Her focus was slipping. At first she thought it was because she already knew most of the material they were covering, but she found that it wasn’t just a wandering mind or boredom - the words weren’t quite reaching her. She could see the lips of Professor Bishop moving, could sense the students around her bending over their desks as they took their notes. Time felt... wrong. Like there was some sort of delay. She glanced to her right, where
@Elijah Krum was attentively watching the front, before she glanced to her left, to see
@Ace Longbottom sitting straight up in her seat, hand outstretched for the ceiling, a question trapped behind her lips. Lily blinked, and found it was hard to open her eyes once they had closed, but she forced them apart.
Oh no.
The class was nearing its end but she wasn’t going to make it. She could already feel sweat beading at her temple, her throat dry as she struggled to build the courage needed to excuse herself. It was the fear of what happened last time, the violent shaking, the nausea, the feelings of faintness - those what motivated her now. She slipped a hand into the air, and it quivered. She dropped her other hand to pinch her leg, trying to keep focused, stay steadied.
But the professor was answering Ace’s question. Lily couldn’t wait though. “Professor, may I be excused? I need to use the restroom.” She bit her lip, trying to convey a sense of urgency without desperation.
Moments later, she was hurrying down the halls, her breath shallow in her throat, trying to force herself to breath through the nose. There was a pain in her ribs, the harbinger of worse pain, and (only because there didn’t seem to be anyone else in the hallway) she ran for the bathroom, throwing the door open and fumbling for the latch on the stall. She wheeled around, locking the door, sitting and rifling through her bag. Her hands were shaking and she was cursing herself, fearing the worst-
But she found it. A medium sized vial, her salvation. For a moment she worried she wouldn’t be able to uncork it, but her desperation took hold and she yanked the cork off, reaching up to pour the liquid down her throat.
She slumped back, eyes closing as her chin lifted. The pain potion would take a few minutes, but it would steady her. She was going to be sore, going to feel the sensations of pains darting from the point on her hip that would have permanent trauma. But she wouldn’t faint. She wouldn’t vomit. She would t shake. She wouldn’t attract attention she didn’t want or need right now.
She released a long breath, and checked her watch. Class had ended. People would be coming out now. A few more seconds and she could slip into their midst unnoticed. Maybe a bit pale, maybe a bit disoriented, but who would say anything?
She was late this morning. That’s why she had forgotten. It was always worse after the full moon. Not only was the pain more poignant, but her system was fragile, meaning the side effects of both the potions and the withdrawals were extra noticeable. And worse, she was exhausted. She probably needed a night or two of ten hour rests after the moon, but she rarely got them. So she overslept. And then she forgot her medicine.
It wasn’t ideal, to say the least. But the potions kept the pain at bay. They dulled her a bit, she had noticed, made her feel less present, less... Lily. But then the anxiety rammed through, reminding her of where she was and what was at stake. It was a bit mad, really, but before the potions there had only been pain. She wasn’t anxious, she was dull, she wasn’t Lily, she was just pain. That was what happened when an already small fourteen year old broke all of her bones every month to become a monster.
But there was no point in despairing. She needed to eat, she knew that much, and if she didn’t get going now, she was going to be an even more ostensible presence in the Great Hall. And that was the last thing she wanted. She just wanted to slip into the crowd, eat her lunch, and live to fight another day.
She gathered her things, patted her face with a napkin, and then left the bathroom - immediately colliding into someone else.