It's getting near dawn,
When lights close their tired eyes
I'll soon be with you my love,
To give you my dawn surprise
A small tentacle of smoke twisted up into the pre-dawn hour, grasping for the light that was just beginning to illuminate the hidden countryside. The grass was growing dewy, glistening with reminders that life came in cycles, regardless of the human intervention that tried to disrupt it. The moon was clocking out, headed to starry companions who would welcome her along as the day shift guard began his yawning progress back into the world.
The large expanse of land that made up World Cup was unplottable and untrackable. Charms and spells were in place so that only this tiny population of the world could access this special event. The way Molly Weasley saw it, it was like she had found the place where the very idea of Being was compromised. With all of these charms and spells in affect, it was sort of like she didn't exist. She was in limbo. Of the world but not within it.
It was freedom.
She had always like that time before the sun rose up. Birds who must have restless spirits like her began twittering confused little messages to each other, before sighing through the air when they realized that, while they got the worm, it was a lonely job indeed. The grey husk rolled across the landscape, as the inky night faded and the pink day tossed beneath its covers. It was always cold, and she could feel her body slowly thaw. It reminded her to warm to the idea of other people, to feel her blood and tissues everyday, to remember that life was not something you could count on. You couldn't count on anything. Which meant no one really had to do anything.
Again. Freedom.
She had pulled her plaid shirt on over her tank top as the air was particularly cold. It was a special feeling, knowing she was surrounded by hundreds of wizards who were all so excited for something, and yet they were all still sleeping. So loud just hours before as they drank, and talked, and commiserated, and cheered, and sang. They traded one shared experience for another, as they all rested together, safe and snug in ramshackle, fabric homes, happy to be surrounded by strangers who probably meant well. If the tired sun would not awake to warm her icy body, that thought alone could.
She exhaled smoke again, the paper of her cigarette feeling unbelievably real between her fingers. Her back was supported by the soft ground, her legs crossed over the other, still wearing the clothes she had passed out in at four o'clock in the morning. Bev had found friends for them to drink with, and they had spent those precious hours acquainting themselves before the all drifted into an alcohol-aided slumber. Her internal clock kept her from missing her favorite part of the day, however. Smudged makeup was forgotten beneath round glassed, and the plaid shirt she had original tied around her waist had proven functional as well as fashionable.
She liked Bev, and his friends. It was nice to be around people. But alone, before even the sun had awoken for his duties... that provided a special sort of bliss she was not sure she could ever give up. Just as the nicotine calmed the dark shapes in her mind and the clamoring in her heart, the predawn hour simultaneously lent feelings of significance and futility that managed to keep her warring mind in times of peace.
In an hour or so, players would storm the fields to demand opportunities to run their drills. Fans would awaken and attempt to make camp breakfasts. Neighbors would call out to each other. Friends would escape to begin the day of fun as early as possible. Couples would love, friends would laugh, families would care. People would hurt, and people would lie, and bad things would happen. Life would awaken. But for now, Molly was alone in a place that did not actually exist. And while the dawn remained the only real thing in her world, she was going to enjoy it.