- Messages
- 514
- OOC First Name
- Clairey
- Blood Status
- Mixed Blood
- Relationship Status
- Too Young to Care
- Sexual Orientation
- Heterosexual
- Wand
- Straight 13 1/2 Inch Whippy Walnut Wand with Augurey Tail Feather Core
- Age
- 04/2047 (17)
Everything Rion did was for Ainmere's own good. All right, it might have looked as if she'd stolen her Hogwarts acceptance letter, then feigned total innocence when Ainmere had discovered it missing, but that was a terrible simplification of the matter. Ainmere couldn't go to Hogwarts by herself. She'd get homesick. She wouldn't be able to concentrate. She'd cry herself to sleep every night; and it would be such an awful experience that when she finally came home for the holidays, she would beg Mum and Dad not to make her go back. It made no sense to put her through all of that when it could so easily be prevented. All she had to do was wait another year, so that Rion could go with her, and everything would be fine.
Rion reached into the back of her wardrobe and pulled out the crumpled letter. She read it again, a frown fixed on her face. This stupid piece of parchment was Ainmere's ticket to Hogwarts. If she couldn't produce it, surely they wouldn't let her in. Under this logic, Rion realised, it was better then to destroy the letter entirely... But she couldn't bring herself to make the first tear. As long as it remained in one piece, there was still a chance for Rion to grow some courage and drop the letter behind Ainmere's bed, where it might plausibly have fallen all by itself. It seemed less likely to happen with each passing day; but if courage didn't push her to do the right thing soon, it was possible that guilt might.
Rion reached into the back of her wardrobe and pulled out the crumpled letter. She read it again, a frown fixed on her face. This stupid piece of parchment was Ainmere's ticket to Hogwarts. If she couldn't produce it, surely they wouldn't let her in. Under this logic, Rion realised, it was better then to destroy the letter entirely... But she couldn't bring herself to make the first tear. As long as it remained in one piece, there was still a chance for Rion to grow some courage and drop the letter behind Ainmere's bed, where it might plausibly have fallen all by itself. It seemed less likely to happen with each passing day; but if courage didn't push her to do the right thing soon, it was possible that guilt might.