A hammock. That's what life was. A nice, big, fat hammock where you lay and lazed and thought everything was dandy, then a storm came out of nowhere to dump you to the ground and left you with grazed knees and coughing up dirt.
Rika was fine with her life. Really, she was. When the Ministry rule compelled her to attend Hogwarts for her fifth year for her OWL's, she threw a tantrum of massive proportions (internally, of course, one simply did not do that in front of Great-Aunt Lucretia), but compromised with the fact that she'd be living in a....magical castle, with magical w-witches and w-wizards...and magic and.....but she was fine. Really. Apart from a punch thrown, a petty rival made, and one lone trip taken into the Forbidden Forest, Rika had managed to escape out of Hogwarts none the worse for wear. She had heaved a sigh of relief, scrubbed the magic out of her skin and burnt her clothes, and gotten ready to resume her normal, magic-free life.
Then came the storm.
Great-Aunt Lucretia was dead. That stubborn, obstinate, forever pursed-lip woman who hadn't allowed dragon-pox and a Great Bloody War to turn a single hair white, was dead. Died in her sleep. And Rika knew she should be mourning for a relative lost, but its difficult to muster anything but faint disquiet for the death of a woman who forced her into magical education, even if it was home-tutored. And now she, the home-tutor was dead, and Rika should be free, but her parents had apparently gone crazy and insisted she atleast get her graduation.
They just want whats best for you.
Rika scowl-snorted. Hard. It was quite an achievement. She strode down the corridors of the stupid magical train taking her to a stupid magical school, and god, did those kids have to bloody jostle and establish physical contact like that? Anyone ever heard of traffic control? She stomped out onto the rear platform, ran fingers wildly through her hair and let out a huffing breath. Fresh air at last. Now she deemed it safe enough to talk without resorting to screaming. "Best? Best? Really? When has magic ever, ever, like in the history of evers, ever been even remotely good for the Dixon family?"