Who: Pansy and @greengrassgrowths
Where: Hogsmeade
When: As the Dragon Pox commotion begins (8-9pm)
Pansy watched as the last of the fireworks fade from the night sky leaving pale grey streaks of smoke hanging like ghosts in their wake. As she stood breathing in the night air for a moment another witch hurried by her muttering about ‘corralling students’ and snapping Pansy’s attention back to the present. She’d lost Astoria and Scorpius again as the crowds had hurried to find a good spot to watch the fireworks and regretted it now hoping she’d be able to catch them before Scorpius was whisked back away to school. As she made her way towards the direction of the school she ran her eyes over the crowd and watched as a sudden shift in tone seemed to spread from person to person coming from the direction of the Hog’s Head. A scream split the night with an explanation for the rising unease.
“Dragon pox!”
Pansy’s spine stiffened with alarm and within seconds her wand was free from the clever holder she’d sewn into her sleeve and held in a white-knuckled grip. Her first instinct was to run… to apparate as quickly as possible from this cursed place and its newest threat but then she remembered.
“Astoria!!” she cried out spinning to gaze over the now panicked crowd hoping desperately to catch sight of Astoria or her son. A flash of pale blonde hair in the near distance caught her eye and sent her stumbling in that direction. “Scorpius!”
“...lovely day, sweetheart, thank you. I appreciate you giving up so much of your time for your mother.” Astoria leaned in to kiss her son on his forehead, enjoying the fact that she could still lean down to do so while knowing that it wouldn’t be for much longer; her son already showed every indication of inheriting the height of his father’s family and in another two or three years he was going to leaning down to kiss her. It was simultaneously a lovely and heartbreaking thought, knowing her little boy was growing up.
He was still her little boy, though, so when their farewells were interrupted by screaming, she lunged forward and caught her son’s arm before he could pull away, pulling Scorpius in towards her and grabbing for her wand. “Stay with me, sweetie,” she said, even as he was digging for his own wand and trying to say, “Mum, get back--”
Astoria’s heart was pounding, terrified of the crowd and the damage they could do; terrified of the illness that could reach her precious child no matter how well she protected him from the physical threats around them. She pulled him back towards the wall of the bookshop, trying to pull them out of the stream of running people -- but then she realized she’d made a mistake; she should have pushed them to run right away before the crowds thickened. Had she trapped them here now, where running from the insidiousness of the disease (the very disease that had killed Scorpius’s great-grandfather, she remembered suddenly) meant risking being trampled -- the sound of her own name sounded like salvation.
It took Astoria several seconds to realize who was shouting for her and for Scorpius; she wasn’t used to having anyone but Draco, Daphne, and their respective parents around on whom to rely -- but Pansy. Pansy was here with them; they weren’t alone. “Pansy!” Astoria shouted, the cry coming out raw and jagged from her throat. “Pansy! Over here!” Hurry, she wanted to add -- but she tried to swallow her fear. Was it pride, or an attempt to keep from frightening her son? Perhaps it didn’t matter, because she wasn’t even coming close to succeeding at hiding her terror.
















