Very often had Johnny feared for his grades, his reputation, his future, his parents’ expectations, his continued attendance at Hogwarts.
Rarely had he feared for his life.
He'd woken up late- overslept his alarm, forgotten by his housemates- and rushed out of bed in a frenzy, pulling on his trousers backwards and doing up his shirt wrong, tie thrown around his collar, shoes untied and socks forgone. He'd rushed up to breakfast, found the hall empty, realised he'd left his bag in the dorms, run back down, torn through the room, finally found it under Jamal's bed, clattered out of the common room and up the stairs, 45 minutes late to Transfiguration and bellyfull of dread. Not even Professor Lupin would let 3 late arrivals in 1 week go unpunished and his first assignment had been Dreadful- he couldn't afford to fall behind. Further behind.
He was only halfway there when his hastily thrown together bag had bounced too hard and a textbook had fallen out with a
thud. He'd skidded to a stop and lurched back to grab it- forgetting his untied laces. In the rush and muddle he'd tripped, tumbling back down the staircase and somehow- by complete accident, he swears- his foot had connected with something that had connected with something else.
The first something was a cat.
The second something was Peeves.
He'd heard the initial yelp and the responding screech, but didn't know either of these things until the poltergeist barrelled around the corner, grappling with the terrified cat- no, kneazle, definitely a kneazle, definitely angry- and spotted him. Its mouth was full but Peeves' was not, except for an unholy shriek, illegible at first but forming words as it gained in rage and proximity.
"YOU MEASLY, LOATHSOME LITTLE TOAD!"
"I'm sorry! I didn't mean to, I'm sorry-
"I'LL GET YOU FOR THIS-"
There was a snap, a whoosh, an almighty clatter- a burst of pain at one of his feet. Portraits were plummeting from the walls, their inhabitants wailing and bellowing as they fell around his head, on his head. Johnny staggered up, hands curved protectively over that same head.
He ran. Textbook abandoned, heart battering his chest, adrenaline pounding his legs like pistons against the steps.
"RUN ALL YOU WANT!"
"I'm sorry!"
"I'M COMING FOR YOU!"
He tore up the stairs and down a hall, two, but the sprint soon became a limp as his momentum flagged, the echoes of Peeves' shouts tailing him all the way. He couldn't even outfly a bludger- how long could he outrun a ghost?
He needed shelter. His eyes, bleary no more, spotted the next set of stairs and he suddenly felt- not hope, exactly, but direction. And the certainty of help, if he could find it.
Who else was probably also late?
It wasn't exactly a long shot but it felt like one at that moment, staring at his own fast-approaching end. Too late. He was hobbling up to the Ravenclaw Tower, praying desperately for it not to be empty, not to be a dead-end.
He sagged against the door. His hands were too shaky to grasp the knocker so he pounded at it with his fist, gulping down breaths in-between guttural yells.
“MARGO! OPEN UP!”
Human, but not a Being-
“IT'S URGENT! PLEASE!”
intelligent, but a Beast-
“LET ME IN- no, sorry, I’m a Hufflepuff-“
foul in the west-
“I don’t know, sorry,
PLEASE!”
and fair in the east-
“HELP! MARGO! IT'S JOHNNY!”
What am I?
"MARGO! HELP!"
The knocker’s silence felt like the final knell, leaving only his last pitiful cry (“Margoooo“) to echo against the stone. In the distance, the faint crashing sound of a vengeful poltergeist upending the hallways rang out the percussive rhythms of his oncoming demise. Getting louder, closer, to where he waited, chest heaving and skin damp, for his saviour or fellow sacrifice.
Zoey was right.
He wasn't making it to his NEWTs. Not at this rate.