Snow was falling in hordes of liberation, transforming the dull colours of autumn into a pristine white on its first touches on Hogwarts. Like everything and everywhere else in life, there were those who were cheered by this prospect, and there were certainly those who chose to mope about in the castle, and to stare out at a random window while looking vacantly contemplative. Trent would have been expected to take part in the latter, something of which Byron would have mocked at again as yet another meaningless activity of angst or sentimentality that some teenagers have an odd tendency towards.
Today was exceptional, however, only because Trent had woken up on the wrong side of the bed, which really set him right, in Byron's opinion. It was, nonetheless, a sudden change. Just the previous night, Byron had noticed that Trent was brooding yet again. By now, it was so very clear who the brooding was done for. And by now, even Byron was beginning to realise the feelings Trent seemed to have for Millie. After all, as worried as he was himself over the girl's recent condition, Byron was not as overwhelmed by it as Trent. With that understanding, he had also begun to let Trent be. All the time and effort spent pushing and pulling the other boy around, trying to get him involved in life itself, were beginning to look like a waste to Byron, who was getting tired of the emotional weight that Trent seemed to always be carrying around.
But yes, Trent had woken up on the wrong/right side of the bed today, as if he was possessed by a happy Winter spirit, and woke Byron up with proclamation of snow outside. Not long after, the two boys found themselves outside, running in the snow, and then engaging in a random snowball fight with even more random others. The other set of boys, Ravenclaws, then began to roll around in the snow. Byron, of course, took part in the mindless activity without hesitation. The big grin on his face was, again, of much amusement to Trent, who had stood there with raised eyebrows, before remembering how he had decided the night before that he would try happy for a day, and see how that would work out. Millie, however, was a hard thought to get out of his mind. Even in the stupidity of an activity that should rob him of brain cells to think, Trent had his head full of the girl. Byron, however, took joy in this seemingly unprecedented change in his friend, and perked up a lot more, thinking that good was surely going to come out of December. It was, after all, the month of Christmas.
Hunger and the cold got the best of the boys, who after a couple of hours in the snow, had to run back into the castle for its refuge of warmth. No sooner had lunch been digested, did Byron ventured an invitation to Trent, where the other boys in the dorm were supposedly going to a random part of the castle because Spencer had somehow been asked by a group of Hufflepuff girls to bring his friends along for a cookie picnic. Trent had been half-puzzled and half-amused when Byron was trying to explain the point of it. But, yet again, he retreated back to the Gryffindor common room, leaving Byron with whatever was supposedly much better than cooping oneself up alone in the dorm.
While the common room was rather filled with students, especially those from the younger years, Trent's dorm was emptied out of boys who were certainly more keen to while the rest of their day away with their new Hufflepuff girlfriends. Without much other thought than Millie in his head as usual, Trent spun around at where he stood staring at the empty dorm, and landed on his back against his bed, legs up in the air. With his arms spread wide beside his body, Trent began to drum his fingers lightly against the bed as he observed his plimsoll shoes. The music in his head trailed away, and he proceeded to drop his legs and let them hang at the end of his bed, just as him drumming stopped. Thankfully, he could hear the muffled conversations that filled the common room downstairs, and so Trent did not have to deal with a deafening silence which would be a sure catalyst to yet another day of brooding. Still, he sighed out of habit, and began to let his mind wander.