“Peeves, when is this all going to end? I am not even a student here anymore!” Amelia pleaded, having been backed all the way up to the window, the stone still pressing coldly onto the back of her legs, covered only by a thin layer of nylon.
“You were the one who signed on for extra years, dearie,” Peeves said, brandishing the bucket of PermaPaint at her, which he had used to get her all the way to this point. The dress she was wearing was borrowed from the designer and sent to her from her mother with strict instructions not to drink anything colored or eat anything at all. That was going to be no problem, because the dress was a sample size and small enough that even the svelte 19-year-old had had trouble fitting into it and probably wouldn’t fit if she ate anything at all.
But what Antoinette probably hadn’t planned for was Peeves. No one ever planned for Peeves, and if they did, he found a way to make sure he pointed out just how useless plans were against him. Peeves had found Amelia hiding in a corner of the entryway, making the mandated appearance at the party but not really engaging with anyone, and he had quickly found a way to correct that by chasing her all the way up here with a can of paint that would never, ever come out of the dress.
“Going up?” Peeves asked, dangling the can closer and closer to her as he imitated an elevator bell boy.
“I’m not going on the roof, Peeves,” Amelia said staunchly, crossing her arms over herself stubbornly. Screw the dress, there is no way I am going up there. I’ll pay her whatever it costs.
“Mummy won’t be very happy if her daughter ruins her pretty dress,” Peeves taunted, coming closer and forcing Amelia to lean further away from him into the windowpanes, which were already open and moved at her touch, causing her to freeze in fright.
“Peeves, can you please just-“
“Not to mention being seen in public looking like a character out of a Stephen King novel,” Peeves added manically as he dipped a ghostly finger into the paint and moved it to dangle over her.
“Okay, okay, I’m going!” Amelia shouted, throwing up her hands in defeat. Her intense fear of heights was gripping every limb of her body as she shifted her weight to sit fully on the window sill, but her fear of her mother’s wrath was greater. Antoinette still hadn’t gotten over the fact that her daughter had debased herself so far as to resort to teaching of all things, and if Amelia came home covered in paint that wouldn’t come off for days, the red stains would probably no longer be due to just paint.
The air was cold as she kicked her legs outside, and she hesitated looking back to see if Peeves was really going to force her to do this, but she really hadn’t been hoping for any sympathy from the perverted poltergeist. Amelia was very careful to close her eyes against the dizzying view from the edge, turning to stand on the sill and then hoisting herself onto the roof with significantly less grace than she would have wanted to have exhibited. And as if that wasn’t enough embarrassment, she shuddered as she stood up to the sounds of Peeves cackling and locking the window behind her.
“Perfect, just perfect,” Amelia muttered to herself, dusting off her legs and the back of her dress as she backed as far away from the ledge as possible, trying to figure out the best way not to panic. She was so wrapped up in her own discomfort that she had failed thus far to even recognize that she was not alone on the roof. But finding out who she was sharing this dangerously high, panic-inducing place with was only going to add to her anxiety, and it would only be a matter of time.