Draco Malfoy ran his aching fingers through his hair for
the forty-third time in an hour, muttering to himself under his breath. Again
and again he raked his eyes over the pages of Dark Arts: A Thousand and One
Spells and Enchantments. Technically, the book was not supposed to be in
circulation. Truth be told, he’d stolen it from his father’s private store, in
the hopes he knew the contents so well he wouldn’t miss it. He searched the
unyielding text for some sign of what he was looking for.
He glanced over at the well-documented list of the curses
it had caused him such pain to write, each curse with a detailed account of the
effects and counter-curse. He flexed his wrist. Such an annoyance, such a
strain on his time and his patience, but it had to be done. He would die to
protect the contents of those notes, they were already armed with many
repelling charms. They were invisible to anyone who he didn’t wish to see them.
And he was so afraid it wouldn’t be enough that it was killing him.
There. There it was, staring him in the face. Blinking his
bleary eyes, he lowered his quill to a piece of parchment and forced his
fingers to make notes on this particular curse. For a prolonged period of time
he wrote, quoting the book word for word, hoping beyond all hope that this
would be enough. Enough to end this once and for all.
~***~
“Ginny!” called Mrs. Weasley anxiously.
“What Mum?”
“Aren’t you ready yet? Your father and I are going to
leave with or without you in a minute!” Her voice held a hint of motherly
annoyance and Ginny smiled. She knew they really wouldn’t leave her here by
herself, no matter how mad she became.
Ginny ran her brush through her long red hair again,
grinning at her reflection in the oblong mirror. She had to look absolutely
perfect for this job interview. If she was to work undercover for the Ministry,
it was vital she blend into the Muggle world. She would of course need the
money too, apparently Sickles and Galleons didn’t go over that well in the
non-magical community. Ginny chuckled at the thought of handing the landlord in
her apartment complex a dozen silver wizard coins for rent.
Straightening her most schoolgirl-like blouse one last
time, she bounded down the stairs two at a time, clutching a black messenger
bag.
“Coming!”
Mr. and Mrs. Weasley had offered to drive Ginny to her
interview in London ‘for the Muggle touch’, in a beaten old Pinto Mr. Weasley
had borrowed from a friend. Since she was staying with her parents for the
weekend anyway, she had accepted. Really, she was thankful to have someplace to
go when she had to escape the noise and generally drunken population of her
apartment building. She’d only been there a month, living on Ministry money,
and already she’d grown sick of the place. Her boss thought it best to lay low
for a month or two before she began her job in earnest. Today was the last step
in assimilating her into her new environment.
“You look lovely, Gin. They’d be fools not to hire you.”
He father grinned at her from the front seat of the car.
“Somehow the job description gave me the impression they
didn’t hire for looks alone,” she teased, then, in a mock stern voice,
“‘Business minded, serious individual required to fill sales representative
position. Room for promotion.’”
“Well, you do look professional…in a lovely way.” Ginny
smiled at her father and sank back into her seat, gazing out the window as the
car pulled away from the Burrow.
After many reproaches from Mrs. Weasley, (“Arthur! Right!
No, brake, brake! For mercy’s sake, watch for that dog!”) they finally
screeched to a halt in front of Turncoats, a Muggle fashion store.
“Thanks for the ride, Dad, Mum.”
“Be careful d…” Her mother’s words were lost as Ginny shut
the door and strode confidently into the brightly lit store. She weaved her way
through the racks of clothes and headed up the stairs.
“Third door on the left…” She muttered to herself as she
knocked firmly on said door. It opened almost immediately, and she was greeted
with the image of a stern woman in a large leather chair. The person who had
opened the door smiled nervously. He couldn’t be more than twenty-one, her own
age. She smiled back at him, and watched him fiddle with the end of his sports
coat uncomfortably.
“Hello. Miss Weasley, I presume?” Ginny’s smile faltered
just a little as she took in the icy tone in the woman’s voice, but bravely she
took a few more steps into the room.
“Yes, that’s me.”
“Please sit down.” The woman’s voice suggested that she’d
rather Ginny not infect her chair, but was too polite to say so. Ginny glanced
at the nameplate on her desk. It read ‘Melinda Fairleisse’ in scrolling script.
Somehow the fanciful name and equally fanciful italic writing didn’t suit the
starchy woman.
“Thank you. Here’s a copy of my resume.” Ginny handed a
page of fabricated positions to Ms. Fairleisse. There was silence for a few
seconds, as she leafed through the listing of jobs Ginny had previously
‘worked’.
“Miss Weasley, I believe there is no need to continue this
interview. You are more than qualified, and I’m in hurry to fill this position.
The previous sales rep has left me in an awkward spot by trying to go on maternity
leave. As if I had the time or money to spare just because she feels the
need to bring another brat into this world.” Ginny nodded dumbly, aghast at the
little regard the older woman showed for anyone but herself. “You start Monday,
nine o’clock. Don’t be late. Percival, show Miss Weasley out please.”
The nervous man grasped her elbow lightly and steered her
out of the office and towards the stairs.
“It’s alright, really. Percival, is it? My brother’s name
is Percival too.” She said lightly, extracting her arm from his soft grip and
turning to face him.
“N-no, Miss. I-I have to…to show you out.” She saw him swallow,
and he pushed his rectangular glasses farther up on his nose.
“Now really, Percy, I’m a big girl. I’m sure I can find
the door all on my own. Worked rather well for me on the way in.” Nevertheless,
she heard his footsteps follow her down the stairs and to the door.
“G-good day, Miss.” Turning slightly, she reprimanded him.
Ginny hated all titles, and despised the forced politeness of the world.
“No more of this ‘Miss’ business.” The twinkle in her eye
set the young man at ease. “My name’s Virginia. You, however, can call me
Ginny.”
With a wave, she glided out the door, leaving a stunned
Percival in her wake. He pushed his light brown hair out of his eyes to watch
her go.
~***~
Slipping the thick volume back on the shelf where he’d
found it, Draco glanced around the gloom of the hidden room of Malfoy Manor.
The coast clear, he tread quietly back up to his own bedroom. He knew the magic
employed on the entrance would not alert his father of his presence there, as
his was Malfoy blood.
Hurriedly, he threw his most important belongings into a
dragon hide suitcase. Wand, as many clothes as he could fit, and his stack of
letters fell into the expensive casing. His notes, his precious, protected
notes, he tucked into his inside jacket pocket. Picking up a quill, he hastily
wrote a note of a different sort to his father.
Father-
I have gone to a place I will not name now to practice on
a few Muggles and Mudbloods. I will return when I feel I have made the best
possible wizard of myself to devote my life to the Dark Lord. This may take a
year or more, but it will be time well spent if I am to serve him properly. My
allegiance is nothing without talent. My execution of the curses must be
perfect for my initiation. When I am worthy to bear the Dark Mark on my arm, I
shall come back. Please do not look for me, I wish to have solitude, and to be
inconspicuous.
I tried to contact you, but Meiares returned my letter
several times.
-Draco
Snorting at his Daddy’s boy choice of words, he Apparated without
bothering to let the crimson ink dry. Come what may, he’d do what he had to do.
~***~
Small footsteps went unheard in the chaos that was her
apartment building. People were hanging out of doorways, yelling at each other
across the halls. Unconscious men littered the lobby, and when she’d ridden the
elevator to her floor, she wished it were the same on that level. Unfortunately
for her, the drunks and the wannabe bad boys were still awake. A few lewd
offers followed her on the trip to her front door, but mercifully they faded as
she put the key in the lock. Thirty seconds later she was safely in her living
room, curled up on a large, battered couch.
No sooner had she propped open her favorite book, a knock
startled her out of her relaxation. Cautiously, she pressed her ear to the thin
wood. There was no peep hole, so she opened the door a slit and peered into the
hallway. The book was raised above her head as a weapon against forced entry.
When she saw who it was however, she swung the door open on its hinges.
“Hello Percy! What brings you here?” And how do you
know where I live? she added mentally. Her mouth ached from the fake smile
she’d had pasted on her face all day, and she couldn’t wait until Percy left to
let it fall completely.
“Ms. Fairleisse in-insisted I bring this to you, Miss. I
mean, G-Ginny.” He held up her black messenger bag by the strap and Ginny felt
her shoulder in disbelief. She couldn’t believe she’d been so careless with it.
“I g-got your address from your re…resume.” Ginny reached out and took the bag,
hugging it selfishly to her chest.
“Thank you so much, Percy. You have no idea how important
this is to me. I’d be lost without it.” He blushed deeply, reminding her of how
Harry had gone red when she’d given him that valentine as a kid. Don’t think
about him, we’ve been down that road already... warned her brain. “It was
nice of you to bring it over.”
“You live here?” He said in shock, seeming to take in the
whole scene all at once. She noticed his stutter disappeared in his
indignation.
“It’s not much but I call it…something vaguely reminiscent
of home.” She said with a small, forced laugh. “The job is a godsend, maybe I
can get a better place if I save up.” Percival nodded at her, still skeptical.
“Look, I hate to put you off but I have a lot of work to do, on, um, my
apartment. I’ll see you Monday?”
“S-sure.”
“Great! Looking forward to it!” She closed the door on him
as he shuffled off down the hall. As soon as he was out of earshot she threw
the bag on a chair and screamed. “Virginia you stupid git!” She kicked the sofa
in frustration and anger at her foolishness. The black bag contained every
briefing, every summary of every suspicious person she was on the mission to
investigate.
In sudden panic Ginny rifled through the bag’s contents,
and was extremely relieved to find everything exactly the way she had left it.
Wand, Sneakoscope, important papers…it was all there. She sighed happily. Thank
God Percival wasn’t nosy.
Slowly she extracted the most intriguing paper of all. It
was a description of her contact, a man who would share this apartment with her
shortly. He was supposed to arrive tonight. The paper said that they could not
reveal his name prior to her meeting him, as it was quite dangerous even to
leave a vague summary of his looks in her hands lest he be exposed. According
to the Ministry, the man was tall, at least six feet, and blonde. They said he
had one distinguishing feature, a tattoo of a coiled python on the inside of
his wrist.
Carefully, taking care not to leave a word intact, Ginny
shredded the memo into a thousand pieces and set it alight with her wand.
“Incendio.” Instantly, it burst into flame and fell
to her feet as a pile of ash. She stepped on it to extinguish the few stubborn
embers that burned insistently among the smooth grains. Cleaning her mess with
a simple tidying spell, she heard a soft popping noise outside her door. A
knock followed soon after.
When she opened the door, she couldn’t stop staring at the
man in front of her.
Draco let a boyish half smile creep onto his face as he
looked down at the obviously shell shocked Weasley. He looked straight into her
heavily lashed, brandy colored eyes and winked. The effect was amazing. In a split
second she went from a cowering little girl to a stern woman, hands on hips and
looking very dangerous.
He took the time to appreciate her fully, running his eyes
up her curved figure from her toes to her flushed but paling face. Her hair, a
beautiful tumble of copper, dark and lighter red fell in loose waves over her
petite shoulders. A faint cinnamon sprinkling of freckles dotted her fair
complexion. He watched her frown up at him and arch a perfect eyebrow, her gaze
traveling over every inch of his face as if desperate to prove his identity
false.
Finally she met his eyes and gave him her best glare. His
smirk stretched lazily over his face, taking its sweet time, as the man who
owned it often did.
“Hello, Weasel.” He drawled.
“Malfoy.” She spat, staring into his silver gray eyes with
a venom usually reserved for large, poisonous snakes.
When he took a step into the room she placed a hand on his
chest and pushed him back. Astonished, he could only look at her.
“Stay out of my apartment, Malfoy. It’s dirty enough
without someone like you in it.” Draco’s face instantly darkened in anger and
he caught her wrist, twisting it behind her back and pulling her toward him
until she was eye level with his chest.
“I suggest you move, Virginia.” He said, warping her name
into something detestable. “I thought you might be smarter, and try to be nice
to your contact. But you’re just as hot headed as your brother, and twice as
moronic.” He swore he heard her mutter something along the lines of ‘No one’s
thicker than Ron’ but he couldn’t be sure. Regardless, she seemed to
unconsciously turn up her nose at him.
“How do I know you’re my contact? They said tall and
blonde, not ugly or Slytherin greaseball.” Ginny muttered, attempting to free
her arm from his grasp. Allowing his leather jacket to slip down his arm, Draco
shoved his unoccupied wrist under her nose. On it was a beautiful rendition of
a coiled red and black python with haunting silver, slitted eyes. Ginny refused
to like it. “How quaint. Did Al the bartender give you that with a toothpick?”
She said, mimicking his drawling voice.
He released her arm, and she rubbed it hard in an effort
to get the blood flowing again. Ginny took a half dozen steps away from him,
eager to keep her distance. “It’s magical. Changes color with my mood. Not that
that’s any of your business.”
“I hope it stays vaguely manly. Wouldn’t want you running
around with a purple snake on your arm after an encounter with Crabbe or Goyle,
now would we?” She said, eyes sparkling with silent amusement while her voice
stayed forcibly casual.
Draco scowled in her general direction while glancing
about her apartment, but the portion of his tattoo she could see was the dead
black of night.
“I didn’t find that even faintly amusing, Weasel.”
“Back to Weasel then are we? And I thought we were making
such progress!”
“Virginia…” He said with effort, a warning lingering
beneath his voice regardless.
“Alright, alright, I’m sorry I speculated about your
private life.” Her mouth twitched inadvertently. “It’s really none of my
business if you wear leather trousers, or that your socks are pink, or that
every night you meet your boyfriend in a deserted alley…” Draco snarled at her,
obviously restraining himself from attacking her altogether. She smiled at him
sweetly, a deceptively innocent turning of her mouth. “Right then.” She said.
“You know, I wasn’t joking about the socks. They are pink.”
He looked down and pulled up his pant leg. His socks were
the promised color.
“Next time you do laundry remember that whites and reds do
not go in the same load.” His mouth twitched in a smile gone wrong that
then twisted itself into his trademark smirk.
“Where do I sleep?” He started slightly when Ginny’s face
turned a deep shade of red.
“You…you’re staying here?” His gray eyes slanted down at
her, making her duck her head for a moment before she remembered she was no
longer eleven years old.
“Yes.” He drawled, drawing out the word into two syllables
as if explaining to a very slow pre-schooler.
“But there isn’t room!” Draco observed with interest as
her already flushed skin deepened in its rather attractive blush. It flattered
her complexion not to be so pale all the time. Or perhaps it was only the initial
shock of seeing him that had drained her face of blood. He forced himself to
focus on her words and almost laughed when he realized that she was ashamed to
admit there was no room for him to stay. “There’s only one bedroom, you’d have
to sleep on the couch. And the couch is too small for you to stretch out and…”
she trailed off as it dawned on her that she was babbling like an idiot.
“I’m sure I can make due. Believe me, I don’t want to be
here even more than you don’t want me to be here.” He shook his head in a way
he knew made his white blond hair fall just so across his forehead.
Ginny melted just a little bit.
Well…how bad can one Malfoy be? Inwardly
she laughed at her own naivety. Okay, very bad. But hey, eye candy! Gotta
love the boys in leather…
Ginny’s lecherous side won out, due, in her opinion, to
lack of male contact save old Ministry officials for the last few training
weeks.
“Okay.” She sighed, suggesting with her tone that the word
had cost her too much precious breath. “Put your things over there.” He watched
the movement of her arm to indicate a corner near the cheap TV set.
Draco could feel her eyes on him, observing his every
move. Suspicious much? He thought, but when he turned around he saw only
an appraising expression set on her features. Smiling to himself, he closed the
distance between them in a few strides and bent down to whisper in her ear.
“No need to wait until I turn around, Virginia,” he
breathed, the familiar drawl coating his words with liquid poison, “I’m used to
it.”
Backing away from him abruptly, she refused to meet his
eyes as she gathered her jacket and thrust her arms in the sleeves roughly.
“I’m going out,” she declared, and a second later the door slammed hard. Draco
marveled at the vibration of the floor for a moment before he began rooting
through her cupboards. He hadn’t eaten since the day before.
~***~
Without much purpose or direction Ginny wandered through
the streets. She had a vague idea of where she was going but it hadn’t occurred
to her to walk down the right avenue yet. Aimless meandering rarely got anyone
where they wanted to go, so she made several rights and ended up in front of a
Muggle club, an all night ravers’ paradise called Death Spiral. The
windows had been blacked out so no one could see inside, and Ginny paused to
ponder her reflection in the inky glass for a moment. The problem was her
outfit, which was perfect for a job interview, but would look stupid in a club.
Thoughtfully she touched her fingers to the hem of her skirt, which ended just
below her knees. Suddenly it occurred to her that she really didn’t care less
what the party going crowd thought of her. It wasn’t like she would ever go
there again.
Satisfied, she pushed open the door and was taken aback.
Strobe lights of many colors played across the walls, illuminating each person
in red, blue, pink and yellow by turns. It was beautiful, cheapened only by the
(most likely high) people the lights streamed across.
Dazedly she walked over to the bar in a corner and ordered
a melon margarita from a girl with ‘Morgana’ on her nametag.
“Sure, hon!” bubbled the girl, snapping a large wad of gum
loudly and turning away to the rows of alcohol behind her. It took her barely a
minute to throw together the drink, and she plopped it down in front of Ginny
without ceremony. “Three ninety-five, doll.”
Ginny paid her, which Morgana seemed to take as a rarity
and an invitation to chat. She leaned across the bar to whisper to Ginny, her
cheaply dyed orange hair trailing the polished surface. “That bloke’s been
watching you since you walked in here,” she said, eyeing a man somewhere over
Ginny’s right shoulder. Ginny followed her gaze to find a man with his eyes
trained on hers. She turned back to Morgana with a puzzled look on her face.
“So?” she asked, trying not to be blinded by the pinkness
of Morgana’s outfit. Mentally she was flipping through the files on her case,
trying to fit the man into a slot occupied by ‘Death Eater’ in bold letters.
“So! He’s cute! Go talk to him.”
“But the odds are he’s trying to ki…” She stopped,
recalling that very few except select Ministry members knew she was here. He
probably only wanted a quick dance. The odds weren’t in favor of his being a
hit man. “…kiss me.” She finished lamely, knowing Morgana was looking at her as
though she’d grown a few extra heads.
“Honey, you’re a strange one.” That said, she walked off
to serve a few rowdier customers. A few moments passed and Ginny looked behind her
again. The man, whoever he was, had gone.
“Fancy some company?” asked a deep voice beside her. The
only sign of Ginny’s inner panic was a faint twitch of her hand. She held said hand
over her heart, and breathed deeply to clear the lump from her throat.
“You frightened me.” She said in a small voice, and then
frowned at herself. She was supposed to be an empowered woman, and at it took
was this man to scare her nearly out of her wits? He chuckled softly. Ginny
found herself hating the sound.
“Can I buy you a drink?” Roughly Ginny pushed away from
the bar, knocking over the stool she’d been sitting on. Not one person in the
entire club so much as blinked at this disturbance. Vaguely Ginny wondered what
sort of Muggle drug they were on as she faded into the crowd, throwing a few
words back at the darkly handsome man.
“I’ve had one, thanks.” She shoved her way through the
throng of people, moving some of them a good foot away from their original
place on the dance floor. Rude phrases came at her from all sides, but she kept
going, propelled by a bad feeling about this entire situation and a single
thought that echoed off the confines of her mind.
I don’t have my wand.
When she hit the street Ginny broke into a run. She was
grateful for wearing her flats if she could not have sneakers, but they made a
swift clicking noise that was unmistakable. The clicking seemed to grow as loud
as a car horn in her ears, all other sounds were surpassed by the sheer
strength behind her own footsteps. Fear filled her then, and she could barely
breathe for fright of the sound. All the same, she kept running.
It was seconds before she heard the heavy thud of a man’s
boots behind her. To her it seemed hours and hours, waiting with bated breath
and hoping beyond hope she’d strike it lucky.
Ginny had never had much luck.
Chancing a glance behind her, she saw a shock of black
hair falling over shaded eyes. It was, as she had known it would be, the man
from the club. She forced her legs to move faster, harder, until they burned
with the effort. She couldn’t have stopped then if she’d wanted to, her legs
were moving too fast. An object set in motion is likely to stay in motion.
Even so, Ginny sensed him gaining on her. It seemed such a waste, she was
barely two blocks from home, and in thirty seconds he would reach out and drag
her down to do God knows what with her.
She let out a high pitched, bloodcurdling scream, the like
of which might never have been heard by man except that Ginny Weasley was
afraid. Nothing happened. He gained still. Again she screamed, but this time
the sharp note also carried a name.
“MALFOY!” Ginny had no idea whether or not he could hear
her, to herself she was merely whispering, and she cursed her lungs for their
size. Possibly she didn’t know that everyone within a five block radius could
hear her, but if she had, she would have ceased to be afraid. For Ginny
believed in the common decency of even the lowest member of the human race, and
in her heart she believed someone would save her. “MALFOY!”
Ignoring all rules of wizard law, Draco Malfoy Apparated
in the street looked confused and irritated. It was about as close to concerned
as he could look. When he saw Ginny running towards him with the dark man on
her heels, he was definitely angry. Angry at Ginny for being an idiot, because
he was sure somehow she’d gotten herself into this by stupidity, and angry at
the man for making him get off the couch. He didn’t have much time to
contemplate that before Ginny dived behind him, clinging to his shoulders like
a virus. He shook his head. Weasleys.
The dark man slowed his pace and stopped a few feet in
front of Draco’s toes, panting. Ginny couldn’t believe he didn’t run like hell after
seeing Draco Malfoy in all his six foot glory. He was looking particularly
dangerous too, his white blonde hair ruffled from sleep and a wary look in his
eye. She peeped around his elbow, being only five foot two herself, and glared
stonily at the stranger.
“Draco!” He exclaimed with a cruel laugh directed at
Ginny. “Where’ve you been all this time, man? I mean, she’s a nice piece of
work, but I can’t see you in the whole hooker business.”
“No one said anything about hookers, Goyle.” He replied easily.
Ginny blinked. Had she heard right?
“Excuse me, did you say Goyle?” She asked. Draco
seemed amused by this question.
“The younger,” he clarified, “Looks nothing like his older
brother does he?” Ginny shook her head, remembering a moss colored mountain at
the Yule Ball in her third year. She snickered quietly. “He’s five years
younger than Gregory. You wouldn’t have noticed him, he was of the sort that
blended into the walls.”
“But isn’t he still in school?”
“Dropped out last year. Shares the same intellect with
Greg, I assume.” Goyle what’s his name glared in Draco’s direction.
“You know, Draco, I could just idly mention at the next
Death Eater meeting that you ain’t there because you’re screwing around with a
red haired wench.”
“Oh, I’m sure you won’t think of it. You are a little
slow, after all.” He pulled his wand from the inside of his jacket and pointed
it at Goyle’s temple. “Obliviate!”
For a moment Goyle looked dazed, but then he walked off
slowly, muttering something about rainfall in Wimbleton. Ginny stayed behind
Draco until he rounded a corner, graciously nodding to an old woman on the
street. When she presumed she was out of danger she came up alongside him and
glanced down the sidewalk to make sure Goyle the younger wasn’t coming back.
Satisfied, the air seemed to leak out of her spine and she slouched slightly,
using her hip as a support.
Draco rounded on her. “You,” he said pointedly, “are lucky
to be alive. Do you have any clue how dangerous it is walking around all alone?
What if something had happened to you?”
Ginny gaped at him for a moment and then snapped, “What do
you care, Malfoy?”
“I don’t, but it’d be bloody inconvenient to have come all
the way out here just to have to go back home and play the loyal, Death Eating
son again.”
“Malfoy, you probably Apparated here.”
“Well, yes, but all the same…”
“And what’s all this about Death Eater’s meeting, hmm?
Playing both sides?”
“Of course I’m playing both sides, Virginia, my
father would skin me alive if he knew where I was right now. It only makes
sense to play both sides.” He looked at the ground, then back at Ginny almost
too quickly for her to notice.
“Oh…right.” She stared at her feet, blushing and suddenly contrite.
“Well. Thanks. Saving my life is always appreciated.” She flashed him a quick
thumbs up and practically ran up the stairs to her apartment. Draco strolled
after her casually, taking his time. After a moment he heard her voice floating
down the stairs, followed by a masculine one he couldn’t place. As he got
closer he could hear the exchange better.
“C’mon, Zhinny…ya can’t do better than meh.” An
exasperated female voice followed.
“Ralph, look, I do not now, nor will I ever want to go in
your apartment. It’s been a month since they cleaned the rats out.”
“Aw, Zhinny, yer so cold…”
“Go to bed, Ralph, you need the sleep.”
Draco vaulted up the last set of stairs and strode
confidently over to where Ginny was trying to herd a drunk man into his apartment.
The drunk man appeared to be succeeding at copping a feel. Lucky drunk,
thought Draco, then shook off the thought. I need a girlfriend. This should
be on the top ten list of You Know You’re Desperate When…
“Problem?” He drawled.
“Nope,” said Ginny, smiling at him and simultaneously
trying to push ‘Ralph’ through one of the brown doors lining the walls. “No
problem at all. I can take care of it.”
“Because you’re so famous for your quick thinking and
super strategy.”
“That was a fluke. I hardly ever get chased by gits.
Unless you count yourself.”
“I haven’t chased you yet.” Ugh, flirting with a
Weasley. What am I doing?
“Yet being the operative word.” Ew, flirting with
Malfoy. Ew. Ew. Ew. Stopping now.
Ralph leaned heavily on Ginny, causing her to stumble. He
wrapped his arm around her shoulders and pulled her closer to him. She pushed
him away, but even drunk he was quite a bit stronger than her.
“You scammin’ on ma girl?” Draco rolled his eyes, and
forcibly pulled his arm away from Ginny. With his free hand he gave him a hard
punch in the eye, shoving him into the apartment despite his pitiful moaning.
“If you remember nothing else from this night, remember
that!” He called after him. He shut the door firmly. When he was finished Ginny
looked on in amusement as his eyes combed his hands in disgust.
“I really could have handled that. Ralph’s always hanging
from some doorway, half crocked and hitting on anything with legs.” Draco ignored
her and pushed past, almost jogging to the door of her own flat. “What are you
doing?”
“I’m going to take a long, hot shower.” She laughed and
tried hard to ignore the mental picture that brought to mind.
~*In the middle of the night*~
Ginny rushed into the darkened living room where Draco was
curled into a stiff ball on her small sofa. He lay with his eyes open, staring
at nothing, trying desperately to sleep.
“Malfoy! I just realized something! Why did Goyle think I
was a hooker? Malfoy? Malfoy, answer me.”
* * *
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