed toward Harry and wept on him like you did tonight. I saw you."
I couldn't think of anything to say, so I let Ron continue.
"Of course I knew you'd come. That was why I left the Invisibility Cloak for you; I only took the Marauder's Map. I thought you'd come down and we'd both keep watch together. But when I saw you with him I didn't want to disturb you."
"Ron, I…"
"You thought me stupid, didn't you? You thought I didn't know? Oh no Hermione…I knew. I've known all along…"
What surprised me is that he didn't sound angry, or bitter, or cynical. Just resigned…
"There was a reason why, in the beginning, I never expressed my feelings for you. I was afraid, because I knew then what you know now, and I always feared the day that you and I were together and you woke up and realized how you truly felt…
"So I decided it was better to keep quiet and just let you two get together. Only you didn't. And I waited…and waited…and waited. And then I saw you two were not going to act on it, and then I began to doubt my premonitions and I decided to give us a shot.
"But it proved to a worthless effort, did it not? You were always pining for him, and I know you tried real had to keep this all to yourself, Hermione, and you did a smashing job, really, you did! But I was with you all the time, when no one else was. And I know you better than you know yourself, the same way you know me better than I know myself.
"But you know him better than you know me, and he knows you better than I. You know each other better than anyone else.
"And I can't compete with that."
What is about the men in my life and their propensity to shock the daylights out of me? First Harry and the truth about his relationship with Ginny, and know this…
"I even tried to set Harry up with Ginny, as you well know. But it didn't work. Do you know why Hermione? Because…"
"Harry doesn't love Ginny," Harry said suddenly, breaking into the conversation.
"Hermione…there was a reason why I isolated myself from you during Sixth year."
Oh boy. Oh my god. This wasn't happening…
"Yes," I said weakly.
"I must admit, I never really thought of you in any other way besides as a friend. Now that I think about it, I must have been completely blind and as daft as you thought Ron because others could clearly see it except for me. Ron saw it, Cho saw it, even Viktor Krum saw it…but I didn't. And I think a part of me didn't want to see it; I liked things the way they were.
"But when you and Ron announced you were going out…I knew it at once. And realizing it, seeing you and Ron was like Sirius' death all over again. I couldn't bear to see you together…so happy…so I decided to distance myself. I agreed to date Ginny; I did anything to keep my mind off of you. But I couldn't keep away; if I didn't have you for myself, I wanted to at least retain a semblance of friendship. So I begged your forgiveness, which you grudgingly granted. And a year later, here we are, pent up truths suddenly bursting forth like a wave onto the shore."
Yes, here we were. And it was time to choose. Was it gonna be the black haired one, or the redhead?
But then no, I had already chosen. It was time to acknowledge the choice. It was hard to deny Ron, whom I loved like a friend and brother, and whom I've shared great, sometimes exhilarating times with. He gave me my first kiss; he was the one that awoke my first stirrings of femininity. He was there throughout the whole ride…knowing that in the end his arms would be empty. He was a noble creature, and I did love him so…
Though nowhere near the way I loved Harry. He was my best friend and ally, the very air I breathed for the past seven years. He was my oxygen…a bizarre sort of addiction in a way. And no one makes me feel the way he does…with just a smile, a slight touch. His very presence in a room was enough to make me lose all train of thought; he was so beautiful to behold.
Yes, I had horridly fallen in love with Harry Potter and there was no way I could make it go away.
On that dark night, in that dark room, Harry Potter took my hand and pulled me out of the water.
It was the simplest, most powerful gesture to ever grace the surface of the earth.
I felt the water around me disappear. I was no longer confused; I no longer doubted anything. I was back on the beach, watching the sunset into the vast ocean, Harry standing beside me.
*~*~*~*~*
Finis