Hearts by Telwyn Dubois
Rating: PG13
Genres: Angst, Romance
Relationships: Lily & James
Book: Lily & James, Books 1 - 6
Published: 13/06/2006
Last Updated: 13/06/2006
Status: Completed
One-shot. After the rain, a moment of Lily and James that all started with pink, damp, paper
hearts. A story about something inexplicably random, about the rain that has fallen, about pale
pink kunzite and Emerson love quotes.
1. Heart
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**Word Count: 2414**
The mist that only comes after the rain has fallen clings to her every move, smelling faintly of
spring. She stares, apparently transfixed, a lone figure in the courtyard. They are exquisite now,
they are. Last night, they hadn’t been, but out here, transformed, they are quite lovely, those
little pale pink hearts scattered on the concrete, the paper material soaked through and through.
It is quite the pretty picture, something to smile at in wonderment, a puzzle that no one knows
about. For how have those pieces of paper gotten to be where they are, right by the edge of a
tower? Only a few scattered girls know, but they won’t have told the rest yet.
He watches, hands tucked into deep pockets, laughing eyes now somber. He watches as she scuffs
her feet against a heart, only to find that it can not and will not move. He watches as she smiled
suddenly, and knows that she is laughing inside at the coincidences life had in store for everyone.
He also watches with a pang in his heart, because he alone knows that she will never take him
seriously, just like the way she is playing with the hearts. She is playing with his own heart,
toying with it and luring him in. He knows it, but can’t resist his angel, the only love of his
life there will ever be. Why did he send her such an expensive gift?
He isn’t sure. Maybe he just wanted to end his pain, maybe he just wanted to let her know how he
felt before they parted ways and went on to different professions for the rest of their lives.
Graduation was so near…
She sighs, remembering the events of last night. Events that caused her to hurl the basket of
hearts over the windowsill, causing her to watch as they fluttered down and disappeared into the
gloom. Yes, the events of last night are burned into her memory.
She and the girls had been enjoying a slumber party of sorts in their lovely dorm room, snacking
on chocolates and whispering about gossip, the way most teenaged girls do and have done over the
course of the last century or so. They’d been having a lovely bit of time until an owl had flown
by, tapping on the window anxiously. In their merriment and laughter, no one noticed the owl until
little Alice had pointed it out, eyes dancing with curiosity. All of their partying stopped
momentarily as she, with a hint of dread sparking in the back of her mind, pulled open the
window.
The owl itself was quite handsome and could be seen as arrogant, much like its owner. He swooped
in and deposited a basket upon *her* bed before swooping out again and
soaring to the other side of the tower, where he waited, ever hopeful. She had picked up the basket
and looked inside, the other seventh years crowding around for a hopeful look. Nestled atop a bed
of paper hearts was a card and a golden necklace. Always the neat one, she’d carefully opened the
card, half expecting her action to trigger fireworks or a blazing message. Instead, there is only a
quote, a quote she recognized as belonging to Ralph Waldo Emerson. But something was different;
James had altered it.
*“*The only gift of love is a portion of thyself, so here is my
heart.”
She looked past the card at the paper hearts, so carefully cut out into their faded pink shapes.
It was impossible to do it with a charm, so he must have done it by hand. Had he recruited his
fellow friends into it? And how did he know that she loved Emerson’s poetry, and always had? But of
course he did; he knew everything about her without her having to say a single word. That was the
way things worked with their quasi-relationship. She said nothing, he knew everything. All of
Hogwarts knew it, too.
It really was a pity that she didn’t love him in the slightest, not even fancied once or twice.
He would have made a wonderful sort of boyfriend, what with all the romantically comedic errors
he’d made in an effort to court her. Alas, she felt nothing for him. It really was all a sort of
game to her, rejecting him in the most eloquent way, in an effort to make the others roar with
laughter. Surely it was a game to him too? It couldn’t be anything serious, could it?
Well, this was the first gesture of his that had been truly romantic, though it once again
uncovered another little known fact about Lily Evans: Head Girl. As such, it deserved something
short, but sweet in return. Simple; she‘d always gone for big and flashy before. What would do? She
had looked around for an answer, blankly observing that the other girls had eager anticipation
written all over their faces. At last, her eye had caught upon the window from which the owl had
come in. It was still open - Alice had forgotten to latch it closed. So she had smiled as she
crossed the room, all eyes upon her. Before turning the basket upside down and hurling the paper
hearts, she paused for a bit, then thoughtfully removed the card and the golden necklace. They were
too precious to throw outside to the elements; she’d return them in person to their owner, and
quietly too. Nobody knew she had removed them, not until the next morning anyway. And with that
quick gesture, the Gryffindor tipped the wicker container over and stuck her head out the window,
watching the hearts swirl and flutter in the wind as gravity pulled them down. Then they
disappeared out of sight, the seventh year dormitory being much too high up to see the ground in
the darkness of midnight.
He still waited on the other side, watching and wondering. But he would not get his answer till
morning, when he would look down and see specks of pink upon the ground. That’s what he always did:
he watched.
It was Remus’s advice.
After she pulled her head in and locked up the window, she turned and looked back, quietly
defiant. Her hair was damp, the drizzle having still caught her a bit when she’d looked out. It was
quiet for a moment, but then chatter resumed, the volume of their girlish voices rising as they
start a pillow fight. She was alone by the window, standing somber and elegant with no pillow in
hand. She caught Alice’s eye amid the hubbub, and Alice nodded faintly, her stamp of approval. So
she herself smiled, assured that she’d done the right thing.
But inside, her heart began to cry, the stirrings of an epiphany coming to her.
She pushed them away.
Yet here she is, still standing and staring. She hasn’t been able to sleep all night, her
thoughts keeping her up. Is it still a game to the other player? Does he really not like her? Is it
all just harmless flirtation? But of course. They are toying with each other, the way they’ve
always done since second year. But here they are, next to last week of term, and he’s initiated the
endings of their Game, the show that only the two Heads of the school can put on, a teasing,
seemingly lighthearted performance where they are the stars. This is the cumulative finale, the
moment when something deep and personal is thrown out, the last challenge of the season.
It is early morning, the sunrise mere minutes before. She’s risen early, still preoccupied with
her superficial decision, though she knows not why. Since the rain stopped right before dawn, she
shruged on a robe and walked down to the common room and out to the courtyard, curious in spite of
herself with the fate of the carefully handmade hearts. She starts to regret what she has done,
then shrugs and pushes the thoughts away. It does no good, what is done is done; isn’t that what
Aunt Myrielle has always told her?
“They’re not going to move, you know.” A deep, painfully amused voice breaks into her thoughts,
startling her. She turns, inadvertently stepping upon that pale pink perfection known as a heart
that currently litters the grounds of Hogwarts. Her hair whips around, and of course his mouth was
open when he stepped out from the shadows.
“I’m sorry.” Her eyes meet his, and her breath catches in her throat. In that wordless look, she
has told him that she is sorry for more than just getting her vividly red and perpetually flyaway
hair stuck in his mouth. She is sorry for tossing the hearts out the window, a callous gesture that
she sees now for what it really was - an example of her fear. That is the moment when she sees
everything thrown into sharp relief. Her heart might be drawn to Potter’s like the lodestone to the
North Pole, but she can not say yes. She is too afraid to say yes, and perhaps she always will be.
So as she gazes up at the tall figure of the boy, her “I’m sorry” rings empty in both of their
hearts, resounding faintly over and over again. She turns to go, afraid to cause any more pain then
she already has.
Because in that one wordless glance, he has told her everything about how he really feels. He’s
loved her, always. Perhaps it started out as a game, a bet, but now, it is so much more. It
deepened into liking her, a small crush that was easy to hide as the Game intensified. But then it
progressed to real, deep, and true love, and all of those empty taunts and proclamations of love
suddenly take on a whole new meaning. It is, and has always been, his James Potter to her Lily
Evans.
Her epiphany comes out. This time, she lets it come.
She turns to go, her pathetic excuse ringing in her ears. As she slides out of his casual
embrace, he catches her elbow and spins her back around so that she faces him again, mildly
confused. “I…I can’t. You know that.” She is afraid of commitment; always has been. James might
finally be ready for a long relationship, but she is still a little girl inside, childishly
cherishing a fear she’s had for so long. How ironic that it is he who matured faster, after all
those times she yelled at him.
His voice is deep and comforting as he looks down at the petite, trembling girl. “We could try.”
He slips off his own cloak and wraps it around her, receiving a quiet word of thanks from the
other.
She bites her lip, not realizing how cute it looks to him. “I’m afraid,” she finally confesses,
looking up at him again. “It would change everything.” Ah. That lies at the heart of the problem.
She hates telling people she is something they think she is not, which is why she’s always gone
along with the “Goody Goody Two Shoes” image that they’ve had of her since the first day of the
first year at Hogwarts, the “Only girl to ever refuse James Potter” image that they’ve had from the
third day of second year. Her life has always been about the images others have of her, how others
perceive her. It shouldn’t be that way.
“Sometimes change is good, is it not?” She is crying, he notices. At least she’s stopped
shivering. He pulls her in closer, encircling her and protecting her from the elements. There is no
one to see this curiously tender moment, because no one else is awake. It is just them in their own
private castle. It is always just them. Lily simply hasn’t seen that yet.
Tears blur her vision as her mind and her heart go to war within her, leaving her confused and
uncertain. Her gaze is drawn downward as she continues to sniffle quietly. The hearts are still
there, the pink stark against the gloom of the colour grey. Suddenly, she pulls out the card from
her pocket and unfolds it, rereading his short attempt at something romantically poetic. Then she
looks back at him, standing right there, stoic and patient, a half smile upon his lips. As if from
a dream, he reaches past her and extracts something else from the pocket of her favorite blue robe
- the necklace.
Last night, she hadn’t examined it much, only seeing a thin golden chain. But now, as he dangles
it from his black gloved fingers, she stares, transfixed by this as well. Embedded in a gold heart
is a stone she recognizes fondly, another favorite of hers: kunzite. Its “pale pink to lilac” color
shimmers in the early morning sun, matching the hearts upon the ground color for color. Her breath
catches again and she raises her eyes to meet his - she knows how much a gem of that most vivid hue
must have cost him, both in time and money. She also knows that it is a mere fraction of what it
has cost him to show his devotion to her in this manner, to finally expose the true thing that has
been underlying the whole time. Both were once afraid, but now one is no longer. The finale is
realized, just not in a way he expected. He is close, so close.
Spinning her slowly, he lifts her thick hair silently as he slips the chain around her graceful
neck, latching the clasp together without any bit of fumbling. Her pale, thin hand immediately goes
to grasp and cover that golden charm, the finality of what he **is** doing settling slowly in
her mind. But she can’t resist him, never has been able to. That is why their little game has
continued, has expanded. They are flirting with each other on two levels, and they always have
been, even if it is an unconscious act on her part.
His voice reverberates again, leaving her feeling all tingly inside. He asks the inevitable
question, the question that has always followed any of his gestures, no matter how cheesy. She
braces herself for what is coming, preparing to overcome her initial choice. Because once again, he
leaves it up to her. She knows that if she says no, he will bow his head and accede to her request,
only to persist until she has been won over. But if she were to say yes…she never has dwelled
greatly on what the consequences of her agreement might be.
“Lily, will you go out with me?”
She smiles softly, preparing herself for an answer that will forever change her life. As she
raises her eyes to his, she reaches out with a bare hand for his gloved one, laying her small
fingers over his large ones. The game is over at last, and she knows the moment that particular
realization has settled over her, a mantle of truth and protection. So she answers his query in the
best way possible, the way she has always answered his letters during the summer before giving her
own letters to her owl. It is a way that, once he has comprehended it, will make a wide smile
appear on his face in delight.
She stands upon tiptoe and tilts her head up, sealing her fate with a kiss.