A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes
Penny was not familiar with anything muggle related, growing up between the magical and werewolf worlds were enough of a hassle without adding animated films, internet, and wireless phones into the mix. Wolves had no need for animated films talking about love, and wizards always were slow to the uptake when it came to modern conveniences and joy.
It is no wonder that shortly after graduation, in a lull between taking down the Ministry of Magic and Werewolf Rights that someone thought it’d be a good idea for Penny to take on the muggle world– Los Angeles was a bad idea if hindsight was 20/20 because the sights, sounds, colors, the stench was enough to drive her mad. It all culminated in Disneyland, a veritable dreamscape if everyone was correct about what it was– a land of dreams, wishes, wonder, hope. Everything a girl like Penny could dream of if she wasn’t so entrenched in a war she was born into. Disneyland was like nothing she could have ever even imagined, for there was nothing in her life that came even remotely close to such a place that smelled of sugar and hot sun, the metallic heat of the rides under her skin and the throngs of people. No one was upset, there were no tears but that a child that did not want to leave.
Penny didn’t want to leave either.
She fluttered from place to place, hopping on rides, taking in the fantastic world and lore. A land of fairytales– it made her ache for something so beautiful to be real all days of the year. She fell in love with Peter Pan and marveled Tomorrowland. She delved into fantastic terrifying adventures with Indiana Jones and was anxiously exhilarated on Space Mountain. Splash Mountain had her sighing in relief at the cold water, for it brought pleasure from the oppressive California heat. An autograph book filled with signatures from characters she had no idea of, but quickly was falling in love with. Carasol rides, flying atop an elephant, the Sword in the Stone, the Teacups she rode four times until she could hardly stand let alone walk. Dole Whip, a craze that she craved. She found herself good at the shooting games in Frontier Land and enjoyed the Happy Hauntings in the Haunted Mansion and spotted a few ghosts that weren’t part of the attraction. She wondered at the parade and stared at the sky long after the fireworks petered out, Mickey Ears adorned her head and it was like she was truly the eighteen-year-old she was supposed to be, with a childhood that was not filled with horrors or a war, like that of a cartoon villain. She hummed and skipped her way down Disney Mainstreet, arms adorned with clothes, plushies, and souvenirs, for sleight of hand and fake Muggle money lines her pockets and a wand was far more powerful than anything any muggle could cook up. She stood at the exit, staring at the streets beyond, the long trolley waiting to take her away and she knew she didn’t want to leave, like the screaming children that were being tugged out by exasperated parents.
Her friends waited and she looked up at the castle looming in the distance and smiled.
“I’ll be back, promise.”















