As Amelia walked down the blustering streets of Hogsmeade, she ducked her head deeper inside the hood of her wool peacoat, wishing for the life of her that she would have just stayed at the castle. It seemed every time she stepped outside Hogwarts, she wished herself back there, even if she had left because she felt confined.
Truth be told, Amelia felt confined at Hogwarts a lot of the time. Although she excelled there and had no reason to feel trapped, it was often the other people, rather than the stone walls which made her feel as though she were cornered. This had been especially apparent in the last few days, with Christmas break having started. With no classes in session, the common room, empty classrooms, and hallways were far more busy than usual. Amelia was even prevented her usual solitary violin concerts in the study room because so many students were awake so late into the night that it would be impossible to avoid detection.
It was this feeling of being constantly surrounded that had brought Amelia outside Hogwarts, walking against the wind toward her destination. Though she had dressed for the weather in a pair of skinny jeans tucked into boots, an overlarge knit sweater, her coat, a scarf, and mittens, Amelia was still cold down to her very bones. This was no surprise, as Amelia’s body seemed to produce no natural heat of its own, but she still would have preferred to have been a bit warmer considering all the precautions she took to ensure she would be.
Reaching the door, Amelia pushed it open, though the wind gave her a little too much help by slamming it against the wall as soon as she opened it just a crack. With a bang, the door was blown wide open and the tinkle of breaking glass was heard from the other side of the door. Blushing profusely, Amelia struggled to close the door against the wind that was still blowing it open. Once this task had been managed, Amelia reached into the recesses of her many-pocketed coat to remove her wand. Pointing it at the shards which lay on the ground, Amelia muttered Reparo! and the glass bells which had been hanging on the back of the door were reformed from the pieces.
Turning around ready to face many curious glances, Amelia was initially surprised to find not a single pair of eyes on her aside from the owner of the place. That is, she was surprised until she remembered where she was.
Got to love Madam Puddifoot’s, Amelia thought, tucking her wand back into her jacket and giving an apologetic nod to the woman herself.
This truly was one of the only things she loved most about Madam Puddifoot’s. The place was usually crowded, as it was today, full of lovey-dovey couples, and the tea was mediocre at best. But there was one thing that made up for it all: no one in the tea shop noticed anyone aside from the person staring goggle-eyed across from them at the small, round, made-for-two tables. Amelia had entered the teashop with a bang – literally- broken a set of bells, and then returned all of it back to its original state, and no one had so much as looked up. A couple near the door, not even five meters away from the site of the crashing glass, were still snogging like it was going out of style.
Ridiculous… Amelia thought, standing on her tiptoes to try to spot an empty table. Luckily, she seemed to have come in just in the nick of time, because there was only a single table left in a corner near the bar. Having sighted it, Amelia moved through the throngs of love-sick students and community members, excusing herself even though the teahouse guests paid her absolutely no mind.
Reaching the table, Amelia collapsed into one of the chairs, unwinding herself from her mittens, scarf, and coat. A petite waitress with bright pink, pixie styled hair took her order and returned shortly with her tea, steaming in an ungodly small cup with tiny red hearts painted on the outside.
“Thank you, but don’t go far,” Amelia said, relieving her of the tea and taking a sip. As to be expected… Amelia thought, focusing on not grimacing, “This thimble you are using as a cup won’t last me too long.”
As the waitress nodded and scurried away, Amelia pulled out a book from her bag and set it on the table next to her “cup” of tea. The Thirteenth Tale was embossed in gold on the leatherbound volume. It had taken her father years to find the book, for it was written by a muggle and was not at all popular in the wizarding world. If he would have settled for a paperback edition, the hunt would have been much shorter, but considering his taste for all things extraordinary, it was no surprise that he had insisted on a first edition.
Flipping through the pages, Amelia found where she had last left off, though she had read the novel many times over since first acquiring it. Allowing her mind to slip between the pages and into another world, Amelia blocked out the mindless, whispered exchanges of those around her who, truth be told, probably hadn’t even noticed her existence.
((Cue Khaat. Also, the Thirteenth Tale is probably my favorite book (though this list is quite extensive). It is by Diane Setterfield.))