The last time Lily had been in this room, she had been so prepared to never come back. This was the room where all of her peers stared her down as the girl who went haywire, as the girl who was so dangerous she had actually attacked another student. Casey had spilled blood in this room to defend her, and Lily had been certain that her exit was as final as one could get. She could think of no reason to ever subject herself to the place again.
And then a reason had found her.
She sat at the staff table, feeling completely out of place. Certainly, it looked it. She knew that the staff was getting younger and younger each year, but her dubious reputation only seemed to go against her. But in her black robes and her face practicing its mask-work, perhaps she was doing a better job at projecting an air of competence than she thought.
Her eyes scanned the crowd. Her cousin, the Richards girl, and Clem were all seated together, unsurprisingly, and were talking as casually as could be. There was Ace, furiously whispering to Christian, because her job was certainly never done. And Casey, alone, looking far off as she sat at the Gryffindor table, deaf to the excitement around her. And then there was Apollo-
Her eyes slid over him, trying to get into the safe practice of avoiding him as much as possible. They had agreed on which measures needed to be taken, and on the reassurance of why they were being taken. If Lily wanted to be of any help, it had to be this way.
She felt a gaze on her and she turned, catching the gaze of Teddy Lupin, who had sat himself next to McKillon, unsurprisingly. Lily blinked, allowing for the smallest shift in her expression to express some amount of pleasure at seeing him. It seemed to be enough.
The doors were thrown open, and she felt Hogwarts as one focus on the first years.
Goose Dyllan had been relatively quiet. He had found himself the companion to Charlie Jericho, which was more than alright to him as he liked the other kid, but he had not found a need to keep up any sort of commentary, even though Charlie was not the sort to offer up any of his own. The silence was comfortable, on their part, but there was this anxiety and discomfort at the very prospect of what they were doing. They had made it to Hogwarts. Goose had been certain it couldn't happen. First it had been his own failings, and then it had been the fact that there wasn't enough students to legitimize a school. Now, though, all the excuses were gone. They were here.
And they were going to be sorted any minute.