'Seamus didn't seem at all tedious to me,' protested Mrs. Weasley.

'Seamus and I broke up,' said Ginny, in a leaden tone.

'And good riddance!' cried her mother. 'I hated him on sight!'

'Oh, for goodness sake,' Ginny wailed. 'And Fred, I don't even know why you'd mention Harry, you know perfectly well I've been over him for ages.'

'I suppose that leaves Malfoy,' said George regretfully. 'Which is too bad.

You'll spend the rest of your life competing with his hair products for attention and fighting over which one of you is the prettiest.'

'And let me tell you,' added Fred, 'Malfoy will win.'

'It is not,' Ginny said, shooting them both glares of loathing, 'a boy problem.'

Fred raised his eyebrows at her. Ginny knew perfectly well what they were doing; George and Fred had always used humor as a way to deflect the pain of bad situations. Without being able to help herself, her eyes went to the ivy plants in the window, each charmed to reflect the health of a Weasley child. Ron's was still blooming and healthy — but for how long?

Ginny's mother saw where her daughter was looking and bit her lip, her eyes suddenly bright. 'Oh, Ginny — I'm glad you're home,' she said in a soft voice, and Ginny let herself be gathered into another hug. It was Charlie who finally broke into the embrace, tapping Mrs. Weasley on the shoulder.

'Ginny's had a long, exhausting day,' he said gently. 'We should let her get some rest.'

Nodding, Mrs. Weasley let her daughter go. With a grateful smile at Charlie, Ginny headed up the stairs to her bedroom, pausing to wave down at Lupin and Sirius as she went. It was nice to have a house full of people, especially people she liked so much. If only she were in a fitter state to appreciate it.

Her bedroom door creaked as she opened it. It was full of shadows and, unlived in for so many months, smelled faintly of soap and dust. Ginny drew her wand out and waved it once, murmuring, 'Luminesce.' A soft glow suffused the room and Ginny stepped inside, shutting the door behind her.

It was only after she had locked the door and turned around that she realized that her bedroom was not, in fact, empty. There was someone sitting on the edge of her bed, and to say that that someone was the last person she would ever have expected to see now would not have been far from the truth.

'Good lord,' she exclaimed, utterly surprised. 'What on earth are you doing here?'

* * *

'Malfoy?' Harry's jaw dropped open and stayed open. The bitter rain went into his mouth and he nearly choked on it. 'H-how — how did you — how did you know — how did you find me?'

'Are you really that surprised?' Draco took a step away from the wall, and began walking towards him. Slowly, as if there were no hurry in the world.

Harry stared at that face he hadn't really expected to ever see again.

Sharp features, familiar gray eyes, the hood of the long cloak down around his shoulders. His hair was as wet as Harry's, plastered across his cheeks and forehead in long colorless streaks. 'I can always find you.'

'No.' Harry's voice was a half-whisper. 'I did everything to prevent this — '

'You're not glad to see me?' The narrow mouth curled up at the corner, like paper curling as it burned. 'How astonishing.'

'Of course I'm not glad to see you. I mean, I'm glad. But Malfoy — there are Death Eaters chasing me — '

Draco, unexpectedly, threw back his head and laughed, a bright sharp bark of laughter so unlike him that Harry stared. 'Death Eaters chasing you? Oh, you are funny. I love it. What's next? Going to start up with that whole and-I'm-a-pitiful-orphan-take-care-of-me-because-I-have-to-save-the-world thing? God, but you're boring sometimes.'

Harry rocked back on his heels as if Draco had hit him. 'I never — I don't -

— '

'No, of course you never.' Draco was still smiling the same half-smile and there was something about it Harry really didn't like. 'Of course you don't.' He raised his hand, there was something glowing in it, like a spark of witchlight or marshfire. 'You're Harry Potter, after all.'

Harry began to back away, driven by instinct. He wondered if Draco was going to hit him and if he could bring himself to hit back. He didn't think he could. He deserved this, after all. That didn't make it any more unsettling. 'I'm serious, Malfoy. There are Death Eaters chasing me. Your father will probably — '

Draco shook the wet hair out of his eyes. 'Oh, right. My father. How could I forget my father. Such a bastard.' His voice was toneless, cool, amused.

The rain ran down his bare face in rivulets, parting the thick silver blades of his eyelashes, sliding down into the open collar of his shirt. 'You know, don't you get bored with the same old whining every once in a while?

Don't you want to do something a little different?'

'Different? What? Malfoy, I — ' Harry broke off as his back hit the damp wall. He could back up no farther. He shivered. 'Okay, I know you're angry. I'm sorry I left you — '

'Left me?' Draco laughed. He lowered his hand, and the light in it winked out. 'That's a new one. You make it sound so dramatic. You don't really think that's the sort of thing I'd care about, do you?'

Harry stared at him. He reached out then, tentatively, with his mind, but it was like hitting his hand against a concrete wall — the other boy wasn?t letting him in at all. Draco was close enough to him now that Harry could see the damp hair curling at the ends, the rain beading on his lashes, the familiar silver scar under his eye. Harry himself had made that scar, indirectly, just as he had made the scar on Draco's hand, just as he had marked him in dozens of ways that were less visible. 'Well, I thought that you would — '

'Really, Potter.' Draco's voice was the same cool drawl Harry remembered from years gone by. He took a last step forward, closing the slight gap between them, and pushed Harry, hard, against the wall. Harry felt cold wet stone through the thin material of his shirt. Grit scraped his bare elbows. Draco held him pinned there, his hand against Harrys chest, and with his other hand he reached into Harrys shirt pocket, and drew out his glasses. 'I was wondering where these were.' He flicked the glasses open, and slid them onto Harrys face. 'Better,' he said.

Wordless, Harry looked at him. It could have been a gentle gesture, this restoration of his glasses, but somehow, it wasn?t. The glasses were wet with rain anyway and slid halfway down his nose, which actually was a good thing, or he wouldn?t have been able to see at all. 'I left you a letter,' he began, stumbling over his words. 'Didn't you read what I — '

'Shut up,' interrupted Draco pleasantly, his grip tightening on Harrys shirt, and for a dizzy moment Harry was positive Draco was going to hit him, just grab him and bang his head into the wall, and his muscles tensed up hard. Draco grinned. 'Scared, Potter?'

'Hit me,' Harry said. 'If you want to hit me, hit me. If it'll make you feel better — '

'I feel fine,' Draco said. He looked down at his hand, where it rested against Harry's chest. 'You always have to make such a big deal out of everything,' he said, and then he did exactly the last thing Harry would ever have expected, and leaned across the small space that separated them, and kissed Harry on the mouth.

* * *

References:

'The kind of family that bought their own furniture' — Draco's family, of course, would never buy a piece of furniture, having inherited the stuff down through the generations. MP Alan Clark once famously said about fellow politician Michael Heseltine that he was a man so unaristocratic that he had 'bought his own furniture'- the first time I came across a reference to this expression was in Textual Sphinx's lovely fic 'To Sever the Lining From A Cloud,' and it has stuck in my head since.

'I told you once you were wasting your time to barter your destiny for the friendship of a boy who would never like you.' From DS6, Lucius talking to Draco: 'You think I didn't see your face, back at the Mansion, when you looked at him, and at her, and her face when she looked at you both? Do you want to barter your destiny for the friendship of a boy who will never like you, and the favors of a girl who doesn't return your love? To ally yourself

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