uncommonlily:
Lily knew the voice before she looked up at the person’s face. Marlene’s was always a voice that Lily could pick out of a crowd, no matter the size. Whether it was the Great Hall of Hogwarts or the busy street of Diagon Alley they were currently on, Lily could find her. Or, commonly enough, Marlene would find her. After her falling out with Severus, her friendship with Marlene helped her to remember that Slytherins and Gryffindors could be friends, no matter what anyone else’s pride said about that.
“Bloody hell, Marlene,” Lily said with a laugh. “I’m so sorry about that.” Once she had grabbed her book, she reached out her hand to help Marlene up as well. “That was totally not your fault, I should’ve been watching where I was going.” When they were both back on their feet, Lily put the book away in her bag.
“Now,” Lily said, turning her attention to the girl in front of her. “Where the bloody hell have you been? I haven’t seen you in ages.”
It wasn’t that she’d been avoiding Lily -- Marlene was entirely incapable of feeling enough shame to have the wherewithal to actively avoid anyone. But she also was horribly unequipped to deal with anything even relatively emotional; she’d spent the majority of her school years burying emotion beneath layer upon layer of facade, only to have it all muddled and torn to bits in the course of one night spent with Lily Evans. She had never been one for crushes, relationships, wooing; she was the living personification of detachment, and yet here she was.
But this was her best friend -- any feelings were surely an anomaly best ignored and repressed.
“Nah, no need to apologize,” she waved off Lily’s apology with a passing touch of Lily’s arm and a laugh, “Guess I put on two left feet this morning, huh? And that book -- that book’s got you off balance, surely. How many pages is that thing? You reading it all in one go?”
She could feel herself beginning to flush at Lily’s question; with fingers running through her hair, she scuffed her boots on the stone, searching for a believable lie. But then she remembered the charred spot on the back of her blouse; dragon mishaps were always convenient. With a grin, she angled her back-- and the enormous burnt spot marring her flannel-- toward Lily, “Work’s been wild. Barely had any time to myself. But I’m, er, here now, yeah? Good to see you! What’ve you been up to?”











