Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Jig
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Hogwarts World Tour




Prologue




The office was small and quiet, with barely enough room to swing a mouse, let alone anything even remotely feline. A short, slightly portly man peered into a fireplace which was crackling merrily despite the height of a June heatwave. The ghostly head of an elderly witch with naturally pursed lips flickered among the flames, both clear and incorporeal simultaneously. The marvels of floo powder were a thing to behold.

“And you’re certain everything is ready?” said she, with a clipped, dry voice and a Scottish accent. Her tone was not unkind, but flashed an infamous steeliness with every consonant - a perfect counterbalance to his softer, rounder tones that deftly marked him for Irish.

“Absolutely, Headmistress. Don’t worry so much.”

“And the portkeys are all arranged?”

“I thought I told you not to worry so much?” said the portly wizard, leaning back in his wingback chair and putting his hands behind his head for effect. Predictably, Minerva McGonagall bristled, to a quiet chortle from him.

“We’ve never had so many students on this programme before.”

“Everything is in hand. Three portkeys to La Place du Fourmilier at twenty-three past four, tomorrow. One’s in Hogsmeade, one’s in Diagon Alley, and the other in Aberdyfi Passage. Double-checked, triple-checked, cross-referenced. Promise.”

“And I presume they all know?”

“They most certainly do. After that eejit got the wrong day last year, I thought I’d send howlers out this time. You know. Just to be sure.”

McGonagall looked cross, but betrayed an almost imperceptible glimpse of approving mirth.

“Do you know where they’re going first?”

“Up to them,” he said, casually.

She sniffed in a way that was not subtle, nor was intended to be; “You really do have a casual attitude, Mr O’Lustrum.”

“I do, don’t I? We’ve all had quite enough to be serious about for one lifetime, don’t you think?” There was a pause for her to parry, but she said nothing, “Was there anything else, Headmistress? It is rather getting on for my bedtime.”

“I shouldn’t think so. Goodnight, Mr O’Lustrum.”

“Goodnight, Headmistress.”

The spectral head vanished, as though pulled into the back of the fireplace, but, just as O’Lustrum settled down to a fine glass of Dhuabhda Firewhiskey, it suddenly reappeared.

“Oh, there was just one thing.”

“Mmh?”

“If you get the chance, please do encourage the students to consider writing to me. I would quite like to,” - her usual voice cracked for just a split-second before regaining its composure - “Know how they’re getting on.”

“You’re not going soft on us, Headmistress?”

A look of fury entirely in keeping with the flames from the fireplace was his reward, and he felt a pang of regret.

“Of course I will. Goodnight, Headmistress.”

“Thank you, Mr. O’Lustrum.”

The head vanished again, this time without returning.

Aaron O’Lustrum extinguished the fire with a laissez-faire flick of his wand and settled back. He still remembered the time the then-Professor McGonagall had given him a detention, and couldn’t help but wonder if any of the students had themselves also been forced to help restock the potions cupboard by manually and without gloves extracting the various juices from a vat of flobberworms. After a moment’s thought, it occurred to him that, now Headmistress, the old battleaxe had an even greater arsenal of punishments for those students foolish enough to cross her and be caught.
Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Kirah
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Mary Winthrop


Mary lay reading on a hammock in the shade of an overgrown tree, one foot hanging over trailing lightly and sometimes pushing against the ground. Her summer thus far had been idyllic. Andrew, her father, and herself had spent it at a small sea-side cottage he had bought when he had first brought Mary home. It was one of her favorite places to go now. Most of the time it was a weekend trip or a short trip, this time they had gone for a whole month. It was the first Summer since Mary had started school that they had that much time together. Now they wouldn't see each other for basically another year.

“Mary,” her father's voice called from the cottage. “Are you finished packing?”

“Yes. I'll be in in a minute I just want to finish this chapter.”

“Okay, I want to take the Knight bus shortly to Diagon Alley.” Mary nodded, her eyes still darting across the page, there wasn't that much left in the chapter. A breeze cooled her burnt cheeks and some sand landed into her eye. With a groan she got out of the hammock and went inside, still reading the book with one eye and rubbing at the other. “Are you okay?”

“Yeah, just some sand in my eye. Wind kicked it up.”

“Welcome to the beach.” Andrew grinned and went back to his task preparing their late lunches for the bus ride. “What time is the portkey tomorrow?”

“Four pm.” Mary said, closing the book and climbing the stairs up to her small room at the top. She loved the tiny room with its huge windows that opened out facing the sea, it gave her a sense of freedom she had never experienced before living with her father. Mary paused before placing the book she had been reading in the large, though not as large as is should be considering how much stuff was actually packed into it, trunk. For a brief moment she was scared of the future.

Mary had never been much of a traveler, and the next year would be nothing but traveling. It was a scary thought. In all her life she had been maybe a dozen places, and all of those had been in the last ten years. Odd how it had been only ten years, and even odder still how ten years felt like more lifetimes then just the one she had lived. The Mary of ten years ago was not the Mary of now. Things were changing, more than just her. She was done at Hogwarts-

“Mary, bring your trunk down. I'm going to wave down the Bus.”

“Coming.” Mary dropped the book and closed the lid, and with a wave of her wand the lock disappeared and no key could unlock it. Only someone with the unlocking spell could open the trunk now. She picked up one handle and dragged the trunk behind her, it was as light as if it were empty. Mary smiled, magic was wonderful, and descended down the stairs. Her father was standing several paces away from the house with his hand out, waving down an invisible taxi cab.

There was a crashing sound and a violently purple bus screeched to a halt inches from Andrew. He didn't flinch. Down hopped a young man who launched into an explanation about the bus. “Yes, yes, we know.” Andrew cut the man off, placing the coins for both Mary and his tickets. “Two for Diagon Alley please.”

“I wanted to hear his speech.” Mary whispered to Andrew once they had gotten their things positioned between two seats on the second floor. They didn't have time to sit as the bus started moving with a jerk going from zero to at least 70 in less than three seconds. By the G-force alone Mary was forced into her seat, and all the seats in front of them came sliding back into them. A harried looking woman groaned and turned a little more green.

“We could have been saved this suffering.” Andrew looked at Mary with a raised eyebrow.

“I was curious.” She gave a small shrug. “And besides we were told discrete travel.

“Apparating is discrete.”

“And boring.” Mary smiled brightly and looked out the window to watch the speeding scenery. There would be loud bangs and whatever was flashing by would disappear and something new and different was replaced by it.

“You'll have a year of non-boring travel, why did I have to suffer too?” Andrew groaned. “If she hurls I'll hurl too.” Mary giggled, and patted her father on the hand. “You'll write to me won't you?”

“Yes I will, every day.”

“I don't require every day, just regularly.” Andrew wrapped his arm around Mary and kissed the top of her head gently, a sensation she never got tired of.

It was just after the seats were exchanged with beds, as equally not bolted down, that they arrived at Diagon Alley. Andrew checked them into rooms at the Leaky Cauldron, with beds that didn't move. Mary had spent a few nights in the Leaky Cauldron before growing up, though most of those times she had shared the room with her cousin, who Mary hoped would show up soon. She didn't want to have to wait until Paris to see her. Her heart beat sped up at the thought of seeing Paris, and the rest of the world. It was so terrifying and fun sounding.

Once her things were in place Mary knocked on her father's room. “I'm going to go into the Alley.” He gave a grumpy sounding okay. “Do you want me to ask Mrs. Longbottom to bring you up something to settle your stomach?” The responding noise sounded like it could have been please, so Mary found Mrs. Longbottom and requested a soothing drink for Andrew.

Finally she was out in Diagon Alley out of the stuffy air of indoors. She had never been to Diagon Alley at this time of year, and certainly not by herself. She grinned ready to explore.
Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by kittyluna45
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Elise was laying in the grass, idly looking at her watch for a few moments before she sat up. Today was the day, and goodness knew that she did not want to be late in any case. Also... she wouldn't want to disappoint Mary. They had made sure through letters, that they would plan to meet up at Diagon Alley the day before they were due to go to La Place du Fourmilier. She had never really been to France before, as most summers she spent with her cousin and family at either the estate, or at the beach.

"Elise? Are you out here?" She heard the voice of her mother, and Elise sat up and put back on her glasses.

"I am. I was just soaking up the last bits of home I could before leaving." She got up and headed towards her mother, and the house. "Dad still at work?" Her mother nodded. "Well, give him my love then."

"Of course. But are you sure you don't want to wait for him?"

"I promised Mary we'd meet up today. Besides, if dad really wants to say good bye, he knows I'll be at Diagon Alley and he can Floo powder there."

"Fair enough. Are you all packed up? Ready for what the weather might surprise you with? You did bring pack plenty of letter writing material yes? Scarfs? Money..."

Elise cut her mother off. "I'm fine. We've gone over what I've packed multiple times mom. I know you're worried, but please. Fret not. I'll be fine." She smiled up at her mother, and the two hugged.

"Alright, alright. So you're still going to apperate, right?" Elise nodded and went to head into her house with her mother. They headed up to her room, where her packed trunk was. However, there was the sound of a crack, as someone apperated outside of the house. "Hmm, I wonder who that is. I'll be back in a moment to help you with your trunk." Elise's mother stepped out of the room, and Elise looked around her room one more time. The familiar posters of the singers she liked, both Magical and muggle, as well as some paintings greeted her eyes. She would miss her room, and her house, and her parents. However, this was also a chance to see more of the world, and learn about all sorts of different types of healing, and different cultures.

"Hey timsam... thought I'd come home early to say good bye." Elise turned to see her father enter her bedroom, and she ran over and hugged him tightly.

"Fuchan!" Elise looked up at her father, and he laughed a bit. "I didn't think I'd see you today."

"I know, but I thought I'd come see you off. I can't make it to Diagon Alley with you, but I can say good bye, and good travels." Elise gently let go of her father and smiled.

"Xièxiè fuchan." Elise said and smiled, and then the three of them picked up her trunk, and went to head outside of the house. There was a spell on the Winthrop Estate, so no one could Apperate directly into the house. Once outside, she gave both her parents another round of hugs, and she looked at them both lovingly. "I'll write to you when I can."

"No sense in forcing it. Write when you can, but go out, have fun. See the world, no use in worrying about the two of us." Elise's mother gently patted her head, and Elise's father nodded.

"Alright, thank you both, again, for letting me do this." Elise pulled out her wand and looked at her parents. She waved at them both, and then swished her wand and focused. She was apperating to Diagon Alley, with her trunk. She arrived in front of the Leaky Caldron and smiled. She gently dragged her trunk in, and smiled. She spoke with the innkeeper, and got a room, and hauled her trunk up. She looked around the Leaky Cauldron, and then went to set out on her way in to Diagon Alley.

She left a message so that in case either Mary or Andrew went to look for her, they would know where she was. She then headed out, tapped on the bricks with her want, and made her way to Diagon Alley, hoping to find her cousin there.
Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Kirah
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Kyle McCarthy


Kyle's cousin, Victor, sat across from Kyle at their late breakfast in complete silence. It wasn't an uncomfortable one as people might expect, but a relaxed silence that came from years of knowing each other. There was no need to fill that silence with banter, or talk of the weather. Besides Kyle was certain if Victor did ask questions it would be about Siobhan, a conversation Kyle did not want to have.

Once the meal was finished Kyle stood up and started towards his room. “Kyle,” Victor said as Kyle reached for the door handle out of the dinning room. “I hope you have a good trip. I'll see you in a year.”

“Thank you Victor.” Kyle started to turn to leave again, but paused and turned to face Victor again. “I appreciate everything you've done for me.” Victor nodded, and Kyle left the room to finish packing.

He really did appreciate his cousin and everything he had done for him. Without Victor, Kyle would have been living on the streets, or worse would have ended up in Azkaban right along side his sister, Maggie. Kyle's brow furrowed at the thought of his sister, thankful though for the walls and distance between the two of them. Almost everyone at the school had known about Kyle's family, they had had a very public trial, which concluded in two lifetime sentences for Kyle's father for the murder of Kyle's mother, and three lifetime sentences for Maggie for use of the Killing curse and Crucio on several muggles and muggle-borns.

Kyle looked over to his nightstand where a picture of Siobhan sat, she was reading something in the picture, probably something about dragons, and the wind was blowing her hair. Kyle didn't remember anything about that day, but taking the picture. Even still it was his favorite possession. He tossed the rest of his clothes into a messy pile in his trunk, but carefully wrapped the picture with a shirt, before closing the trunk. He waved his wand and whispered an incantation, the trunk shrank down to be a bit smaller than his palm. Kyle shoved the now miniature trunk into his pocket and walked back out of his room, giving it one last glance.

It was barely noticeable that someone had lived in the room for nearly ten years, only the wardrobe with too small clothes, or half broken supplies gave any indication that it had been a student's room. All of Kyle's books were either packed, or in his cousin's library, and the only picture that had ever sat in the room was packed as well. He didn't even have a picture of his mother, the only member of his immediate family he had ever gotten along with.

Kyle left the property, and just on the edge of the spell that kept people from apparating or disapparating inside the grounds, he disapparated and appeared in Hogsmead. His stomach twisting even after all the practice he had put into learning the spell. Kyle braced himself for a moment against a wall and then stepped out into the all magical town, his eyes looking for Siobhan.

Hidden 8 yrs ago 6 yrs ago Post by McHaggis
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by kittyluna45
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Elise Reed and Mary Winthrop


Elise wandered around Diagon Alley for a while, wishing she had a better way to stay in contact with her cousin. They had agreed to meet up the day before, but not a where, and not a when. She looked around, and decided to check the ice cream parlor first, and when she didn’t find Mary there, she decided to try the bookstore. Both her cousin and herself loved books, so it would have made sense to check Flourish and Blotts.

Mary was leaning against a bookshelf near the front flipping through a book, one that looked like it was about advanced transfiguration. “Mary! There you are!” Elise walked over to her cousin and looked the book over. “Any good?”

“It doesn’t seem to have anything on Crinus Altitudo though.” Mary wrinkled her nose, and placed the book back in an empty spot between a book about Animagus, and the textbook Advanced Transfiguration.

“I see. So, how have you been, how was the beach?” Elise gently wrapped her arms around her cousin in a hug. It had been a few weeks since they had seen one another, and Elise had missed her cousin/ best friend. Mary gave a small hiss.

“A bit sunburned actually,” she said as she extracted herself from the hug. “I had a total blast though, it was very relaxing. I taught dad Exploding Snap. How about you?”

“Oh, sorry.” Elise pulled her hands back to her sides and grimaced a bit. “I’m glad to hear that it was relaxing. I’m doing alright, mostly just did some pre-trip shopping, tried to have mom stop fretting over me a bit, and brush up on some of my language skills, though grandma still says I speak Cantonese like a baby.” She laughed a bit at that and smiled. “So, is Uncle Andrew with you?”

“Ha, good luck getting your mom to stop fretting.” Mary grinned, and then at Elise’s question about Andrew she frowned a bit. “I might have been a bit too excited about taking the Knight Bus, and well, he’s in his room trying to sleep it off.”

“She was doing it up until I apparated here. She wanted to make sure I had enough scarves. I’m sure she probably tucked a few things in my trunk I didn’t pack as well.” Elise laughed a bit. “Oh the Knight Bus? Dad says that driving in India is easier than being on the Knight Bus. I guess I’ll see him tonight.”

“You know, I’d probably believe him. Honestly I’m good, and have no desire to ride it ever again. Though it might mean I will have to work on my apparation and actually pass the test.” Mary gave a small shiver, ever since the time her father had side-along apparated her Mary hadn’t particularly seemed enthused with the idea of apparating.

“I can help you out if you want, but no worries. I know plenty of witches and wizards that are not fans of apparating. They use Floo powder or brooms.” Elise smiled and gently rubbed her cousin’s shoulder, but knew better than to rub too hard with a sunburn. “So, did you go over any of the French they said we should try to learn before we go to La Place du Fourmilier? Because I know I didn’t. French is hard.”

“Well dad was able to help a bit, but yeah, my accent is awful and I have no idea how letters work in French. Basically dad taught me the phrases that’ll keep me from getting arrested, let me know where the bathroom is, and a hotel.” She gave a small shrug. “Want to get an ice cream? I can teach you the phrases dad taught me.”

“That sounds really good. Let’s go ruin dinner!” Elise laughed a bit as she looked at her cousin and then went to head to the ice cream parlor with her. “My treat. Mom and dad gave me a bit of money for the trip, and promised to send more.”

“Excellent.” Mary smiled, following Elise. “Dad said he’d give me money tomorrow before we leave, I only have a few coins left from the summer money he gave me.”

After ice cream, and some wandering of Diagon Alley the two of them headed back inside of the Leaky Cauldron. There they found Elise’s Uncle Andrew sitting at a table.

“Oh good, I was just about to head into Diagon Alley to look for you two. You about ready for dinner?”

Elise looked at her Uncle and laughed a bit. “I could probably eat a little bit, but not too much. How are you doing Uncle Andrew, feeling a bit better?” She smiled as she leaned down to hug her uncle lightly, just incase he was sunburned as well.

“Yes, thank Merlin’s beard for Mrs. Longbottom’s drink concoction she brought me. I don’t want to know what was in it, but it did the trick. She could make a fortune on that drink if she sold it on the Knight bus.” He gave Elise a hug back, and once the girls were sitting he waved over Mrs. Longbottom and they ordered three butterbeers, and dinner.

“Well, she probably learned a trick or two from Professor Longbottom. He is pretty brilliant with Herbology.” Elise sat down with her uncle and cousin and thanked him for ordering dinner. Once food and drink arrived the three of them caught up for a bit and just chatted, spending some time together as a family before they would be parted the next day.
Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by ravenDivinity
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"Let's go already. We absolutely cannot miss the sale," Ross said to his mother with a general American accent and a tinge of urgency.

"Okay, okay. I'm coming," his mother, Marissa, replied in her subtle Oxford accent, palms held up in defense as she joined him on the porch of their home. It was a quiet, pinkish Tudor house, tucked away in one of London's many wizarding communities - but not in Diagon Alley, unfortunately. They would have to Apparate to Diagon Alley, as per usual.

Ross scanned her up and down, double-checking her belongings to confirm that his mother did indeed bring what they needed. "Do you have everything?"

"Yes, yes, it's all here. Are you ready to go?"

"Naturally," he said casually. "Can I do it this time?"

His mother nodded and gripped his arm tightly. "Those classes better pay off, boy."

They were gone with a turn of the wand through space and time. Ross never was accustomed to the sensation of Apparition, but he always enjoyed the thrill of it. When he turned 17, he made absolutely sure to take extra classes in Apparition to perfect his technique, and he became reasonably skilled in the practice. Of course, his mother still took precautions and didn't let him do it as much as he'd have preferred, but it couldn't be helped. After all, though a useful mode of transportation, it came with its dangers, and she worried as a mother would about his usage of it. Luckily for her sanity, his trip around the world would be via portkey.

Nearly an hour later, Ross and his mother popped out a storefront in Diagon Alley, and he dragged a piece of luggage with him as they trod along. It was a dark green with a single gold padlock on its main compartment, and inside was a space which was extended with an undetectable extension charm. The thing cost him a good 13 Galleons, a good price for a wizard's luggage. Business was all but taken care of; however, Ross still wanted to inspect more wares in Diagon Alley, especially the famed Flourish and Blotts. Where else could he find excellent reading material for his downtime abroad?

"Okay, love you. I'll see you at home," Ross said as he handed the luggage over to his mother. She accepted it and Disapparated, the suitcase in tow, as he headed the other direction towards Flourish and Blotts. Still somewhat aimlessly he walked along, stopping to stare at the displays in several storefronts.

Only seven years ago was the blond there, shopping for his first year at Hogwarts. Ross shoved his hands in the pockets of his navy-blue, pin-legged jeans as he pondered the brevity of life. But Hogwarts was behind him now, in his past. He had to do something with himself, to explore the wide, wide world before it escaped his hands. He needed a chance to figure out who he was and who he wanted to be, to find some closure in his struggle for identity. This world tour vacation was just the right opportunity for such a personal journey. Nothing could hide his excitement; he wore it proudly on his sleeve. When the possibility first presented itself, Ross tackled it with full force, and he would daydream about it endlessly. A few weeks of begging, and his mother relented and gave him permission (and money) to go. Ross couldn't be any more grateful. He needed something - anything - to tear him away from the banality of everyday life. He wanted an adventure, a romance of his own.
Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Jig
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“Watch out, young lady!” hissed Great Great Uncle Erick from his portrait as it fell from the wall and clattered down the stairs. Beck, the young lady in question (although she was nothing of the sort) casually thumped behind him, stomping carelessly as she did so. She held her wand lazily aloft and was following a floating mass of seemingly random objects that she was carrying down to the ground floor - carelessly clattering a stray suitcase or errant quaffle into the walls, hence the distress of the portraits.

“Schwoop doo-doo doo!” she trilled as though to herself but was really for the benefit of her mother, who was now furiously sitting in the lounge. Beck had absolutely insisted that she didn’t want her mum’s help with the packing to the declaration that, fine, Beck could do it all by herself. Like a vulture with a bad temper, as Beck’s mother always was on special occasions, she was now circling, just waiting for her daughter to do something entirely abstract or brainless as a pretext for seizing the reins. And not without good reason - Beck was the kind to walk onto the quidditch pitch only to realise she had entirely neglected to bring her own broom.

“You nearly done, kiddo?” asked her father, a rather more relaxed creature than his shrill wife, as he joined her in the kitchen. It was apparent that Beck was not remotely done, but she refused to admit it: with a haphazard flick of her wand, her assorted but unsorted belongings slurped into her trunk like water down a plughole.

“Err, yup.”

The lie was not convincing. They both supposed it would be about a week before she found out that she’d forgotten something utterly crucial, but, at the same time, they knew that it would make at the very least for a funny story. The big clue was how she’d accidentally summoned half the contents of a kitchen drawer, the tinkling cutlery utterly unmistakable. Neither seemed to notice, daring the other to mention it. They didn’t.

“So,” her dad’s eye twinkled, “We’re nearly ready to go?”

Hmmn. Now, Beck loved her father dearly - the two got on like a house on fire in a way that Beck and her mother never had. Only the day before, he had given her six bottles of barely-legal firewhisky to take on the trip with her on the strict proviso that it be consumed irresponsibly (she solemnly promised that it would cause much hilarity). Still, it hadn’t occurred to her that he might wish to drop her off, meaning that her plan to catch muggle transport was rather out of the question. Beck had managed to pass for a muggle several times, but her father was the most wizardly wizard she had ever met; she had once tried to explain the muggle sport, football, to him.

“So, it’s kinda quidditch but without the broomsticks.”

“... how do they fly?”


The very thought of her dad on a muggle bus was enough to terrify the statute of secrecy, even though she suspected she could probably coax him. Nope. Nope. Nope. Darren would probably be taking a bus. The little shit would probably end up whining about it, too, just to piss her off. God, he could be a bellend. That’s probably why they got on so well.




“Can I not give my daughter a lift, one last time?” said Edgarius Rowle, pretending to blink back tears, when his daughter threatened to apparate to Aberdyfi Passage on her own and see him there.

Beck pulled a face but didn’t mean it - if she had not wanted him to link arms with her father, there was no force on earth that could force her. And then, suddenly, with a crack, Aberdyfi Passage appeared before them. It was a dumpy streak of nothing in comparison with Diagon Alley, but both Beck and her father tended to avoid the hustle and bustle of that street, along with other wizarding hotspots. Thanks to avoidance of more obvious magical settlements, they now knew this one like the backs of their hands, although that wasn’t really saying much at all. After all, how long did it take to learn where an ice cream parlour, three dilapidated inns and what claimed to be the world’s best cauldron emporium were, anyway?

“Sooo, I’m after a…” Beck pulled O’Lustrum’s letter from her pocket and double-checked, “Ergh. An empty bottle of sherry.”

“Classy man, this O’Lustrum?” deadpanned her father.

“You’d at least hope for a rack of full Gorian Mead.”

“I raised you well,” the pride in Edgarius’ voice was supposed to be sarcastic. Beck knew it wasn’t, but decided not to notice.




“Yo yo yo; look what I found.”

In polite company, a young woman running through a grungey street brandishing an empty bottle of sherry at a young man might have meant one thing, but when one of them was Beck Routledge and the other was Darren Hughes, it was probably safe. Then again, it didn’t promise that they wouldn’t end up hitting one another with it.
Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Jig
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Will’s case was packed. He’d run through it twice, which was sufficient to be certain. Tent, check. Quills, books, inkwells, check. Dress robes, should they be required. A whole cabinet of tinctures and treatments, many of which were actually medical. It had even occurred to him to file away some advanced spellbooks. At first, he’d assumed it would be fine to hit up a local library, if necessary, before remembering that a year of travel and hedonism didn’t always count libraries among primary hotspots. It was always best to be prepared. Speaking of which, his duelling medals (just in case) - check.

It was a nice thing, the briefcase; undetectably extended, it had a good leather finish and he had done the enchantments himself to ensure that everything had its rightful place and stayed there in transit. The only tweaking he hadn’t done had been done by his father. It took years and years of expertise, he knew, to correctly enchant a broomstick, and it was a pleasing fact that there was a reason that, on his own, Will would never have been able to make the thing leap from the ground to his hand simply by gesturing at it. After weeks and weeks of practice, he had managed to persuade a quill to do something similar, but even then, his bewitchments had been sluggish and muddy (not his normal style): Grenville Lawrence, whose reputation as a bespoke broomstick maker preceded him, was an expert: the briefcase left the ground smoothly, undisturbed by any ambient air currents, and he caught it as naturally as taking a breath. Will wondered how long it would be before he reached a similar aptitude as his father - a year, maybe two?

He consulted his diary, pointlessly: a few days in La Place Du Fourmilier for the group to get their bearings, and then, who knew? The whole thing just stank of adventure, and he had experienced precious little of that - duelling was a wonderful art but perhaps a little clinical, while the thrill of pointlessly throwing and catching balls had eluded him altogether. No, sport alone would not a well-rounded young wizard make, while theory and brilliance only got you so far. As he had written in his application for the bursary, he was in dire need of experience and crying out to be challenged. He coiffed his hair and adjusted his tie in the mirror, although he was by now so well-versed in this ritual that muscle memory was entirely sufficient and one might suspect that the mirror served another purpose entirely.

A well-rounded young wizard looked back at him and smiled. It was a winning smile. He had trained it well. It didn’t so much as hint that behind his polished wand and meticulously-honed body lay a human heart that was beating a thick, muscular rhythm, just like anybody else.

He was looking forward to get back to La Place Du Fourmilier. The Lawrences had a glimpse of French ancestry and therefore felt a certain attachment to France; he’d holidayed there multiple times, and thoroughly loved the place. Diagon Alley had its charms, of course, but nowhere in the British Isles boasted quite the same urbane metropolis. The idea that a Leaky Cauldron might be considered a reputable establishment was not one that the French entertained. Will had even once been proficient in the language - he’d spent six months there with his father, aged about six or seven (only later did he learn why), and that was plenty to pick up the key verbs and vocab. His diminutive former self, recalled all the Lawrence family with pride, had had no time for his father’s attempts to integrate, which had consisted primarily of pointing. He ran through the basics in his head to check he still knew them, but was distracted by speculating who else, if anybody, in the group could speak French. Somehow, he doubted that there would be too many.

He had already said fond farewells to his parents, who were still at home in their cottage in Shrewsbury. Restless from his toes to the tips of his ears, he had spent a couple of nights in an inn in Aberdyfi Passage, the Crippled Kipper. This, he realised, was something of a mistake. He’d done Diagon Alley to death, and since his father’s workshop was there anyway, there had seemed little point. Where better to start one’s adventure than in a new place?

Well, he should’ve heeded the warnings. The place was trying to reinvent itself as a tourist destination, Aberdyfi-on-Sea - and had been for as long as anybody could remember. It had hardly been an auspicious start, since there was literally nothing to do and the only young face he’d seen was a Ravenclaw second-year whom he had once given detention for breaking curfew. He’d spent his first night doing his best to be a crotchety old man with the rest of the wizened old codgers that propped up the bar in the Kipper, who had been about as lively as he’d expected and lost interest when a (literal) hag walked in. Apparently, they were considered prime totty in Wales.

The second day hadn’t been too much better than the first; a pub down the road boasted live music, and he did his best to enjoy the Wired Sisters, a frankly dire tribute act to a band that had been out of fashion in the nineties, but shortly afterwards had called it a day and gone for a swim in the sea instead of his evening workout. He’d gone to bed early. It was probably for the best, since travelling could be tiring.

It was therefore with some surprise gratitude that he heard a familiarly-boisterous voice out of his room’s open window:

“Yo yo yo; look what I’ve found.”

He leaned over the window, framed by the shutters, dappled sunlight falling across his face. It was Beck, dashing down the cobbled stones, swinging round an empty bottle of booze like a madwoman. The image was so utterly appropriate, it took him a moment to identify the portkey. He had, after all, spent the last two years trying to prevent her from smuggling alcohol into the Hufflepuff common room for what he could only describe as mass distribution. She, in kind, had kept coming up with newer and more brilliant ways to win their endless game of cat and mouse. The two got on about as well as their metaphorical counterparts.

Still, she had the portkey. And the two would have to learn to get on.
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Elise Reed and Mary Winthrop


(Mary's POV)

The morning of departure was filled with last minute realizations and some hilarious incidence. Once things had calmed down, Mary met up with Elise in Diagon Alley. The two started scouring the place for something that looked like it belonged and was out of place. It took some time, but they eventually found an old muggle book, it was worn and the title had been washed away in some accident involving tea or coffee.

“Elise, I think this is it.” Mary held up the book, the spine of which flopped halfway down.

“I think this is as well. Ah portkeys, a clever way to use trash and get to a new place without apperating. I can’t remember, have you used one before Mary?” Mary’s cousin, Elise, looked at the book.

“No, is it like apperating?” Mary looked at the book like it was a dangerous item, and might bite her.

“It’s kinda like apperating, but less feeling like you’re being squeezed out of a tube of toothpaste.” Mary’s frown grew a bit.

“Great.” She took a deep breath. “I am not looking forward to this.” Mary then looked around, “Who else is supposed to be meeting us here?”

“I don’t know. All I know is there were three spots we could go to meet up, but the choice was yours. There could be more than two of us, or it could be the two of us. I guess we’ll see as it gets closer to the time.” Elise looked around as well and then sighed. “I just hope Will isn’t joining us here… I know he’s on the trip as well.”

Mary nodded and looked at the book. “Okay, guess we just wait then.” She leaned against the wall to wait.
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Old friends didn’t need to greet each other properly. Conversations melted into each other and ignored whatever lumps of time separated them.

“A pre-bev?” Darren was apparently utterly unflapped by the bottle of sherry that Beck had by now all but thrust up his nose, possibly because a pair of neon pink glasses were almost entirely obstructing his vision. When he pushed them up onto his forehead to see more clearly, he had, apparently, more pressing concerns, “Why is it empty?”

Beck was pleased to note that Operation Banter had begun early.

“-first things first,” She pointed at the shades, which didn’t even have lenses, but horizontal bars of plastic, and were, without doubt, the single most hideous thing she had ever clapped eyes upon, “Those are revolting.”

“See, if you were glorious Muggleborn master race, you’d know that these are trendy.”

“Muggles used to be cool, man,” said Beck, and held out the bottle with one hand, the other empty but expectantly outstretched, “Swap.”

Darren, smirking, handed over the offending article and took the bottle. As Beck put the shades, which had inexplicably exchanged lenses for strips of plastic, on with a playful wince, he pulled a second pair of disgusting glasses - this time consisting of one luminous green visor - from his jacket and pushed them expertly up the bridge of his nose.

“Came prepared.”

Of course he had.

“What’s this, then?” asked Darren, casually tossing the bottle from side to side. Sometimes, Beck forgot her best friend was muggleborn.

“This, my mugglesome friend, is our portkey,” (Darren immediately held it more securely) “And these are fucking ludicrous. I can’t see anything.”

“Oh, the thing O’Leary set up. Was it just lying around? Where did you get it?”

“I see nobody ever told you that Hufflepuffs are very good finders,” Beck tried to roll her eyes dramatically, but behind the glasses, the effort was completely wasted, “Balanced upside down on a fence or something.”

“Well, it’s better than Apparating,” Said Darren, and, when Beck briefly lifted her visor to shoot him a challenging look, he hastily added: “Probably. I’d rather take the Eurotunnel.”

“Same,” said Beck, glumly, although their reasons were rather different. Darren was basically shit at all modes of wizarding transport, while Beck, who had grown up knowing them as the absolute definition of tedium, was utterly boggled by muggles’ ingenuity; she understood what a train was; she understood what a tunnel was; and she understood that between England and France there lay a wide strip of water. Fusing all three was genius, and even more so when achieved without magic.

Oh. Oh god. A familiar face appeared over Darren’s shoulder, maybe fifty metres away. It was a smug face. A smug face with a Winning Smile. The kind of face that Beck would have liked to punch if she weren’t the epitome of peaceable femininity.

“Don’t look now, but walking dragon scrotum at six o’clock.”

Darren looked nonplussed and tilted his head quizzically until an all-too-familiar voice called out to them: “Goooooooooooood afternoon,” It was the unmistakably charming tones of one William Lawrence, former prefect for Hufflepuff, duellist extraordinaire, and all-round gobshite. It continued to baffle Beck that Darren could happily tolerate Will in upwards of medium doses - possibly connected to the fact that the two hadn’t spent seven years in the same house.

“The man of the hour!” Darren and Will both clapped a hand against the other’s and pulled it into a grotesque manhug. Will thumped Darren heartily on the back with his spare hand, who would probably have returned the gesture if he weren’t holding an empty bottle of booze. Remembering that he had it, Darren pushed the thing into Will’s hands once they were done with their bromantic ritual, “Here - you’ll know what to do with this better than I do.”

“A-ha. You found it then. Good stuff,” Will nodded approvingly, since, after all, his approval was one of the wizarding world’s most valuable commodities.

“That was actually me,” said Beck, smiling sweetly, determined at least to make an effort. It was going to need some effort.

“Hufflepuffs are good finders,” parroted Darren.

“They must have made an exception in my case,” said Will, “I was just coming out to pick it up but it looks like you beat me to it.”

There was a moment of silence, which Darren, like a hero, shattered before it frosted over entirely.

“See, this is why I hang out with you guys. Like a parasite. Literally a Muggleborn stereotype.”

“Aww, don’t beat yourself up, Darren. You’re not really a muggleborn,” snarked Beck, snarkily, glad of the opportunity to snark innocently. Will chuckled. The prick.

“Oh, do excuse me,” said Will, suddenly, and ferreted in his pockets for a second, before flashing a Winning Smile, “I seem to have forgotten my dreadful eyewear.”

What he’d not forgotten, was to wear a tie, in a perfect windsor knot. Or to do his hair. All the important things for travelling. Next to Beck, in a baggy hoodie and jeans that belied her natural curves and Darren, who was unironically rocking the ironic tourist look, Will looked the picture of an overgrown schoolboy who hadn’t quite realised that he wasn’t a prefect anymore. The only thing that really distinguished him from double Charms on a Monday morning was the Hufflepuff emblem on his Hogwarts robes.

“They’re not dreadful!” Darren, scandalised, lunged, and pushed his green sunglasses onto Will’s face - Will, who was still holding the portkey, was powerless to resist, “If you’d ever gone to Tee In The Park you’d know.”

“I’ve had tea in a park...?”

“Then you should know,” Darren nodded seriously; Beck disguised a violent snort as a coughing fit, “So moving swiftly on before you lot insult my swag more, how do the three of us use this Portkey? Do we, like, hold on to it?”

“Don’t you kno-” said Will, immediately, before cutting himself off. Beck wasn’t sure if she was grateful or disappointed that her foul glare was hidden behind a series of horizontal, pink strips of plastic. Will continued, quickly, “Basically, that’s about right. Think an apparition timebomb. At four exactly, assuming they’ve set it up properly, anybody touching it - swoosh,” he flicked his fingers dramatically.

Swoosh. That’s a fancy magic term, I take it.”

“Yeah, like Flitwick taught us in first year: swoosh and flick,” confirmed Beck, and swooshed and flicked with an imaginary wand.

“Four o’clock, yeah? We’ve got time to kill in Craperdyfi Passage,” Darren turned to Beck, “You know in Muggle schools whenever they do trips they’re usually hammered before they get to the place.”

“Then let us honour your fine traditions,” said Beck, and bowed her head solemnly.

“No Head Boy duties anymore,” said Darren to Will, “You in?”

“Hang on, I’ve got my prefect badge somewhere…” Will repeated the same joke as before, pretending to search himself for something that wasn’t there - though Beck found it funnier this time, as there was a decent probability of him actually having it, “Nope. Can’t find it. Pub it is. Just not the Crippled Kipper.”

“Right. I reckon we’ve got an hour and twenty minutes. That’s three butterbeers if we put some effort in,” Beck said, authoritatively, and added, “Or, if you’re Darren, enough time for a half and to throw up on an Aberdyfi seagull.”

Darren was not a good drinker. Darren’s most useful spell at Hogwarts had been evanesco. Darren had once attempted to compete with Beck to do a line of pumpkin-flavoured rum shots only to give up halfway through because much of it was coming back out through his nose. Darren knew what he was.

“See, one day I’m going to find a place that serves vodka ‘n’ cokes as well as firewhisky and we’ll see who has the last laugh.”
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Kyle & Siobhan Shenanigans


With the portkey clutched in his hand Kyle found Siobhan. “How was last night?” He spoke quietly as if he were in a library, or people were listening. Knowing Kyle it was a mix of the two. Too many hours spent whispering in a library, and too much worrying about being overheard on private conversations. He spun the old boot, it looked like it might have been a good quality leather boot 50 years ago, now the tongue was gone, and none of the eyelets for the lace were left.

“Oh, you know, same old same old,” Siobhan said breezily. Tiredness shone through on her face, in the set of her brows and the sleep still in her eyes. “I didn’t kill any bunnies, so that’s good, and the dragons didn’t get startled by the howling. All in all, 5/10, no murders.”

She tilted her head to the side inquisitively. “Was your last night as eventful as mine?”

“No, mostly packing. Victor actually said some kind words before I left, so that happened.” Kyle’s smile dropped a little. His cousin was known for saying precious little. The first night Kyle moved into his house the only word Victor said was “fine”. “Though I think he expects I plan on having a place to live after this.” Kyle held up the boot and wiggled it slightly. “I mean he won’t kick me out on the streets, but if I know him he’ll want me on my own as soon as possible.” Kyle gave a small shrug. “Was anyone else meeting us here?”

“I don’t think so,” Siobhan answered. “I imagine Darren’s in Wales, and Elise and Mary in London, and I’m guessing that everyone else is down South somewhere too.” She flipped her hair back and muttered theatrically something that sounded like, ‘The English’, with a disparaging sigh following shortly thereafter. Kyle nodded, that all made sense. It was a small group, which he was thankful for. He resisted letting a grin spread across his face at Siobhan’s sigh.

“You’re welcome to stay on the reserve, though, if you need a place to stay.” Forceful nonchalance had her inspecting her fingernails, looking for signs of blood. “Like, you know, not in the dragon bit, but there’s plenty of spare rooms.”

Kyle’s shoulders relaxed a tad bit. “I appreciate that. I’ll let you know if that ends up being the case. Uh, would...” Kyle trailed off, his frown returning to it’s usual state causing early worry lines. “You know would he have an issue with that?” The past was a painful and murky one, and this part of it was uncomfortable territory for Kyle.

A very serious nod of understanding followed. “Nope! Not at all. I doubt it,” Siobhan lied cheerfully, because really, the rumours about Alistair’s (lack of) coping post-Maggie McCarthy were mostly true. “And if he does, well, the house is technically mine, so there’s not much he can do about it. Or… I’ll shred his pillows during the full moon.” An actual honest to god smile spread across Kyle’s face, which was as close to a laugh as Kyle ever really got.
Kyle looked at his watch, a complicated mess of planets moving across the face of it. “Should be any minute now.” He said as he slid the watch back into his pocket. It had been a gift from his cousin as was tradition at the age of 17.
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An old book, an empty bottle, and a highly distressed old boot fell to the ground from nowhere. Beside them, a mad scrummage of young British tourists appeared in the blink of an eye, most of whom collapsed in a scrambled heap on the floor, while one or two managed to remain standing to their own astonishment or smugness, as applicable.

They picked themselves up, a curious crash of excitement and travel sickness. The air was chilly. The walls of l’Hotel Déguisé were stone in a way that recalled the old dungeons of Hogwarts: dark, dank, and, above all, cool, but somehow with the hint that a nice toasty fire wasn’t too far out of sight. Some portraits, disgruntled - although of course the depicted monsieurs and madames should have been more acquainted to this particular practice - began to chunter amongst themselves, and not politely: at least one long-dead musketeer immediately, without so much as batting an eyelid, claimed to have been disturbed from his sleep. The great wooden grandfather clock chimed perfectly in time with the students’ arrival to mark five o’ clock, local time.

They had been expected. A surly porter, who, despite his human height, betrayed a soupconne of the goblin (or perhaps even the elf) around his nose and ears, checked and collected their portkeys, barely pretending to tolerate each objectionable artefact as he thrust them with the tips of his fingers into a neat box for that purpose. While he did this, he rapidly jabbered some French at the group, some of whom gamely tried to follow, while others did their best to bluff with nods and smiles and one or two, still green from the portkeys, had checked out entirely and weren’t even trying.

Confidently, Will followed the bellboy to the reception desk and rifled through some papers, and signed them. On his return, he explained that they had all been checked in, and, with a glance of confirmation to their gruff host, established that everything was in order. They were all startled when their luggage, which the portkey had churned through alongside them, suddenly winked out of existence. Will exchanged a few slightly scurried words with the porter, who somehow looked both amused and annoyed, and then breathed a sigh of relief on all of their behalves.

“Your luggage ‘as been taken to your rooms,” said the porter, who had apparently up until now simply refused to speak english.

Beyond the hotel doors and a short walk up a steep incline, La Place du Fourmilier waited for them. The square was, predictably, bustling. While Diagon Alley, its closest UK counterpart, seemed as busy on any given day, that was an illusion: Diagon Alley was long and narrow with terraced buildings creeping out over the street like a masonic canopy - the people were squashed together. The great square tucked away from prying muggle eyes in the South of Paris, meanwhile, was luscious and open, and yet one still had to push and jostle through wizards, witches and assorted magical beings simply to get around. Some corners were cordoned off by corner cafes, so that their patrons could lounge and sip coffee to be disturbed only by waiting staff shooing away unwelcome stray kneazles that came begging for scraps at the tables. Other areas were home to hawkers’ pitches, the streetsellers sportingly trying to press cheap trinkets into the hands of uninterested tourists. These were more subtle than the more reputable establishments; being more easily spotted meant that they would be avoided by potential customers and possibly moved on by the authorities. On that particular day, a young couple in white makeup some way away were reenacting an historic duel via the time-honoured art of mime, using twigs instead of wands. A cloth cap with some scattered coins, silver and gold, lay on the ground next to them, but their performance was disturbed, and, by all accounts, improved, when a loose niffler grabbed the hat by its peak and scurried into the crowd with it. This was not, judging by the actors’ reactions, part of the show.

The square was neat and geometric and dominated by an obscure monument at its centre, a sort of spindly metal pyramid on stilts that resembled a thirty-meter steeple designed by madmen. It was taller than any other building in the square, but only just, and tiny, corked vials hung from its metal rungs via obviously magical tethers, some of which took a silvery glint in the light. Tour guides took great delight in explaining that it was built in 1899 as the result of a bet: a certain Gustav de Fourmilier, who had been commissioned to create a breathtaking piece of architecture had wagered that he could flagrantly plagiarise a popular muggle monument without any wizard being the wiser. He had, apparently, been right, and only revealed the trickery of La Tour de l’Avenir on his deathbed in 1964. De Fourmilier had died cackling, or so went the urban legend.
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It seemed fitting that l’Hotel Déguisé where their journey began was a place that reminded Will so thoroughly of Hogwarts (and no, he wasn’t counting the disappointments of Craperdyfi Passage as the first step of their once-in-a-lifetime adventure). The walls were comprised of great stone blocks and the chilly stillness of the place certainly put one in mind of the school dungeons, though with the airs and graces of the above-ground castle. Ambiguous relics and trophies lined the walls, perched in custom-cut crevices where one might have expected torches, were the lofty reception not already lit by understated, silver-wrought chandeliers that hovered freely over their heads.

“Donc, l’hotel, c’est vieux, n’est pas?” asked Will of the porter, as he guided them to their rooms, the others shortly behind them.

“Oui.”

The trail of decorative artefacts, now evenly spaced between numbered doors, followed the students, or, rather, the students followed the trail, down a corridor, as led by the sullen porter, who was utterly wordless apart from his curt responses to Will’s attempts to communicate. The corridor described a curve as it listed leftwards and, until he adjusted herself, Will’s awkward footsteps betrayed a brisk decline: if the whole hotel itself wasn’t underground, its guests’ rooms certainly were. He made a mental note. This would be useful information if they, as he expected at least some of them might, were going to toast the beginning of their adventure in raucous style.

The group shuddered to a sudden stop. The porter stopped, so Will stopped, and the rest stopped, apparently, by bumping into their backs, so abrupt was their arrival. Will could hear somebody mutter something that sounded like “fuck’s sake” from somewhere behind him.

“Voila,” said the porter, after the fact. He handed over four keys and disapparated, just like that. The students briefly quibbled about who might share with whom, and Will was grateful that his roommate was to be Ross. Will got on well with Darren, but Ross, a typical Ravenclaw with a good head on his shoulders, was calmer: after an hour and a half of Darren and Beck verbally jousting about basically nothing in the Bow and Truckle in Aberdyfi, Will had been on the verge of hitting his head off the table. And Kyle remained sullen as always.

He thrust the key in the lock and opened the door. Everything seemed in order; two four-posters lay at opposite ends of a rectangular, stony room that had presumably been bewitched not to be icily cold, alongside a couple of chairs and a writing desk. Not a doxy in sight. A few seconds after they both stepped inside, the room worked out who they were, and Will’s black leather briefcase and the green trunk that must belong to Ross appeared at the foot of either bed.

It wasn’t too terribly grand, but it was a damn sight better than the Crippled Kipper and it certainly wasn’t bad considering, as far as Will could tell from the letter he’d been sent a week or so ago outlining the precise itinerary of departure, O’Lustrum had paid for the hotel out of his own pocket. The students hadn’t as individuals had to part with a knut to stay in the hotel, and nor had it, as he had checked, affected the balance of at least his own bursary. He’d struck Will as a funny sort of man, that O’Lustrum, on the few occasions they’d briefly actually met, but he was respected and seemed respectable.

“So,” he said to Ross, as he opened his briefcase and removed an old guidebook, “Ever been to La Place du Fourmilier before?”
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Elise gently pulled out her watch, and gripped onto the book, and looked at her cousin. She gently reached over and squeezed Mary's free hand for a moment, before the time ticked and the portkey activated. She felt the gut wrenching sensation of being taken from where she was standing to a brand new place, across the ocean and the dropped in the lobby of l’Hotel Déguisé, and on the floor. She had tried to land on her feet, but as she had landed, somehow her foot had ended up elsewhere than where she had wanted. She pulled herself and her luggage off the floor and helped Mary up as well.

She looked around the room and saw Will, Beck, Darren, Ross, Kyle and Siobhan, and it looked like the rest of their little group was there. No one else was joining them as far as Elise knew. She did frown a bit as she saw that Will had gone up to the desk and had signed in for them, and soon got up and signed herself in. She had noticed that their luggage had vanished, but given that this was a wizard run hotel, it had probably been put in their rooms for them.

She followed the porter to their room, and luckily since she was towards more of the front of the group, she stopped before she could bump into anyone else. She looked around and took one of the room keys and went to open the door for the room she'd be sharing, luckily with her beloved cousin. Sure, she could have shared it with one of the other two girls, but she and Beck hadn't really been on great terms in a bit, and she barely knew Siobhan. Sure, that was part of the trip, to get to know other people, but... for the first part, she'd rather be roomed with someone she knew she would get along with.

She knew that they would be meeting up with their guide in time, so they had a little bit to unwind and unpack if they wanted. She flopped out on the bed for a moment and let out a long breath. "I really should have focused on French more... god I am going to be so lost for the week we'll be here." She sighed as she looked up at the ceiling. She was still a bit overwhelmed that she was actually here, in France. She rolled over and looked at Mary and smiled a bit. "Are you excited, or still a bit off from the portkey?"
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Odd, Ross thought of l'Hotel Déguisé's atmosphere. The place seemed as though it should be freezing inside, but it was perfect room temperature. Bewitched, probably. Ross could hear the steps the group made, echoing as they walked to their rooms, just as the ugly premonition he had about his likelihood of sharing a room with Will. When the porter jumped ship and disapparated, Ross knew his fate. He almost cursed aloud.

Will pushed the key into the lock, and he opened the door. Slowly, Ross trudged in behind, wondering why the hotel didn't give the group two keys for each room and already considering the logistic issues involved. Now, the room was quaint inside, but Ross wouldn't necessarily dub it luxurious. However, he was just an uncultured half-blood, and he'd never heard of this hotel in his life. His new green trunk showed itself at the foot of the bed across Will's in perfect timing, and Will opened that mouth of his.

"No," Ross answered Will, making a long and wide motion with his wand. "I've nary been out of the country unless you count moving to America as a 'vacation'." In conjunction with his wand, the green, somewhat ordinary-looking trunk unpacked itself, and the contents held within jumped from the luggage into two neat piles: one for clothes, which landed on the bed, and another for various knick-knacks, which stacked itself on top of the clothes pile. Ross ran a hand through his hair, and he combed through some of the things on the bed.

Tracing the edges of a keepsake of his with his thumb, Ross tossed back some smalltalk. "I didn't know you spoke French. Does that mean you've been here before?" He looked up at Will as he said this. Ross might not have wanted a room with Will, but only for the fact that Ross found Will incredibly annoying. Will meant well, Ross understood, but bloody hell, sometimes.
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Mary


She'd rather side-along apparate. She'd rather learn how to apparate, anything than ever taking a port-key ever again. In fact, Mary thought to herself as she re-acquainted herself with standing upright, Mary would much rather prefer taking a broom anywhere. Cross country, cross oceans, anything to never suffer going through that again. She looked green, and felt more of a chartreuse than she had ever thought it could be possible.

For the most part she wasn't even aware that someone had appeared, and spoke to the group. Let alone that he had disappeared after she had blindly followed the group up to their rooms. She of course ran into her cousin, not because she had been following too closely, but because she had failed to realize she was even moving. Not that when she stopped moving did she feel like she wasn't moving. It was all a blur. A rather gut wrenching blur.

Out of habit she followed Elise into the room, as soon as her brain recognized that there was furniture she could collapse on she took full advantage of it.

It took her several moments of deep breaths to realize Elise had spoken, and was expecting an answer. "Sorry." Mary mumbled and asked for Elise to repeat herself. "Excited yes, off definitely." Mary responded wondering were the loo was in case of need to hurl, though she suspected at this point the need was past. "Can I never do that again?" She pulled herself up onto her elbow and looked at her cousin. "It was as bad as apparating." Mary wrinkled her nose in disgust, "And I'd rather never do that again either."

"Since we're only here a week you can work on your French, but we're going a lot of places that don't speak English as their first language." Mary gave a small shrug. She had worked on her French and it was good enough to order food, find the bathroom, the hotel, transportation, and emergency services. The last being something her father had been rather adamant about her learning.

Now that the sensation from the portkey was starting to wear off Mary wanted to explore, and maybe drink something to help calm her stomach. Tea would be nice. "Do you want to see if we can find a place that serves tea? It'd be easy to order it through the hotel, but I'd rather explore a bit, now that I can feel my legs again."
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Kyle


Kyle didn't have any issues with the port-key. It wasn't his first one, so he was one of the few standing. His French was good enough, but Will had already stepped up that Kyle didn't bother helping.

He was however distracted as the group followed the bellhop and therefore ran right into Mary, who looked like she was about to topple over on her own. He held her elbow for a moment as she regained her balance, she didn't even seem to notice, which worried him. Had the portkey bothered her that much?

Then they were dividing rooms, a brief exchange with Darren and Siobhan, one that made Kyle briefly hopeful that he and Siobhan would get to share a room. Siobhan turned Darren down though leaving Kyle to room with Darren. Kyle didn't mind Darren in the slightest, despite him being a Gryffindor. Mostly it had to do with how he had treated Siobhan in the last year. Darren was nice enough though.

"I was here once..." Kyle trailed off. "I was very little mind you, maybe three years old. All I really remember was looking up at the light filled jars." He gave a small shrug. It was so long ago. Before all the terrible things happened, hell's bells he was certain he and Maggie were on good terms even. Of course good terms was a relative term, he was fairly certain she hadn't tried to kill him yet.

"But yes I am a pureblood." There was a hint of contempt at the phrase, and Darren would most likely either pick up on it, or have learned through rumors in the years at Hogwarts how little Kyle cared for that term and all that came with it. Kyle was quiet a moment longer. "Now if I recall there is a place you might find of great interest." Kyle flashed a bright smile at Darren, one slightly forced giving it a painful quality. "It is across the street and down a set of stairs." There was a passage in a guide Kyle had read about a bar that was quite popular.

"I on the other hand am going to go check out the tower. I want to see if three year old me's memory stands up." He pulled a knapsack out of his trunk, which was no normal sized, and started right back out of the room. He paused for a moment outside of Siobhan's room, before knocking. "I am going to go explore the square want to join me?" It was better to get a no from her than to not offer and her indignant later.
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