She was coughing. Coughing and coughing and coughing her lungs out, like her air passages were determined to eject every particle of soot that had lodged itself in their corners, along with blood and phlegm and tissue and whatever else that chose to come out. But the smoke did not abate, the rising, churning swirls of black staining the air like a disease; and worming its way into her nose and ears and whatever crevice it could find. It was choking her.
Dip into soapy bucket. Swipe rag at dusty floor. Rub rigorously. Repeat.
She was sitting on her bed, knees folded and drawn to her chest, eyes fixated unseeingly on the dormitory ceiling. She had shut the door, and both the windows, a long time ago. But still the smoke seeped through; sliding though gaps under wood and between glass, marring the elegant nymph design on the stained glass window beside her bed, black splotches of soot settled here and there, till the mystical creature looked like she was choking too.
After the breech, she had slept on the Astronomy tower, icy winter wind chipping away at frail cotton and skin and bone, for three days and three nights. On the fourth day, she had attended Defense class. It had been a practical one. She had refused to use her wand. After a solid fifteen minutes of appeals, reprimands, and stern commands yielding no results, her Professor awarded her detention. Rika kept on staring at the floor.
Dip. Swipe. Rub. Repeat.
She hadn't moved even when the boy, replete with dishevelled robes and blackened face, had darted into the room, yelling that portions of the castle were on fire. The boy looked at her with widened eyes, screamed at her to get a move on, and then receiving no response, proceeded to tug at her arm frantically. She couldn't even wince. Her body had locked down ever since the smoke had come, and the voice inside her head had been silenced. She could only wonder absently that the castle must have been charmed to remove all obstacles against the boys entering the girl dorms in times of need. She could only watch her frozen, paralysed fingers and toes, and wonder if they would ever move. It was quiet, inspite of the screams and the roar of Fiendfyre. Too quiet, without Brenda.
Her detention had been to scrub at the floor of the rooms and corridors on the third floor, till students could 'see their reflection in the shining stone'. She had pulled up her sleeves, fallen to her knees and proceeded to work at the floor without comment. That had been the way she had dealt with most things after Brenda had fallen silent. She scrubbed the floor vigorously, pausing to wipe off the sweat beads that bunched up near her eyebrows after intervals, then continue. After two hours, her body was screaming for mercy, aching and drawn taut, unused to physical exertion. She continued working. She was almost close to the Trophy Room, now.
The boy had finally managed to tug her out of bed, and then proceeded to drag her bodily across the room, like a limp, wooden puppet. The door suddenly swam before her vision, and with a dull clunk, realisation settled in that they were escaping. And this room might perish behind them. Already she could see Fiendfyre licking at the nymph's hair.
"No," She breathed. All that she could remember after was flashes, tugging herself out of the boy's sweaty grip in a sudden burst of strength, the dresser door being flung open, taking out the telescopes, two and huge and heavy. Already they were beginning to feel warm. Then a knock on the side of her head, her unrelenting, claw-like grip on the instruments, a hand grabbing her by the scruff off the neck, dragging her across the floor, fire lapping at her feet. Then that reddened face, those blown-up pupils and the boy yelling in her ear, "Are you mad!"
Are you mad.....are you mad......are..you......mad.....
Another boy's feet, large and agile and heavy, tripped over the bucket that Rika was trying to dip the sodden rag into, there was a large clang as the entire water upended on the floor; and she watched dumbly as he sped away to the Defense classroom she had just mopped; yelling something about ghosts and spiders and Friars.
Yelling. Simply too much yelling.
There were another two, a boy and a girl, standing in the corridor outside the Trophy Room, ghosts teeming around them like a wreathing, puffing circle of mist. She stood up, left hand hoisting up the fallen bucket; and walked towards them, steps unsteady and voice weary, "Could someone fill this bucket up with water for me, please?"