((Would Miss Finch be persuaded to come out now, you think? XD ))
“Oh my god. Just look at you.”
Dark hair cascaded in waves around her shoulders, the candlelight shimmering off the silver beads bunched around her neckline, playing peek-a-boo with her collarbone. The sheath of the black dress hugged her thighs, clinging faithfully to her sparse curves and those metallic boots were the best pocket money investment ever. They looked bloody wicked around her ankles, all solid steel and gleaming bright, the pencil heel sharp enough to castrate balls with a good kick (the only way to judge a heel, really) and coolest of all......they came with laces. Honest-to-God black, school boy laces that wiggled and flopped all about the place when she kicked her feet. Her legs looked phenomenal, going all the way from the South Pole to the Bering Strait; and Alisha just stared at them for a few minutes more, exerting mindboggling will-power not to whip out a tape measure right that instant. She would auction off her broom if they hadn’t grown three inches in the last night.
“You wicked, wicked girl.” The girl in the looking glass wagged her finger at her. “Why, oh why, must you torture the poor inhabitants of the castle like this? Do you want them to turn catatonic?”
Catatonia Inducing Legs of Mass Destruction, Alisha marvelled. She’d probably be able to form a dictatorship, right then and there, and take over the world.
The mirror however, didn’t seem to share in her enthusiasm. In an epically bored voice (Alisha was almost jealous, and it was an inanimate object, and that was not cool), it drawled- “Are you done yet?”
Mouth twisting a little to the side, she shot back- “Isn’t that supposed to be your job? Telling me how I look?”
“Not when you’re doing it so successfully on your own.” If mirrors could have eyes, they would be rolling enough to fall right off. Alisha wondered if it would be overly immature to stick out her tongue- technically at her reflection.
She shook her head left to right, a little like a dog shaking water out of its fur, till her black tufts of hair flopped over one another in crazy perfection, then turned around, calling over her shoulder. “I’m replacing you tomorrow. You’re fired.”
That nasal drawl continued on her heels, “Malfoy would notice her mirror getting switched in two minutes.”
Her tongue grew cold from overexposure before she stomped out; and the mirror was still shaking in laughter.
~
She’d reached the greenhouse fifteen minutes ago. Rock-climbing made one rather dexterous, even with ball-chopping Heels of Doom. She’d even taken the scenic route for her walk after- which of course passed through the Clock Tower, and the roofs of three other greenhouses and Hagrid’s deserted hut. But the girl was still there, face thrown into shadows in the corner she was huddled into, when Alisha returned. Her toecap tapped against the dirt rather impressively, twice, before she gave up on saintly patience- not one of her most impressive skills anyway.
“Are you going in?”
The girl started- Alisha rather thought she’d have startled anyway, even if she’d made a noise like a rampaging herd of hippogriffs when she approached, if those glazed hazel eyes were any indication- and turned, showing Dixon’s thin, half-starved face. The girl ate fine enough, anyone with Hogwarts finest house-elves and feasts at their disposal would be idiots not to- but the girl’s features always seemed a little starved to her anyway: that lank hair, colourless lips, limpid eyes. As if wanting, deprived all life of something most basic, essential. It made a part of her twist in unease, but a bigger part want to step forward and.....help.
Alisha expected a rebuttal, one of those meaningless, mumbled mutters Dixon bestowed on anyone who bothered approaching her, but the girl turned back to look where her eyes had been fixed ever since Alisha had first arrived: on the greenhouse door. Her voice was still bland though, still meaningless. “No point.”
Alisha waited. A part of her wanted to tap her foot again, the part that was too restless to stay still and flow with life, eager to overtake it instead, the part that made her Daadi tut at her in disapproval because she could never make a good gardener- she left boring, uninteresting seeds for dead and plucked tender buds off the shoot before they could bloom; but she waited.
“I’m trying too hard.” Dixon said, mouth curling in bitterness as a particularly joyous shout ran through the building when the thump of music starting curling beneath the ground at their feet.
“We all are.” Alisha said, and perhaps spoke a bit too fast, too soon; but she wanted to get it out before her cheeky tongue tumbled over the words and messed them up- it felt so rare that her mind produced something worth saying. She jerked her head at the door. “Half the people in there are trying to be grown-ups. The other half are trying to be five. None of us are succeeding very well.”
“I’m too different.” Dixon said next, and Alisha felt her mouth turn down, but of course it wasn’t going to be that easy. She sounded like it had been drilled into her, like a cold draught poured down her throat every day before breakfast. “I don’t fit.”
Alisha’s brow clouded over, and before she could control it, her heels had bored four holes in the mud in two steps, impetuously carrying her to the raven-haired girl. Dixon blinked back at her, almost naively, and inspite of all her impatience to do good, and all her recklessness with plants and glass and things that deserved better, more careful treatment- a smile broke over her face, and it felt as genuine as ever. Good and right.
“Have you ever seen a jigsaw puzzle?” She asked, the smile quirking up her lips, and then ploughed on in her typical way, not waiting for an answer. If it had to work, it would work. “Imagine if all the pieces were straight, and square. Then all of them would fit together, and any piece would go anywhere and we’d hold the completed puzzle up and it’d all fall apart- because it wouldn’t really fit. Stick.”
“But every piece in a jigsaw puzzle is different. And each has its own place, and for all their crazy shapes, and inward grooves and outer loops, they all lock together perfectly to form the right picture. They stick.”
Alisha’s breath rumbled out of her chest, and she paused, and waited again. There was the uneasy thudding, the one that emerged so rarely, the one that told her that as always, she’d pushed too hard and too fast. But then Dixon smiled too, and her cheeks didn’t look quite so hollow anymore.
Which is how, minutes later, Alisha found herself throwing the door open and yelling for the world to heat, “Bringing new acolytes for the reaping!”
She shot a last thumbs up to the pale, little shaky-looking but otherwise alright Dixon, and then forgot all about it- zooming to where the party was. Her domain, her land. But then again, she rather specialised in making every place hers.
Her arms ambushed Ducky from behind, tightening against his throat briefly then turning him around, million wattage smile at the ready. “Ducky Baker. My good, good man. It has been too long.” It had been, really. One minute without dramatics of the Ducky-kind, was a minute too long. Then she swooped down on the slightly flabbergasted-looking Finn next to him. “Fiona, my honey-munchkin. You look absolutely ravishing tonight.” She turned to the tousled-haired boy next, and ruffled his hair up a little more, holding back the coo with immense fortitude and strength of will. “Bertie.”
A narrowed gaze at Finn. “You saved me the first dance, didn’t you?”
outfit
Last edited by Alisha Merchant on Sun Jun 22, 2014 8:08 am; edited 2 times in total