There were times when muggles had some use, he could admit. Damien settled himself down as he hummed to himself. Despite his consistent rejection of muggles, he had to admit that they wrote good songs. Art -- perhaps that was their function. Did that mean that he was not to be seen with his sketchbook? Surely there was art exclusively from and for wizards only. Damien, however, could not think of any. Perhaps he just needed a shift of exposure. Wizards could do a lot of things, surely art was something one of them. The greater art, of course, had to be magic. Perhaps, then, he was partaking in a lesser art. Damien wondered, in confusion, about those thoughts.
It was the second night of the new school year. After the feast from the first day, a majority of students staying up late especially in their dormitories, and a whole day of lessons that threw them all back into academic motion, the castle scarcely had anyone roaming about. Almost everyone had decided to catch up on some beauty sleep, or laze in the common room. The events of the two days drained quite a bit of energy, especially when all had to adjust themselves back to the onslaught of classes. Thankful for the lack of people around the castle at this time, Damien had sneaked out of the Slytherin Dungeons, and made his way up to the Astronomy Tower. Just a year ago, he would have met Alexis here. With his sister having graduated and left Hogwarts, Damien was feeling a little lonely now, staring solemnly at the view of Hogwarts that his position offered.
Damien continued to hum the song to himself. It was a good one, Jar of Hearts. He had heard it on the radio. It was not an activity he proclaimed about, listening to muggle radio. He hated when they had to talk on and on, blabbering about insignificant muggle nonsense. The songs, though, the sad ones, he appreciated. The moon was extremely faint, and Damien settled his eyes on it as he hummed. There was an eerie look to the Castle now, but he liked the look of it. People have been whispering about changes in the school, especially with the change in the Minister. So far, they all looked good to Damien, who had believed that this change was going to be for the better. To begin with, there had been conversations along the corridor to classes about people losing muggle artefacts. Oh joyous day, he had thought. It was certainly hypocritical, seeing that he owned a small muggle radio, but which he had left at his mother's, refusing to be found with it at school.
School had began well enough for Damien. He would remain contented as long as things went his way; which so far, they did. Still humming, the boy flipped the pages of the sketchbook that had rested on his lap. It was very personal, his sketchbook. It was also probably the only thing that he owned, that was an avenue for the ultimate freedom of his expressions. He drew anything and everything that came to his mind. Naturally, that were a lot of drawings of mother. There was one of father, and one of the D'Eath Residence. There was one of his twin elder sisters, and none of the other siblings who he disdained. Pricilla Cuffe, for her slight impact on his adolescent life, also made it to the pages. Mira Anderson took another bulk of them, while there was one of him and Georgia Wheelbarrow. Damien continued to flip the pages, a habit he often exercised - to look back at his memories in this way. And then a page was revealed, which made him glare hard at.
There she was -- Roxanne Weasley. He had drawn her on one of the nights that he had lost sleep over the fact that he was frustrated while trying to get his mind off her. The original sketch of the girl was her in the way she looked. And then moments of frustrations had him add nasty things to her face. He wanted to blot the memory of her out as badly as he did to her face in his sketch. Unfortunately, he still had it. After the meeting at the circus, Damien had led Roxi to dinner, where he had tried the usual taunting, only to find himself relishing her presence, and returning home feeling more conflicted than usual. That was the night that he had coloured all of her teeth black in his sketch of her. Looking at what had become of his original sketch of the girl now, Damien felt a strange dissatisfaction. His eyes fell to the next empty page, while his left hand still held out the ruined sketch of her face. Was he really thinking of re-drawing her on the new page?