XaiJu
Writer of the Aether
Writer of the Aether

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Like Fire and Moonlight - Chapter 05: The Spark

The courtyard had been transfigured into a makeshift outdoor stage, though calling it a stage was generous. A long raised platform stretched between two elms, uneven and held together with what Harry suspected were weak sticking charms and the sheer will of Professor Flitwick, who was currently pacing along the base of it like a choirmaster preparing for some kind of magical opera. Students gathered in loose rings around the perimeter, most seated on benches, a few perched on walls, pretending they weren’t invested. Sunlight spilled through the trees in long bars, casting dappled shadows across the platform and giving the whole scene the strange feel of a play about to fall apart in slow motion.

Harry stood just behind the front row, arms folded across his chest, eyes narrowed at the stage. Two third-years were attempting to reenact the founding of the Hufflepuff kitchens — something involving an enchanted cauldron, three cursed hedgehogs, and a baguette that wouldn’t stop singing. One of them had already tripped over her robes. The other was blinking back tears as the baguette continued humming loudly in French.

“Brilliant,” Harry muttered. “This’ll inspire generations.”

Next to him, Daphne didn’t so much as glance at the chaos. Her arms were perfectly at her sides, her expression unamused and unreadable. Her robe collar was fastened higher than usual, a pearl clip at her throat, and her hair was swept back in a style that managed to look both effortless and surgical. She stood like someone waiting for a duel that had already bored her.

When the performance ended — if it could be called that — a smattering of polite applause followed. Professor Flitwick smiled encouragingly, but his mustache twitched. McGonagall, seated beneath the east tree with her arms crossed and her mouth tighter than her spectacles, offered no reaction.

The applause faded. Then came the worst sentence possible.

“And now,” Flitwick announced cheerfully, his voice charmed to carry, “perhaps our seventh-year leads would like to offer a preview of what the top Concord pairs have prepared?”

Harry turned to Daphne.

Daphne turned to Harry.

Neither moved.

Around them, heads began to swivel. A few students leaned forward. The Ravenclaws whispered. The Slytherins stilled. The Gryffindors grinned. The Hufflepuffs just looked hopeful.

“No,” Harry said under his breath. “No, no, no—”

But Daphne was already stepping forward.

Not with eagerness. Not even agreement. Just inevitability. Like a queen sacrificing a bishop — not because it would win the game, but because decorum required it.

He followed her up the steps, stomach tight, the words of the script half-lodged in the part of his brain that hadn’t been used since third-year exams. The sunlight hit them as they reached center stage, and the shift was immediate. The noise dulled. The laughter faded. The school watched.

Daphne did not announce anything. She turned, faced him, and met his gaze with a steadiness that made him feel immediately underprepared. Her expression wasn’t cold — it was blank. That was worse. Because he knew she was reading him, line by line, and already calculating whether this would be another mess she’d have to fix.

He cleared his throat.

She began.

“You called me here under the pretense of discussion,” she said, her voice ringing clear, each word shaped like a spell. “But what you want is obedience.”

Harry fell into the script, stumbling slightly over the rhythm but catching it by the second line. “I wanted to understand. But you’ve made that impossible.”

“No,” she replied, tone cooler now. “You made it impossible when you chose fear as policy.”

Their voices were rising, but not in volume — in intensity. The script called for an argument between Salazar and Helga over the role of blood status in the school. It was meant to be symbolic. Dignified. Controlled.

But standing here, with the entire student body watching, with McGonagall’s gaze slicing through him and the Gryffindors murmuring in the wings, Harry felt something shift. He wasn’t playing Salazar. And Daphne — she wasn’t pretending to be Helga.

They were still themselves. They just had fewer reasons to lie.

“You think idealism will protect them,” he said, voice sharper now. “But your faith in goodness doesn’t make you noble. It makes you naïve.”

“And your obsession with control doesn’t make you wise,” she fired back, eyes glittering. “It makes you afraid.”

He took a step toward her. “Afraid of what?”

Her chin lifted, imperious. “Of anyone who doesn’t need you.”

A breath. A silence. The courtyard held still.

They were too close. Not physically — there was still a hand’s breadth between them — but emotionally, narratively, intimately. The kind of closeness that didn’t read like theater anymore. It read like a confrontation dressed in borrowed names.

He swallowed. She blinked.

Then, very softly, she delivered the final line:

“I cannot build a world where fear is the foundation.”

And Harry — not Salazar, not the character, not the line — whispered, “Then I’ll have to build mine without you.”

They froze.

No music. No cue. No curtain.

Then someone clapped. Then more.

And the applause rose — not riotous, not gleeful. Just real.

But neither of them bowed. Neither of them smiled.

They stepped off the stage in silence, shoulder to shoulder, not looking at each other. The moment had passed.

But something had changed.

And they both knew it.

~HP~

The applause followed them off the platform like a ghost that hadn’t quite decided if it meant to haunt or admire. Harry stepped down the uneven stairs and hit solid ground without looking back. The sun had shifted behind the clouds, dulling the edges of the stage and making the courtyard feel colder than it had been fifteen minutes earlier. He adjusted the collar of his robe without thinking. His hands felt too warm. His head, too full.

Daphne didn’t speak. She moved beside him in perfect silence, not hurried, not flustered. She walked like someone who had done exactly what she expected to do and felt no need to discuss it. That, more than anything, made him want to say something stupid. Or clever. Or honest. But she didn’t give him the chance. Before they reached the edge of the crowd, she peeled off without warning — a quiet diagonal exit, vanishing into the fold of green robes near the west colonnade without a word or glance behind her. Gone, like a retreat disguised as dismissal.

He exhaled, rolled his shoulders, and turned just as Ron came barreling toward him like a Bludger with a question.

“Bloody hell, mate,” Ron said, eyes wide, expression somewhere between impressed and faintly alarmed. “Did you two rehearse that or duel before it?”

Harry snorted. “Neither.”

Hermione caught up behind Ron, less breathless but more alert. She crossed her arms. “That was... intense.”

Harry scratched the back of his neck, watching the crowd break apart around the benches. “Yeah.”

“I mean,” Hermione went on, her eyes still fixed on the empty platform, “it was brilliant. You didn’t just perform it. You—” She paused, clearly recalibrating. “You inhabited it.”

Ron made a face. “What does that even mean?”

“It means,” she said, turning now to Harry, “that it didn’t feel like acting.”

“It wasn’t,” Harry muttered, before he could stop himself.

Hermione raised a brow. Ron opened his mouth, thought better of it, and closed it again.

They were still processing when Blaise arrived, which meant trouble. Blaise Zabini never walked. He glided — like someone with secrets tucked behind his teeth and an alibi already prepared. He looked freshly pressed and bored, the kind of bored that meant he'd been paying attention more closely than anyone else.

“Lovely little play,” Blaise said, his voice like velvet draped over something sharper. “Touching. Devastating. I especially liked the part where Daphne looked like she might hex you or kiss you. Very ambiguous.”

Harry didn’t rise to it. “She’s a good actress.”

Blaise gave him a long look. “She doesn’t act.”

Harry didn’t reply. He felt Hermione shift slightly beside him.

“You’re enjoying this,” Harry said finally, folding his arms.

“I’m watching it,” Blaise corrected. “And you should too. Very closely. Because you’re not going to like the ending if you forget how the beginning worked.”

Ron looked confused. “What beginning?”

But Blaise had already turned, walking away toward the edge of the courtyard with his hands in his pockets and his back radiating the kind of satisfaction that only came from saying just enough to unsettle someone. Harry hated how well it worked.

Hermione touched his arm gently. “What’s he talking about?”

Harry didn’t answer.

Because he didn’t know.

But he was starting to understand that whatever this was — this thing between him and Daphne, this performance that had stopped being performance — it wasn’t invisible anymore.

And that meant it was dangerous.

Meanwhile, at the far end of the courtyard, Daphne leaned against a low wall, half-listening as Pansy rattled on about tone and theatrics and “the Gryffindor tendency to confuse intensity with romance.” Millicent nodded along with an expression of vague disapproval. Someone from Ravenclaw passed by and gave Daphne a strange look — part admiration, part calculation.

Pansy smirked and leaned in close.

“So,” she said, her voice syrup-slow, “was that rage or foreplay?”

Daphne didn’t look at her.

But she didn’t deny it either.

~HP~

The classroom they’d been assigned for Concord planning wasn’t much more than an oversized storage room someone had tried to pass off as a workspace. The windows were too narrow to offer a view, and the table was a re-Transfigured dining bench that still bore scorch marks from a previous Defense lesson gone wrong. Hermione had charmed the air to smell like parchment and lemon balm to counter the must, and Harry, true to form, had dragged his chair back at a dangerous tilt and propped his foot on the edge of a nearby stool. The room hummed with quiet conversation — not quite collaboration, not quite rivalry. Each Concord pair was seated at a slight remove, as though unsure whether teamwork would dilute their House pride.

Harry wasn’t really paying attention to the event timelines Blaise was drafting. Or to the way Ron kept sighing every time someone suggested “discussion groups” instead of actual games. His eyes kept straying — not dramatically, but persistently — toward the end of the table, where Daphne sat with perfect posture and an open scroll of committee notes. Her quill moved in elegant strokes, no wasted ink, no hesitation. She wasn’t speaking, but that wasn’t unusual. When she wanted attention, she never needed to ask for it.

He should have known something was coming. The silence was too easy.

It started with a laugh. Quick, nervous. From a second-year seated nearby, a Hufflepuff with bright eyes and a voice that rose too quickly.

“Potter probably won’t need to rehearse,” the girl said, too loudly for the tone to be accidental. “He always gets what he wants anyway.”

There was a pause. Just long enough to register.

Then another girl — a Ravenclaw, Harry thought — chimed in with a smug sort of grin. “Yeah, especially if what he wants is Slytherin-flavored this year.”

That earned a few more quiet chuckles. Nothing cruel. Just sharp. Just enough to cut.

Harry didn’t react. He’d heard worse, and most of it didn’t bother him. Not anymore. Let them talk. Let them assume. He wasn’t about to give them the satisfaction of a glare or a witty retort.

But Daphne moved.

She didn’t raise her voice. She didn’t turn her head. She didn’t even look away from her scroll.

But her words cut through the room like a blade that had been sharpened in silence.

“If you’re going to gossip, at least be original.”

The girls stopped laughing.

Daphne continued, still not looking up. “He gets what he works for. And when he doesn’t, he doesn’t sulk. He adapts. You might try it.”

The silence that followed wasn’t awkward. I was stunned.

Then Hermione coughed lightly and redirected the meeting. Ron gave Harry a look, part admiration, part open confusion. Blaise raised an eyebrow but said nothing.

Harry didn’t say anything either. He didn’t move. He didn’t glance at Daphne. He didn’t have to.

Because he’d felt the shift. Not in the room — in her.

And while everyone else started talking again, a little more careful now, he stayed quiet.

Later, when the meeting ended and the room emptied, Daphne passed by him without breaking stride.

He thought she might say something. Clarify. Dismiss. But she didn’t.

She just walked past him like what she’d said had cost her nothing.

And maybe it hadn’t.

But Harry couldn’t stop thinking about the way her voice had sounded when she said he adapts.

Like she’d meant it.

Like she’d been watching.

~HP~

It wasn't a habit that brought Harry to the Astronomy Tower after curfew. It wasn’t even restlessness. It was that particular pressure that built up around the collar when too many people said too many things with too much certainty — about who you were, what you meant, how your footsteps should land. He could’ve gone flying, sure, but that was its own kind of exposure. The Tower was quieter. Fewer windows. More stone. No one there to ask what he was thinking or how it felt to play pretend with a girl whose silence could cut glass.

He didn’t expect anyone else to be there. He especially didn’t expect her.

Daphne sat at the edge of the outer wall, not dangerously close, but far enough from the torchlight that she looked like something carved out of moonlight and decision. Her legs were crossed at the ankles, her robe half-open over sleep trousers, and her shoes placed deliberately beside her. She looked comfortable in a way that suggested she'd planned to be there for a while — or often came here without telling anyone. Her hair wasn’t styled. No pearl pin. No careful sweep. Just wind-touched waves that moved like they hadn’t been asked permission.

Harry stopped in the archway, not saying anything at first. She didn’t turn, though he knew she heard him.

“Didn’t think Slytherins broke curfew without an audience,” he said finally.

She exhaled. It might have been a laugh. “I thought Gryffindors only did it when they could be applauded.”

“I do a lot of things without applause,” he replied, stepping into the torchlight. “They just don’t get reported.”

She didn’t look at him, not yet. She stared out over the grounds, where the lake shimmered faintly in the moonlight and the trees whispered with late wind. He followed her gaze. No words for a while.

Then, very softly, she asked, “Did you mean it?”

He glanced at her. “Which part?”

“All of it.”

She turned to him now — not sharply, but slowly, like she’d been waiting to see if he’d flinch. Her expression wasn’t combative. Just curious. Honest in a way he didn’t usually get from her.

“I wasn’t acting,” he said.

She nodded, not in agreement, but in acknowledgment. Like she’d already known.

A long pause stretched between them. He leaned against the wall, hands in his pockets, and for once, didn’t try to fill it.

She spoke again, after a while. “You know what they see when they look at me?”

He said nothing.

“They see control. Clean lines. Good blood. They see the next Greengrass matriarch. They see someone who’ll marry someone they approve of and keep the family tree disease-free.” She tilted her head. “But they never see me.”

He looked at her now, properly. “Then show them.”

She gave a dry laugh. “And what? Be charming? Be louder? Let them guess at what I feel?”

“No,” he said. “Be inconvenient.”

She looked at him, and he saw the flicker — real amusement this time, half-contained. “That’s your solution to everything, isn’t it?”

He shrugged. “It’s worked for me so far.”

“And what do they see when they look at you?” she asked, turning toward him fully now, her knees brushing the wall, her profile sharp in the moonlight.

“A name,” he said. “A reputation. Something to stand next to or throw stones at.”

“But not a person.”

“Not unless I fail,” he said. “Then they remember I’m human.”

She was quiet after that.

Then, to his surprise, she laughed — not sharply, not cruelly. A real laugh. Brief, low, almost startled, like she hadn’t meant to.

He smiled without realizing.

They stood like that a while longer — not talking. Not dissecting. Just breathing in the cold, steady night, the kind of quiet that didn’t ask for anything.

When she stood, he didn’t ask where she was going. She picked up her shoes and moved past him, slow and barefoot.

At the archway, she paused.

“You’re late,” she said.

He frowned. “For what?”

“For seeing me,” she said.

Then she disappeared into the stairwell, and the wind rushed in to fill the space she left behind.

~HP~

The stairs wound downward in clean, cold spirals, echoing softly beneath their feet as they walked. Daphne moved ahead of him by a step, shoes still in her hand, the hem of her robes whispering against the stone with every shift of her weight. She didn’t speak again after the tower, but she hadn’t told him to leave either. That, he decided, was something. Silence between them had become its own language — cautious, tense, now threaded with something else. Not comfort, not yet. But familiarity. And beneath it, the echo of something warmer waiting for a name.

They reached the base of the main tower staircase where the corridors split — one passage leading to the lower halls and down toward the dungeons, the other toward the grand staircase and the red-gold flicker of Gryffindor’s far side. The torch nearest the wall hissed faintly in the draft as they stopped. The hallway stretched long behind them, empty, the castle asleep. Only the two of them remained — not planning, not performing, just standing in a moment that hadn’t been scheduled by McGonagall or scripted for applause.

She looked tired. Not the brittle kind that cracked when pressed, but the deep, layered fatigue of someone used to carrying everything — expectation, posture, silence — and never being asked if she wanted to. Her face was blank in that Greengrass way she wore like armor, but her shoulders weren’t as square as usual. There was something about the way she held her shoes in one hand, fingers curled around the strap, that made her seem suddenly very young. Not childish. Just… unsupervised.

He didn’t try to say anything witty. He didn’t offer a compliment or a closing jab. He just looked at her and let the quiet sit for a beat longer than was comfortable. Then he said, simply, “That line you wrote for Helga. About hope not being a virtue, but a decision. That was good.”

She blinked, once. “It wasn’t sentimental enough for you?”

“No,” he said, shaking his head. “It was honest.”

She didn’t reply. She didn’t smile, didn’t thank him, didn’t soften. But she looked at him. Really looked. And for the first time since he’d met her, there was no evaluation behind it. No measuring.

Just presence.

He nodded once. “Goodnight, Greengrass.”

Then he turned and walked away without waiting for her to say anything else.

Behind him, she didn’t move.

Not right away.

She stood there, barefoot on the stone, watching the place where he’d disappeared into shadow, and didn’t descend toward the dungeons until long after the torchlight stopped flickering.


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