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Scorpius Malfoy/Albus Severus Potter
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Published: 2012-05-28 Words: 11539
Books By Their Covers
Summary
When Albus Severus Potter became an Auror, he had certain expectations. Researching
crup fighting in the ministry library with Scorpius Malfoy was not among them. Or: Albus
Severus Potter is not his father. Scorpius Malfoy is not his, either.
Notes
Originally posted on livejournal, August 2011.
When Albus became an Auror, he had somewhat stupidly assumed it would be a lot like being at
Hogwarts, and even more like his father’s stories of being an Auror: having adventures, fighting
evil.
The assumption proved stupid for two reasons, if you disregarded the obvious reason it was stupid
(being that it was an assumption): (1) Dad’s memories of his time in the Corps proved to be
extremely skewed--which is to say, his memories of the Aurors proved to be inaccurate, an
inaccuracy that was exacerbated by the fact that crime levels had gone down since the tenuous
post-war years; (2) even though he was only two years out of Hogwarts, Albus’ memories of
school proved to be similarly inaccurate; and (3) the Aurors were a government institution. Maybe
it was simple naivete (it was simple naivete), but really.
At least that’s what Stella told him, when Albus came to her to gripe about the research for his
latest insignificant job.
“You just need to go to the Ministry Library,” she said. “It’s really lovely Al.”
“Are you quite sure you can’t do it?” he’d asked, and earned himself a look that would turn trees
into wilting violets.
Hugo had sided with Stella. Ever since they’d married he’d been fixing Albus with a baleful look
whenever disagreements surfaced and mouthing the word “sex.” Albus was not actually able to
read lips, but Hugo had helpfully explained it to him (“It’s wonderful,” he whispered, and Albus
had stopped him right there.)
So if anyone asked, that was how Albus ended up in the lift to the Ministry Library, which he was
certain was located on a sad and dusty floor where no one ever went.
He turned out to be wrong, to the degree that the library appeared to be well dusted (by, Aunt
Hermione would later claim, uncompensated house elves), and someone must have done sort of
magic on the windows, because they were larger and better illuminated than made logical sense,
given that, as far as Albus knew, the floor the Ministry Library was located on was no larger than
any other floor at the Ministry, and, furthermore, there was another building next door that
blocked most natural light.
Then again, maybe it was, because besides the large windows there were vast shelves, with
ladders running along on rollers, waiting to be summoned.
And there was Scorpius Malfoy, wearing wire-rimmed spectacles, sitting at the long wooden
counter at the fore of the room. He didn’t see Albus; Albus didn’t want to see him, and ducked
behind a bank of shelves.
He knew Scorpius Malfoy was the ministry librarian. Everyone knew--when Julia Buchner had
passed and Malfoy had been named her successor, it had made the third page of the Prophet
(Minute Ministry Minutes). Third page, bottom of column three, but it had been a prime piece of
gossip shortly thereafter, so there was that. Albus had actually persuaded his rubbish bin to release
that copy of the Prophet to confirm the news. He’d ironed out the sheet of paper and there it was,
one line:
Scorpius Malfoy will be replacing Julia Buchner as Head Librarian at the Ministry,
making him the youngest ever Ministry Head Librarian...Looks like the Malfoy fortune is waning,
if the heir needs to look to MoMCSS for income.
MoMCSS stood for Ministry of Magic Codex Sorting System. Albus realized he couldn't care
less, and returned the paper to the bin promptly. The bin then proceeded to spit up the spoiled
beans from yesterday on him, and Albus had quietly blamed Malfoy for the whole ill-fated
endeavor, for the fact that, Harry Potter’s son’s greatest travails were an ornery rubbish bin and the
fact that his boss assigned him what could only be termed as shit cases.
Which brought him to the library, where Malfoy was peering at a large volume and jotting quick
notes with his left hand. He was wrinkling his nose to keep his glasses up, and he looked vaguely
constipated.
Albus snorted into the stacks, and then he felt like he was spying. It was--there was no reason for
it. In school their relationship had been one of mutual dislike, because their fathers had been
enemies or whatever and Albus thought someone ought to carry on the tradition, since James
showed no interest and Rose and Stella seemed to consider Malfoy something of a friend (Rose
and Scorpius were also academic rivals, but Rose always insisted it wasn’t that competitive, just,
you know).
It turned out to be good that Albus choose to carry on the tradition, because Scorpius was a right
twat and apparently Albus was the only one to notice. He had replaced the Malfoy’s blood-based
system of judgment with something based on the number of OWLs or NEWTs obtained, and
Albus came to dread shared Slytherin-Ravenclaw classes solely for Scorpius’ withering glances
whenever Albus was called on to answer a question.
So if he was spying, it was because it simply won’t do to have Malfoy stumble upon Albus in his
domain without knowing precisely what he was doing--and Albus didn’t quite know what he was
doing.
Actually, Albus was supposed to be breaking up a crup-fighting ring. And in truth, he had already
broken up a crup-fighting ring. It was simple, really: (1) obtain crup; (2) bring crup to dog park
while dressed as shadily as possible (Albus had magicked himself a temporary tattoo expressly for
this purpose, although he had rather liked it and had yet to remove it); (3) get crup to bite
something; (4) reap rewards. Repeat steps one through three as necessary for a crup fighter to
notice your crup and, subsequently, invite you to a fight. The problem was that now he had to
write a report on crup-fighting and wizarding culture and whether it was related to Muggle dog
fights and what sort of policies should be implemented to prevent crup fighting in the future.
Albus wished he could go back to fighting his crup, which James had christened Teeth, because
he bit less when he occasionally had the opportunity to sink his teeth into another crup. But that
was not the sort of thing one went about saying, especially to Rose or one’s boss. Still, thus far
Teeth had damaged every piece of furniture in Albus’s flat, with the exception of the rubbish bin
and the ottoman that smelled strongly of floral perfume.
Books on crups, if Stella was to be believed, should be filed under Beasts, Magical, Forked Tails,
Canis domesticus magus (their Latin name).
Crup fighting, conversely, would be filed under Activities, Games and Sports, Magical,
Pugnacious, Beasts.
Writing those two pieces of information down on a scrap of parchment was the sole help Stella
had offered, but when Albus attempted to locate both of those sections he had no luck at all, and
wound up somewhere in Dysfunctions, Physical, Sexual.
Which is where Scorpius Malfoy found him. He had a small cart of books trailing after him like a
lost dog, making small whining noises as it rolled along on its undersized wheels, and he looked at
Albus with something akin to amusement, if the amusement were mingled with dislike and
perhaps a certain degree of smugness.
“Albus,” he said. “I know the Prophet’s been taking your break-up rather well, but wouldn’t they
be interested to know it was because you--ah, how do you say?--because your wand wasn’t
working properly.”
The break-up was a year ago, maybe more. Even Sean doesn’t care particularly anymore--even
Albus doesn’t care anymore, and he probably took the whole thing worse. Albus tries not to look
incredulous. He’s not sure if he manages, but Scorpius and his cart have halted in front of him like
they’re both waiting for something, so Albus eventually says, “I’m looking for books about crup
fighting.”
“Crup fighting, Potter,” Malfoy replies. “Are you certain you aren’t compensating for something?”
“It’s for a job,” Albus says flatly, and then he holds out the note from Stella. “Stella said I might
find them here.”
Malfoy takes the parchment from him, pushes his eyeglasses up his nose, and inspects it.
“She would have been right last week, but--” Malfoy says. “Because of the lunar phase, they’ve
been moved.”
Albus had actually stalled a week before coming to the library, and as he trails after Malfoy he
considers commenting on it.
“Stella gave me that note a week ago,” he says eventually, and Malfoy nods.
“I thought so,” he says. “Longbottom knows MoMCSS as well as I do. So this just makes you a
lazy arse.”
Albus considers defending himself, but Malfoy’s jab is mild, and he’s trying not to act like a
schoolboy, and so instead he just says, “It’s Weasley, now,” even though Malfoy has to know
because he was at the wedding. Malfoy does something only slightly more cultured than grunting,
and Albus follows him through a warren of shelves until they reach Beasts, Crups, Fighting which
is--
“The week leading up to the full moon is always the most sensible,” Malfoy says. And then he
and his cart disappear.
Well, they don’t disappear exactly. They rattle off to another bank of shelves, and Albus chalks
that up as one surprisingly non-hostile interaction with Malfoy. Although Albus didn’t talk much,
which may explain it. He pulls books off the shelf at random, and goes to the front to check them
out. There’s a witch there who Albus doesn’t recognize, examining her fingernails, and when
Albus piles the books on the counter she glances at his ID badge disinterestedly before flicking her
wand and marking them all as checked out.
“Due in two weeks,” she says without meeting his eyes. “Looks pretty dull. I expect you’ll be
returning them earlier.”
“I wish I could return them earlier,” Albus mumbles, and shifts them to his hip to carry them back
to his cubicle.
Most of the books prove to be either completely useless or impossibly dry, but there’s one that’s
relevant and traversable, at the very least, so Albus brings that home.
It should come as no surprise that Teeth eats it. He does it while Albus’s asleep, and by the
morning the volume is almost completely mangled, and there are fat drops of saliva on the cloth
cover. Teeth is sleeping curled around it, and Albus is certain that no spell on earth could fix the
book when half of it is currently being digested.
He’s not sure what he’ll tell Malfoy, which maybe explains why he lets Teeth carry the book
around the flat for the next two weeks. The crup seems to have grown attached to it, and he
doesn’t gnaw terribly much on it or anything else, though Albus does come home one evening to
find that Teeth is apparently mating with it. He makes a silent pact with himself never to tell Stella
or anyone else, and then he pats Teeth on the head, changes out of his Auror robes and in to a
jumper and jeans, and goes down to The Flying Ford Anglia to see if Hugo’s there.
The Flying Ford Anglia is Hugo’s bar, named for a story Uncle Ron likes to tell. It was christened
Diagon Alley’s new hot spot by The Daily Prophet, and by The Quibbler a bar, owned by Hugo
Weasley. Which is, frankly, good enough for Albus.
Also, Hugo makes his own butterbeer, and it tastes like sunshine. Although Albus only says that
when he’s very, very drunk.
“Stella said you had to go to the Ministry Library,” Hugo says when he takes a break from tending
bar to slide into a booth with Albus. He looks tired and happy, which is how he looks most of the
time these days, and Albus kind of envies him. “Sorry about that, mate. How’s Malfoy?”
“Probably pissed at me, now,” Albus says, taking a swig from whatever it is that Hugo’s brought
him, some mixture of something. “Teeth ate one of the books.”
“I can’t believe you’re keeping him,” Hugo says. “That Crup is terrible.”
“But what am I supposed to do with him?” Albus asks.
“Beatrice Ballificent’s Home for Magical Beasts, mate,” Hugo replies. “That’s where Rose used
to volunteer.”
Albus thinks of Teeth, who is white with liver and black spots and one ear that won’t stay up, and
feels inexplicably fond of him. Hugo shakes his head.
“You’re worse than the wife,” he says, and Albus wishes Hugo would stop calling Stella ‘the
wife’ and he knows it’s a newlywed thing (because Stella told him, because Stella said “It’s a
newlywed thing, he’ll get over it”), but it’s still stupid. “With your lost causes.”
“Teeth is not--” Albus starts.
“Teeth ate an entire pair of trousers,” Hugo says. “Give it up.”
Albus is not willing to give it up, but it is true that Teeth ate an entire pair of trousers. They were
his favorites, too.
“Where is Stella?” Albus asks, instead, and Hugo shrugs.
“Studying, yeah?” he says. “Exams coming up. They’re on the DRAGONs.”
And it doesn’t--it doesn’t feel like exam season, which makes Albus realize how long exactly he’s
been away from school, and it’s strange to remember that in Stella’s endless quest for graduate
degrees she still hasn’t gotten around to not being in school. Hugo grins at him like he’s thinking
the same thing.
“Glad it’s not me,” he says. “But she likes it.”
Hugo runs his hands along the dark wood of the booth, almost thoughtful, and then he glances up
and then hisses at Albus, “Don’t look now, but your pal Malfoy is here.”
Albus doesn’t look.
“Does he come here a lot?” he asks, instead.
“Sometimes, yeah,” Hugo replies. “I’m not going to turn him away, am I? He’s Stella’s friend.
And Stella says we owe him one, since he lends her the books she can’t get at the uni library even
though she doesn’t work for the Ministry.”
Albus really needs to take a moment and discuss that with Stella because if Malfoy grants her
special favors Albus may need to call in a special favor, what with Teeth eating that book and all.
Malfoy’s weaving through the crowd, a flash of bright blond hair that stops intermittently to talk
with--a pair of Ravenclaws, a girl dressed in bright colors who might be the one who checked out
Albus’s books at the library, Henryk Zabini. Henryk is sitting at the bar and within easy view
from Albus’s booth--he and Malfoy join their heads together, dark and pale, discussing something.
“Are they friends?” Albus asks Hugo, jabbing a thumb in the direction of the pair, because he
doesn’t recall them being friends at Hogwarts. Henryk had been in Albus’ house, and he wasn’t
all bad--a little mercenary, but completely transparent about it, and when he and Albus had gotten
very drunk at a house party and woken up wrapped around one another Henryk and kissed him
hard and said they didn’t need to talk about it.
“Hell if I know,” Hugo mumbles. “Not like I keep tabs on them or anything.”
Albus watches them for a moment, then turns back to Hugo and drinks the last swallow of his
drink, which burns more than all the previous sips combined. When he comments on it, Hugo just
nods.
“Neat bit of magic,” he says. “Uncle George came up with it, and Stella did a bit of arthimacy for
us. Alcohol content increases in direct proportion to how much you’ve already had to drink.”
That sounds like a terrible bit of magic. Albus’s surprised Stella went along with it, but then not
surprised at all, because the last time he saw Stella’s mother, Professor Lovegood, she spent most
of the time looking at things that weren’t there and doodling arthimacy equations in the air.
Hugo goes back to the bar and leaves Albus there, drinking quietly. A few of his old housemates
come over--Patrick Nott and Louise Trapper--and they talk briefly and superficially, and when
Albus is finished with his dinner and the live music starts up, he leaves. On the way out he catches
another glimpse of Malfoy leaning on the bar, all sharp angles of elbows and hips and nose. He’s
not wearing glasses, and Albus envies him for that--every healer Albus went to talk to about it told
him his eyesight was to bad for any sort of cure, or even Muggle contact lenses, something about
nearsightedness and astigmatisms and terrible, terrible eyesight, how did he even do anything
when his vision was that bad. His father had vaguely apologized, waving his hand and saying
Albus got it from him, great genes, all that.
Malfoy, though, sans glasses, is sliding out onto the dance floor with Zabini, who suddenly stops
and waves to Albus, which means Albus has to weave his way through the crowd to them,
because it would probably be interpreted as some sort of slight if he didn’t.
“Scorpius,” he says, nodding. “Henryk.”
“Al,” Henryk says. “I suppose I shouldn’t say fancy meeting you here, seeing as your Hufflepuff
friend owns it and all.”
“No,” Albus says dryly. “I suppose you shouldn’t.”
“How have you been?” he asks, reaching out to put a hand on Albus’ shoulder, and Albus
wonders if he’s suddenly decided he’s wanted a repeat performance, even though Albus doesn’t
remember precisely what the performance was. It was sixth year, after Albus declared himself gay,
before he started dating Sean Thomas. Frankly, Albus is pretty certain the sex was terrible.
“I heard about the break-up,” Henryk finishes, and Albus wonders why two people, now, have
brought up something that happened a year ago like it’s fresh news.
“Yes, a year ago,” Albus says. “I’m fine.” He glances at Scorpius, who looks faintly annoyed, and
takes a step back from Henryk. “I’ll let you two get to the dance floor, then.”
“Nice to see you,” Henryk says, not taking his eyes off Albus’ face, and then he catches Scorpius’
hand and leads him away.
“Your books are due in one week, six days,” Scorpius calls as he leaves. “Don’t forget.”
Albus eventually gets a notice from the Ministry Library about the books, which are now overdue
and will be fined at the rate of one knut per day. He already knew they were overdue, because the
stamps on the cover that said ‘Checked Out’ had started flashing ‘Due’ and then ‘Overdue’, but
he’d stuck them underneath a couch cushion and pretended it wasn’t happening. When he gets the
notice it is then, and only then, that he goes to see Malfoy. He splays the remaining books across
the desk and looks down at Malfoy, who is peering up at him over the silver frames of his glasses.
Reading glasses, it figures.
“My krup ate the other book,” Albus says.
“And which book would that be?” Malfoy asks, and Albus blinks.
“A History of Crups in Culture. Ah--”
“Michaelsen, I’ll expect,” Malfoy interjects. “And you didn’t read the backflap.”
“What?” Albus asks.
“Crup pheromones,” Malfoy says. “You need to be careful with that one.”
That does explain some things. When Albus looks back at Malfoy, he might be grinning--not
smirking, but grinning properly, but it’s a foreign expression on Malfoy’s face, so Albus’s not
entirely sure.
“Potter,” he says. “Were you afraid to tell me?”
It’s no use lying.
“The book’s completely destroyed,” Albus says.
“Honestly, Potter,” Malfoy says. “It was outdated, anyway. You’d be better off with--” Malfoy
pauses and hums to himself. “Follow me.”
This week the books are back where Stella said they’d be, the first week, so they wind up in
Activities, Games and Sports, Magical, Pugnacious, Beasts, with Scorpius pulling volumes off the
shelves and piling them in Albus’ arms.
“I don’t understand why you didn’t take these the first time around,” he says. “Really, do you
Slytherins not know how to read?”
“Your parents were both Slytherins,” Albus points out helpfully, and Scorpius shoots him a scowl.
“When I said ‘you Slytherins,’” he says. “I meant you specifically.”
“Then what does my house have to do with it?” Albus asks, disgruntled. First year he had hated
his house, but somewhere in there he came to terms with it, and then he developed something that
could be only described as house spirit.
Mostly because it was either that or let James make him feel ashamed for the rest of his life, and
Albus figured if he was going to be in Slytherin for the next six years he might as well accept it
and move on to better things, like embarrassing James in front of every potential girlfriend ever
(why Violet kept him remains a mystery).
“If you were a Ravenclaw,” Scorpius says. “I wouldn’t even have to ask that question.”
“Not all Ravenclaws like reading,” Albus counters.
And then he feels--he’s trying to rise above schoolboy whatevers. Fighting about houses feels like
going back to first year, and Albus is not going to fall for it.
“Are there any more books I should be looking at?” he says, looking down at the heap in his arms.
“This will do for now,” Scorpius replies. “Let me know what you think when you’re done with
them, and I’ll see if there’s anything else that would help.”
It all sounds surprisingly helpful, and Albus tries not to let his astonishment show on his face.
“Thanks,” he says, and Scorpius shrugs.
“Let it not be said that I never did anything for our esteemed Auror Corps,” he says, and then
leads Albus back to the counter, where he himself checks out the books.
“Bring them back on time this time,” Scorpius tells him after the books are stamped. “I added
something a little extra to the charm.”
“Of course you did,” Albus mutters, and Scorpius looks up at him with a smirk.
“Red is really not your color,” he says, instead of anything to do with their conversation. Albus
pretends he doesn’t hear, because he’s heard it before. Usually he just says “Good thing I didn’t
wind up in Gryffindor, then,” but he’s not sure what Scorpius would do with that, and he would
say “Blue isn’t yours” but that’s not precisely true.
The deep blue librarian robes actually suit Scorpius. Albus doesn’t want to talk about it, or think
about it, or look at it any longer than necessary. He goes back to his office, wades through the
books--which are tomes, really, too long and too dense, but he manages to extract bits and pieces
of useful information from them, though he still feels like the information he’s finding is
somewhere besides the point. Because he’s just not a Ravenclaw. He doesn’t like collecting
knowledge, only wades through books gleaning information to the extent that it’s useful or
interesting. That doesn’t make him dumb.
He mentions that to Stella when he meets her at The Flying Ford Anglia for dinner.
“You aren’t dumb. No one thinks you’re dumb,” she says, fixing him with an even stare. Stella’s
eyes have always been too large for her face and an unnervingly pale blue, and for a long time
Albus had trouble holding her gaze for extended periods of time.
He does, still.
“Scorpius thinks I’m dumb,” he says.
“No he doesn’t,” Stella says, and reaches across the table to give Albus’ hand a squeeze. “You
know he’ll help you if you just ask.”
But Albus doesn’t want to ask for Scorpius Malfoy’s help.
“Albus,” Stella says. “Scorpius Malfoy is a Ministry Librarian. It’s his job to help Ministry
employees with research.”
“Malfoy, again?” Hugo asks, sliding into the booth besides Stella. “Al, really.”
“Really what?” Albus asks, because he is really not sure.
“You realize Scorp is Stella’s friend, right? He’s coming by in a couple days for dinner.”
Albus looks between the pair of them. Stella shrugs.
“It’s true.”
It’s not surprising. Albus doesn’t know why he feels surprised.
“You should come,” Hugo says. “Maybe the pair of you could get along if you weren’t in school.
You have a lot in common.”
“Being gay is not a lot in common,” Albus mutters, looking down at his plate of food. Half the
chips are getting cold. He can practically see them getting cold, grease congealing on the potato
skins.
“You both are very concerned with your fathers’ opinions,” Stella offers in the way she does,
saying something mildly that cuts to the very quick.
Albus is not--but he is. Half the reason he joined the Aurors was for adventure, but he also joined
it to prove something to Harry, that the strange, worried look in his eye when Albus had flooed
home after the sorting to tell his parents he was in Slytherin was all for naught.
Before he got on the train Harry had knelt down and told Albus that the Hat would listen if Albus
said he didn’t want to be in Slytherin.
The thing that Albus suspected his father knew was that by the time the Hat got off his head,
Albus wanted to be in Slytherin. He had the option, Slytherin or Hufflepuff, and he picked the den
of snakes.
And by the time he graduated, he liked it. He liked his housemates, because he knew where he
stood with them, and for the most part they respected him, which was all he really wanted. He was
a Chaser on the House team. He was Quidditch Captain. His house expected him to lead the team
to victory, the expectation was clear and simple and there were no caveats--he wasn’t expected to
be everyone’s friend, or to be a particularly brilliant example, or to be anyone other than Albus
Severus Potter.
Sixth year, when he came out, his mum had folded him up in her arms and said it was okay, like
something was wrong, and his dad had studied him and nodded succinctly, like Albus was
confirming expectations. His house immediately began to shift the gossip about his relationships in
the direction of his orientation, and otherwise their treatment of him hadn’t changed at all. Even
his siblings and cousins had taken time to adjust, like they suddenly weren’t sure who he was.
Outside his house, only Stella took it in stride, saying, “Well, of course,” and continuing with the
conversation they had been having.
“So you’ll come, then?” Stella asks, now, and Albus blinks back at her.
“What?”
“Our flat,” Hugo says. “Tuesday night.”
Albus completely, absolutely does not want to go, but he doesn’t see how he has any choice.
“I can bring dessert,” he replies.
Albus takes Teeth out for a walk that night, casts an illusion on the forked bit of his tail and clips
him to his thin leather lead. They trot down Diagon Alley and out into muggle London, where
there’s a park Albus likes at night--quiet and ringed by street lights, in a neighborhood where
Albus imagines all the families have children and are sweetly happy with their lives. Albus has an
inexplicable envy of muggles that can’t be traced to any of his interactions with them, that has
nothing to do with the stilted, painful dinner with his Great Aunt Petunia when he was nine or the
muggle girl he dated and then messily broke up with (“There’s something about me you’ll never
understand” he told her, melodramatically) over one summer vacation in Spain when he was
eleven.
It’s early autumn and cool out, anyway, and so maybe it’s just nice to be walking regardless of the
neighborhood. Teeth picks up a stick somewhere along the way, and carries it proudly all the way
back to Diagon Alley, where Albus lets him chew it to splinters on the floor, because it’s a better
use of chewing than if Teeth were chewing on his wand.
Over the course of the next few days, Albus sorts through the library books Scorpius selected for
him and creates an elaborately color coded system of note taking, mostly because the colors
entertain him. He ends up with five sheets of parchment all scrawled with notes, under the headers
History (Crups), Biology + Breeding (Crups), History (Crup Fighting), Dog Fighting, and Crup
Culture (??).
When he looks at them after the fact, it’s not very helpful. Albus draws a picture of Teeth in the
corner of each page and magics them to scurry around, but seeing ink drawings of Teeth gnawing
on his handwriting doesn’t actually improve his mood any.
That’s how Monday afternoon finds Albus, and his mood is worsened when he remembers that he
agreed to have dinner with Scorpius Malfoy (and his friends, yes) and bring dessert and there’s
nothing in his flat that could be reasonably expected to shape itself into dessert. When he gets off
work he goes to the grocery and buys the ingredients for the chocolate cake Grandmum Weasley
taught him to make, which also happens to be the only dessert he can actually make. Despite a
run-in with the kitchen timer everything turns out, and Albus is shrinking the cake down to bring
to Hugo and Stella’s when Teeth pisses all over the kitchen floor.
Albus looks at him.
“Teeth,” he says, in what he imagines is a firm tone, and Teeth sort of cowers and looks guilty,
lowering his tail and wagging it apologetically.
“Don’t do that, Teeth,” Albus says, and then he has to clean it up, and the whole time Teeth
prances around looking pathetic and like he would probably like to be taken for a walk.
Albus firecalls Stella.
“Can I bring Teeth?” he asks, and she smiles at him benignly.
“A crup in the house means food in the coffer,” she says, which is an old phrase from when crups
were used for killing rats and at this point is little more than nonsense. Albus blinks.
“Is that a yes?” he asks, because he can’t imagine someone would willingly let Teeth into their
home.
“If I say no, you’ll just say you can’t come because you need to take Teeth for a walk, and then
there will be no dessert,” Stella states succinctly, and then she leaves the fire and effectively ends
the call.
She’s right. Albus puts the cake in his pocket and hitches Teeth to his lead, and the pair of them
are off. Teeth looks pleased with himself, and trots along waving his tail jauntily. Albus wishes he
were a crup.
When they get to Hugo and Stella’s place, Scorpius is just arriving, sending a small rock upstairs
to tap on the window. He’s dressed in muggle clothes, slim trousers and a dark wool jacket, and
he looks--not good, precisely. He looks nice, though.
“Potter,” he says nodding towards them dropping the pebble when they approach. “Potter’s crup.”
“Malfoy,” Albus replies. “This is Teeth.”
“Clever,” Scorpius says, raising a thin eyebrow, and this is the thing about Scorpius, the very
thing that makes him so exasperating.
“I thought so,” Albus says, meeting Scorpius’ gaze and silently wishing Teeth would bite him, but
then the door is opening and Hugo is there, to let them up.
“Albus,” he says. “You brought Teeth.”
“Stella said I could,” Albus says, trying not to sound defensive. “I also brought a cake.”
“Grandmum’s recipe?” Hugo asks, and when Albus nods the affirmative Hugo sighs a little and
lets them all in. When they get upstairs Albus unclasps the lead from Teeth’s collar, and he
immediately goes to Scorpius and begins to nuzzle his leg, and then to mount it, which.
“He doesn’t usually do that,” Albus says, diving for Teeth’s collar and reigning him in.
“I’m just special?” Scorpius asks, looking amused. Albus wishes he didn’t. Albus wishes he
weren’t sitting on the floor, clutching his crup by the collar and looking up Scorpius’ long legs,
but it doesn’t look like that wish is going to be granted, either.
“You must be,” Stella says, sliding in from the kitchen. “Usually he just bites.”
Albus gives Teeth a shake and gets to his feet.
“Don’t let it go to your head,” he says, and Scorpius actually laughs, not at Albus but like maybe
he actually thought that was a funny joke.
It wasn’t funny, but Albus will take what he can get.
“I brought cake,” he tells Stella, and they return it to its proper size and set it on the kitchen
counter, and then they have dinner.
Stella and Hugo insist that they should eat at the tiny table in the kitchen, because otherwise they’ll
get too spread out, and so the four of them wind up seated in a neat square. Hugo plies them with
wine, because Aunt Hermione believes in serving wine with dinner and raised her children to
believe the same. And the conversation doesn’t exactly flow, but it comes. Albus manages to get
Teeth to sit between his feet and holds him there, so he can neither molest Scorpius nor chew on
furniture, and Stella switch from a conversation about new developments in the historical
understanding of muggle-magic relations that Albus is only marginally interested in to one about
muggle literature that Albus is very interested in.
Albus remembers, then, why he always liked muggles. He tries to articulate it to the table at large--
something about how magic isn’t quite the right substitute for imagination, something about the
collection of Calvin and Hobbes comics Aunt Hermione gave him one Christmas when he was
not terribly old, something else again. Stella and Hugo have heard it all before but Scorpius--
Scorpius has things to say.
Albus is surprised to find he doesn’t mind hearing them, and when he eases up and uses his hands
to start articulating a point, Stella shoots him a grin.
He knows what she’s trying to say. He wishes he didn’t. Albus always keeps his hands still unless
he’s comfortable, because his fingers are long and thin and spidery and easy to talk with but
somehow seem embarrassing. If Scorpius thought Albus was stupid already, he must think he’s
terribly dumb now that he’s using his hands when words fail him, drawing sweeping explanations
in the air. But Albus--Albus is not sure if he doesn’t care, or if he just doesn’t think Scorpius
thinks he’s dumb. Either way, it’s disconcerting, because Albus is suddenly, unexpectedly
comfortable.
They get through dinner to the cake, which is thick and spongy, with cream between the layers
and too much frosting. They used to only bring it out for birthdays when they were kids, but all
the cousins loved it to much and insisted on it for every occasion, and Albus loved it most of all
and insisted on learning to make it. Now he almost regrets that it’s the only dessert he knows how
to make, because Scorpius is licking frosting off his fingers and making little mewling noises of
pleasure, and Albus doesn’t want to think of Scorpius and frosting or those muted noises, which
sound like muffled sex.
“This is delicious,” Scorpius says around a forkful, and Stella nods.
“Thanks for bringing it, Al,” she says. “Really elevates the occasion.”
“Don’t get sick of it,” he says. “You know Lil’s birthday is in two weeks.”
“Like we could,” Hugo says. “Seriously, you make it better than Grandmum.”
“Blasphemy,” Albus says, but he’s grinning. “I have to do it well, since it’s the only thing I
make.”
“Well, yes,” Stella replies. “Although you do put together an alright cheese sandwich.”
“Cake and cheese sandwiches?” Scorpius says. “It’s a wonder you’re so scrawny.”
“That’s Uncle Harry,” Hugo says mildly as he wipes crumbs off his plate with his thumb.
It’s true. Albus would actually prefer not to talk about it--the untamable hair, the wiry frame, the
terrible eyesight. Everything he got from his father makes him uncomfortable, because while
Harry wears it well, the features seem to fit Albus like another man’s clothes.
“My father used to call you Harry Potter’s miniature,” Scorpius offers, and Albus frowns at him.
“Yeah,” he says, trying not to betray how little he likes that moniker, which The Daily Prophet
gave him as well. “I get that sometimes. Pity I was in Slytherin.”
“Pity I was in Ravenclaw,” Scorpius says, meeting Albus’ gaze, and for a moment Albus
understands.
Draco Malfoy is a recluse, since his wife died or maybe before, but Albus saw him a few times at
Kings’ Cross, a few times in the paper. And, yes, he could see how he might not be the only one
wearing his father’s features without actually being able to fit his father’s shoes, for good or ill.
Stella saves Albus from trying to think this through too deeply, slipping into a new subject,
thanking Albus and Scorpius for coming, saying other things--Albus only picks up every other
word, maybe. It might be the wine or the conversation, but Albus is tired. Exhausted. Not thinking
clearly, which is maybe why he actually asks Scorpius for help.
“Think you could help me with with my crup fighting research?” Albus says, but only when
they’re leaving--when Teeth is back on his leash and only the gold-tinged streetlamps illuminate
Scorpius’ thin face, fine hair. Cast in gold Scorpius looks--Albus’ first thought is that he looks
warmer, and that might push him, too.
“That’s my job,” Scorpius says wryly. “Come by the library tomorrow.”
Albus nods, and then he tugs at Teeth’s leash and the pair of them set off down down the street,
until Scorpius catches up with him, matching his stride.
“I’m going this way, too,” he offers after they’ve been walking more or less together for a
moment, even though that should be obvious. Albus hitches up his collar against the cold breeze,
and nods before he realizes Scorpius might not be able to see it.
“I figured,” he says. Teeth’s toenails clatter across the cobblestones, and if there’s anything else to
say Albus doesn’t know what it is. They reach Albus’ flat before where ever it is that Scorpius
lives, and stop outside the heavy door.
“See you tomorrow,” Albus offers, and Scorpius nods.
“Sure,” he replies, and then Teeth trails Albus up the thin staircase to home, to bed.
In the morning there’s nothing to regret, just breakfast to eat and a dog who needs to be walked;
and then, after, Albus pulls on his Auror robes and goes to work, goes from his office up to the
library.
“I wasn’t sure you’d show,” Scorpius says, and Albus shrugs. He has a pile of books and his
sheaf of notes, which he spreads out for Scorpius to examine.
“Nice cartoons,” Scorpius says, glancing at them, and somehow, somehow, Albus has the grace
not to blush.
“Yeah,” he replies. “Let’s just get to it, then.”
Scorpius splays Albus’ notes across the table, and then he sorts the books by subject and splits the
pile between the pair of them. Scorpius draws a tangled web of connections around Albus’ notes,
and does a neat piece of spellwork that makes the whole thing three-dimensional, and, somehow,
comprehensible despite it all.
Albus’ drawings of Teeth, meanwhile, tug at the more tenuous connecting thoughts as they scurry
around.
“These are good, you know,” Scorpius says, prodding one of the drawings with his wand.
“Silly, though,” Albus says, shrugging. Two of the drawings of Teeth have gotten into a scuffle
with one another. To win a crup fight one crup has to get the fork of the other’s tail, bite it. Albus
points to the fighting pair.
“I’ll bet you,” he says.
“For what?” Scorpius asks, and Albus shrugs.
“A sickle,” he says, and Scorpius shrugs.
“I was thinking something a little more interesting,” he says, leaning forward on his elbows. “But,
you know.”
“Interesting how?” Albus asks, despite himself. Scorpius’ glasses are slipping down his nose,
glinting silver in the library lights, and he’s looking very intently at Albus’ face, like he’s waiting
for something.
Like he’s fascinated.
“Interesting,” Scorpius says. “Like--”
“The fight’s already over,” Albus interjects, pointing at the crups. The one closer to Scorpius has a
firm grasp on the other’s tail, and the pair of them tumble into a ball, yipping silently.
“Right,” Scorpius says, and the he pushes his glasses up his nose and flips open another volume.
Albus knows what just happened. He just wishes he understood it.
In Slytherin--it’s not really worth talking about Slytherin, because Sean was a Gryffindor, and
In Slytherin--it’s not really worth talking about Slytherin, because Sean was a Gryffindor, and
wore his emotions on his red and gold sleeve. But in Slytherin, too, you always knew what people
wanted, because they tried to get it. Not once, but several times, and if they were cock-blocked by
an early win in an animated illustration of a crup fight, they pressed on.
Scorpius doesn’t. He starts taking notes again, gesturing at their floating diagram, and then he
suggests other sources and disappears to retrieve them, leaving Albus to his thoughts. It’s not--if
they hadn’t gone to school together, and if Scorpius hadn’t been such an ass, if they’d just met at
Hugo’s bar (or at the other bar, the one Albus had frequented after he and Sean broke up, with his
eyes and hair magicked to something less distinctive because it was not good for the rep, to have
people know he danced like that).
There are a lot of possibilities, but the one that is playing out right now--Albus just can’t see it
working out.
Albus is a Slytherin. He protects himself.
When Scorpius comes back to the table Albus asks which books he should work on, and takes
them and reads them. He does not steal glances at Scorpius when he thinks he’s not looking, and
he certainly does not stretch his legs out beneath the table in case they might brush. Because, for
one, that’s so Hogwarts, and for two--Albus just said he wouldn’t do that. He just decided. He
stands by his decisions, even the worst ones (and there have been plenty of worst ones).
But making a decision doesn’t mean that Albus doesn’t want to find out what Scorpius was trying
to do, and why. He lets the idea percolate through him--Scorpius Malfoy wants him. Or wanted
him for a moment. Or was trying, weakly to flirt with him. Either way, it’s something.
With Sean there had hardly even been flirting--Rose had invited Albus to a Gryffindor party.
There’d been something in the punch. Sean and Albus had wound up pressed together in a plush
chair in the corner, quietly licking their way into one another’s mouths. And Sean wasn’t like
Henryk. After that, they were an item, as they say.
The break up last year ago had been either rough or inevitable. Rose said inevitable, Stella thought
rough, and so when Albus gets home from research with Scorpius, Rose is the one he calls.
Rose had gone to Bulgaria to work with Uncle Charlie after graduation, and from there she’d been
moved to a reserve up in Norway to work with Norwegian Ridgebacks. When she answers the
firecall she has a long streak of soot on her cheek, and her hair is twisted up into a bun on the top
of her head with frizzy strands escaping.
“Al,” she says, catching her breath. “What’s the occasion, cuz?”
“How are you?”
“Skip the formalities,” she says. “I know you want something.”
Albus looks at her for a moment.
“I am doing well,” she says. “It’s mating season up here. The females hold eggs over winter, and
they mate in midair--you should come up and see it sometime.”
“And now what do you want?” she finishes, grinning.
“I was wondering why you were so sure Sean and I were going to split,” Albus says, and Rose’s
grin broadens.
“Coming to your good cousin Rose for relationship advice?” she asks. “Poor Albus.”
“Shut up,” he says mildly. “Talk.”
Rose has always had a weird habit of magicking little balls of blue light and floating them around
while she talks. It was the first spell Aunt Hermione taught her, and it’s been like that since then--
there’s always one or two, trailing after her.
She got in trouble with the Ministry about it nearly every summer.
Now one orbits around her head, and then bobs in the air when Rose taps herself on the chin with
her wand.
“Did you ever think you might be afraid of being gay?” Rose asks, then cuts him off before he can
answer. “Because of Uncle Harry. Because if you don’t marry and have 2.5 children to carry on
the Potter line you’re afraid you’ll disappoint him.”
“That’s not true,” Albus says. “I’ve never wanted--”
“No, but you never wanted to commit, either,” Rose says. “And Sean did.”
That’s true. Albus knows it’s true, because Sean’s living with the guy he started dating after
Albus, and that was a step Albus was never willing to take--moving in together, combining their
possessions in one flat. He liked waking up in the tangle of Sean’s arms, but it felt safer to keep
certain things separate, like the other apartment was a safety net or an escape rope.
“Some people just don’t like commitment,” Albus hears himself saying. “Not everyone needs long
term things.”
“And if you believe that, it wasn’t going to work out with Sean anyway,” Rose says succinctly.
“But is that what you really believe?”
“It’s not because of Dad,” Albus says.
“You’re an Auror because of him,” Rose replies. “I don’t see how this is any different.”
Sometimes, Albus kind of hates Rose. She’s sitting there, probably kneeling in front of the
fireplace, with her hair frizzing out and her little ball of blue light, and she’s saying things that are
sensible, that might be true, but that Albus does not want to hear.
“Albus,” she says when there have been several beats of silence between them, broken only by
crackling flames. “Your family loves you. You can be whoever you want, and they--we--still will.
I just want to make sure you’re being who you want to be.”
Being whoever he wants to be is terrifying. Albus’ ambition had always been for some nebulous
state, for respect. His father was the most respected man he knew. It followed that if he could be
like Harry Potter--but he wasn’t.
“Yeah,” Albus says. “I’ll think about it.”
Rose smiles at him wanly, looks like she wants to reach through the fire and hug him, and then
they say their good byes.
Albus is still sitting on the floor, his back wedged against the sofa. He calls Teeth over and
scratches him behind the ears. He wonders.
He doesn’t even know what he’d do if he weren’t an Auror.
Albus falls asleep like that, slumped together with Teeth in front of the fire, and he wakes to the
crup licking his face. He is, not unexpectedly, late to work, but no one seems to care. When he
gets up to the library he waves in Scorpius’ direction and then retreats to a table in the back,
curling his legs up beneath him and pressing onward with books, notes spread on the table around
him.
Scorpius comes to join him sometime before Albus breaks for lunch, settling into a chair opposite
Albus with little more than a nod of acknowledgment and a few moderately insightful comments
about crup fighting.
It’s strangely comfortable, and when lunch does roll around Albus asks Scorpius if he’d like to
come along. There’s a muggle cafe two blocks down from the Ministry that Albus like, small and
quiet and never quite clean. Scorpius looks skeptical, but he comes along almost despite himself.
“Are you sure no one will be able to tell?” he asks when they’re outside on the sidewalk. Albus
keeps muggle clothes in his cubicle, and he and Scorpius manage to transfigure a spare pair of
trousers and an oxford to fit.
“You were wearing muggle clothing just the other night,” Albus says. “For dinner with Stella and
Hugo?”
“But then I wasn’t going to see actual muggles,” Scorpius replies, weaving to dodge a man
coming towards them. Then he pauses to examine his wrist. “I feel like the stitching is
inauthentic.”
“The stitching,” Albus echoes.
“On the cuffs here,” Scorpius says. “The transfiguration altered it--because my arms are shorter
than yours, and now it’s all--”
“Malfoy,” Albus interjects.
“What?”
“No one’s going to look at the stitching on your cuffs,” Albus says.
“That’s fine for you to say,” Scorpius grumbles. “Your shirt’s intact.”
“Yes,” Albus says. “It is.”
“And your trousers,” Scorpius says, twisting. “I think our arses are different shapes. Are any
Muggles looking at my arse?”
“No,” Albus says. “But the will be, if you don’t keep trying to look at it yourself.”
Albus is. Albus is looking at Scorpius’ arse. If anything, they transfigured the trousers too tight,
and the pull of the tucked-in shirt neatly displays the curve of Scorpius’ waist.
“Right, Potter,” Scorpius says, and keeps walking.
“You’ve passed it,” Albus says, halting in front of a storefront.
“Thanks for telling me,” Scorpius replies, coming back a few paces to rejoin him. “Helpful, you
are.”
“I try,” Albus says, and pushes the door open for Scorpius to go inside.
It’s Albus’ treat, because Scorpius doesn’t carry muggle money.
“Does it surprise you that I don’t carry muggle money?” Scorpius asks when they’ve seated, and
Albus shrugs.
“Not particularly,” he replies.
“It’s not that I hate muggles--” Scorpius starts. “I know, my family. I just don’t know much about
them.”
“Didn’t you take Muggle Studies?” Albus asks. He knows Scorpius took Muggle Studies. They
were in the same class.
“That was the only class you ever did better than me in,” Scorpius says dryly. “You know I took
it.”
“Why were you always such an arse about that?” Albus asks. “Grades?”
Scorpius glances down at the table, then flickers his eyes up towards Albus’ face.
“It was what I was good at, I guess,” he says. “I was kind of a show-off.”
Albus snorts.
“I didn’t think you were prone to understatement.”
“I’m not,” Scorpius says. He might be blushing, which--is not a bad look, really, a tint of color on
the sharp Malfoy cheekbones.
“You tell me,” Scorpius says, then. “About your cartoons.”
“What?” Albus asks. “The drawings of Teeth?”
“And your entire family,” Scorpius says. “And nearly everyone we went to school with.”
“You’ve seen those?” Albus asks. It’s true the margins of most of his notes and some of his essays
at Hogwarts were littered with doodles. Albus had always been quite handy with animation spells,
but that was not the sort of thing Hogwarts tested with any particular alacrity, so it had never
mattered. Albus still has binders of cartoons, filed away in boxes beneath his bed.
“It’s no wonder you never did well in most of our classes,” Scorpius says, hiding a smirk. “You
were never paying attention.”
“Yeah--” Albus says, trailing off thoughtfully. “But I did well enough to become an Auror.”
“Yes,” Scorpius replies. “That was certainly a surprise.”
“Was it?” Albus asks, narrowing his eyes.
“That’s just not what I expected you to end up as,” Scorpius replies.
“Because I’m too dumb?” Albus asks. He scowls at Scorpius, thinning his lips. “Because that is--”
“No,” Scorpius interjects, spitting out the syllable quickly. “Albus. I just didn’t think that was
what you wanted to do.”
“Because I’m a Slytherin?” Albus asks, and Scorpius actually has the gall to laugh.
“Albus,” he says, again. Albus’ name, not Potter, which Albus is not entirely sure how long he’s
been saying. “Most of my relatives are in Slytherin. I’m talking about you, not your house.”
Albus had lifted one of his hands, like somehow that would enable him to articulate things more
clearly, but now he lets it fall to the table.
“You don’t know me,” he says, softly. “You don’t.”
“I--” Scorpius starts, but Albus cuts him off.
“This is none of your business, Malfoy,” he says. “It’s not your place to judge.”
“Right,” Scorpius says. “Of course not.”
Albus looks at him, but his face is impossible to read. The rest of their meal passes in silence, and
when they get back to the library Scorpius goes to his desk and Albus stays at his table, sorting
through books and adding to their web of notes until the work day is over and he can wrap up his
work and go home.
He makes a cheese sandwich for dinner. Contrary to popular belief, he can cook other things, but
it’s drizzling outside and this is something he doesn’t need to think about.
The bar he goes to for dancing (for hook ups, if he’s honest with himself) is on the fringe between
Diagon and Knockturn Alleys, down a flight of stairs. If it has a name that Albus has forgotten,
brick walls with tattered posters and more kinds of beer than anywhere else in either alley. Light
comes from floating orbs in dull, warm colors--amber, ochre, maroon, mahogany.
Albus has always liked it, because it’s dim and noisy and the music is good. It’s just a club, really,
and changing his hair and eyes--had to do with being a Potter, more than thinking what he was up
to was particularly shameful. It wouldn’t be, if he weren’t a Potter. But on a slow news day, even
dull Potter news made the Prophet, and Albus Potter sleeping with random men was somewhere
north of dull, edging towards interesting, if taudry. Because Potters didn’t sleep with random men.
Potters saved the world and married their Hogwarts sweethearts. Potters did good, wholesome,
useful jobs and lived similarly wholesome lives.
That was not, strictly speaking, the truth.
Albus calls Lily.
When Lily wound up in Slytherin Albus was sure everyone blamed him for actually liking his
house, and he didn’t really know what to do with that. Instead he wrapped her green and silver
scarf around her neck and pulled her tight into a hug, then he set her loose amongst the snakes.
They didn’t stand a chance.
Lily played Seeker at Hogwarts, and she was recruited by the Ballycastle Bats before she even
graduated. She dropped out.
“Of course,” she said, whenever anyone commented (Grandmum Weasley, Aunt Hermione,
Uncle Percy--Uncle George had clapped her on the back and welcomed her to the fold). “What
else would I do?”
Lily can’t take his firecall because she’s training, but she calls him back that night when he’s
already asleep.
“Al,” she says. “Did I wake you? You should really put on a shirt, don’t want to scar me for life
with your pasty chest, yeah?”
Albus mumbles into coherence, blinking at his sister. She has always been the youngest. That’s
really the only way to describe her.
“Lily,” he says.
“That’s my name,” she replies brightly. She grins, waiting.
“Did you ever feel guilty about being in Slytherin?”
“Merlin, Al, it’s just a house,” she says.
“You don’t feel like you disappointed Mum and Dad? We were all over the Prophet--‘House of
Potter Goes Bad.’”
“That was my favorite headline,” Lily muses. “But Al, don’t be an arse. They don’t care. I’m the
best seeker since ever, and you’re Albus, and no one gives two shits about it.”
Albus stared at her. Lily was the best seeker since ever, and Albus was--Albus. Which was
actually kind of depressing.
“Stop stewing,” she commands from the fire. “Albus Severus Potter, whatever you’re angsting
about, just stop. You’re not old enough to have a midlife crisis.”
“Do you think I should quit my job?” Albus asks, and Lily squints one eye at him.
“Are you having a midlife crisis?” she says.
“No,” he replies. “Just the regular sort.”
“Do whatever the hell you want,” Lily says. “I have to go.”
And then she leaves. Albus didn’t really expect anything else.
He sleeps in front of the fire again, with Teeth curled up against his back, breathing warmth and
smelling of crup.
He’s on time for work this time, though just barely. He spends the day reanimating the notes he
and Scorpius created and allowing them to congeal into an essay, and when he’s done he puts the
scroll inside a drawer of his desk and decides that he’ll bring it over to Scorpius for review before
submitting it.
But that can wait until Monday. That needs to wait until Monday, actually, to give Albus some
time to order his thoughts.
Friday night he goes to the bar. It’s a decision he feels like he already made, pulling on his trousers
in the usual way, pulling on a thin green jumper. He changes neither his hair nor his eyes, and
doesn’t look in the mirror before he leaves--he knows how he looks, which is like himself.
Like a young Harry Potter, they say. Albus likes to think his glasses are a little more stylish.
He feels conspicuous when he descends the stairs into the club, but when he gets there--he’s not.
No one turns to stare when he enters the room. The bartender glances at him and says nothing, just
slides the requested pint down the bar and grins as Albus tosses it back.
And then there’s the dancing. Albus has never been good, precisely, but it’s not the sort of
dancing you need to be good at.
When he sees Scorpius, there’s another man’s hands on Albus’ hips, thumbs teasing at the
waistband of his denims. Scorpius is a shock of bright white hair on the other side of the room,
leaning against the wall, arms crossed, wearing the clothes Albus transfigured for him one day
prior. His hips are angled forward and his hair’s been rubbed into soft peaks and he’s looking
directly at Albus.
When their eyes meet, and Albus turns around and puts his arms across the strange man’s
shoulders, tries not to think about it. It’s easier this way, to match his hips with a stranger rather
than thinking of the play of Scorpius’ body against his, about the fact that Scorpius is wearing his
clothes for no reason Albus can fathom.
He makes the paper that morning, one line on the fifth page (‘Cauldron of Gossip’). It’s not as bad
as he expected. When he has dinner with his parents Sunday afternoon, they don’t even mention
it.
“Albus,” Harry is saying. “I have it on good authority that your next job will be slightly more
interesting.”
Albus pauses to chew his food and revise his thoughts.
“I think I might quit my job,” he says, and Harry looks at him sharply across the dinner plates he
prepared.
“What?”
“I’m not sure I’m an Auror,” he says.
Things fall quiet, then, and Albus desperately wishes Lily or James were there to diffuse the
tension, but James has an odd bit of weekend work to do, and Lily is traveling with the Bats.
“Really, Albus?” his mother asks. Albus is trying to read the expressions on both of their faces at
once. He’s always been good at telling when his parents are angry, and lying his way out of it, but
they don’t look angry now--they just look--they just look.
“What will you do?” his father asks, and Albus thinks he recognizes his expression as patience.
“My drawings,” he says. “Cartoons.”
“There’s money in that?” Ginny asks, and she sounds so calm that it startles Albus, frightens him.
“Are you really okay with this?” he asks.
“Of course,” Harry says. “Merlin, Al, you know we just want you to be happy.”
They both smile fondly. It’s so--these are his parents. Albus knew these were his parents. He still
expected something more, some sort of drama, some sort of--he expected someone to imply he
was less, but instead of that his mother is scooping peas onto her plate, and his father is offering
him potatoes.
They hug him by turn when he leaves, even though they both know he hates it.
Albus firecalls Lily when he gets home, sitting on the floor with Teeth.
“Al,” she says. “What’s happening?”
“I told mum and dad I’m quitting the Aurors,” he says, and she grins.
“Oh, good on you then,” she says, clapping her hands.
“It’s not really that big of a deal, is it?” he says, and she shrugs.
“Not really, no,” she replies. “You were always more interested in the stories about being in the
Auror Corps than the actual--”
“Yes,” he says. “The stories.”
“Are you going to write comics, then?” she says, and Albus scowls.
“How’d you know?”
“Al,” she says. “Everyone knows. You never liked anything else as well. Also, I’m uniquely
perceptive.”
Albus wants to punch her, but he settles for shaking his head.
“I don’t know why I put up with you,” he says.
“Because I’m your sister,” she says. “Like you ever had a choice.”
After they say goodbye Albus scratches Teeth behind the ears and goes to bed, properly, this time.
Teeth hops up sometime in the middle of the night, wriggling up towards the pillow.
There’s business to take care of on Monday, but Scorpius isn’t there.
“You can owl it to him,” says the witch at the desk, the one with the fingernails from the other
day.
“No, it’s fine,” Albus says.
“Well, I can hold it here,” she continues.
“No,” Albus says, clutching the scroll. “I’ll bring it back.”
He turns to go, and then swivels around.
“Where’s Scorpius live?” he asks.
The librarian with the fingernails looks at him, blinking evenly.
“I’m not at liberty to disclose that information,” she says.
“I need to see him,” Albus says, because it’s true.
“He’s not here right now,” the other librarian says. “You can owl him the scroll.”
“Owl him this,” Albus says, instead, taking out a small sheet and writing Where do you live? -ASP
on it. The other librarian scowls at him, but eventually she whistles for an owl and sends it off, and
then sits down at one of the tables and waits.
The owl comes back thirteen minutes later, precisely, and the other librarian hands Albus the note,
hiding a smirk.
That’s none of your business, Potter.
Albus scowls, flips the note over, and scrawls.
I put in fortnight’s notice this morning. I need to talk to you.
The next note as a Floo address. Albus tries not to look smug. He fails.
“He’s ill,” the other librarian says, but Albus is already going through the big glass-and-oak doors
and back to the lift.
The other librarian turns out not to have been lying. When Scorpius answers the floo Albus can
already see his nose is red, and when Albus comes through it’s apparent that Scorpius is wrapped
in a soft robe of the sort muggles wear, and has wool socks sagging around his ankles.
“Oh,” Albus says. “I suppose I’ll--go, then.”
“No, don’t,” Scorpius says. “It’s not as bad as it looks.”
“It looks bad,” Albus replies, and Scorpius shrugs.
“Dad sent me potions,” he says. “I took them.”
“Ah--well, then,” Albus says, pausing to look around. Scorpius’ flat looks a lot like his own, with
more books. But there’s the pictures in frames, the posters tacked up on the walls (one for The
Toaster Ovens, Albus’ personal favorite band and a result of the recent vogue for naming bands
after muggle devices), the tatty furniture. “I just came to apologize.”
“Did you?” Scorpius asks, and Albus--Albus doesn’t know what else he came here for.
“And to ask if you could revise my crup fighting report,” Albus says, thrusting the scroll forward.
Scorpius stares at it, at Albus, and then reaches out to take it.
It is terrible. It is painful. It is awkward. Albus flees.
And then he feels guilty when he gets back to his flat, because Scorpius was clearly sick, and
Albus crashed into his life and demanded he read a terribly dull report about crup fighting.
So he makes chicken soup. He left work early, he has time. He owes Scorpius something,
otherwise he’ll be indebted. He’ll drop it off, it’s not a big deal, he has a chicken in the freezer,
anyway.
It’s not true, about the chicken in the freezer, but no one has to know.
Albus doesn’t know all the spells for soup, so he improvises a little and it ends up alright. Or it
looks alright, anyway, and tastes alright, so he shrinks the pot down and floos back to Scorpius’.
Draco Malfoy is there.
“Oh,” Albus says. “Sorry.”
Draco looks at him blankly and then says, “Are you here to see Scorp? He’s asleep.”
“I just--brought soup,” Albus says quickly, fishing the pot out of his pocket. “I shrunk it.”
“I can see that,” Draco says.
“Right,” Albus says, bringing the pot back to size. “Tell him he can bring the pot to work, or
something.”
“Or something,” Draco echoes, and he sounds so damned amused that Albus absolutely needs to
leave.
“Cheers,” he says, and does that.
Albus goes to Stella and Hugo’s next, because he’s trying to tell everyone that matters about his
change of careers before the Prophet gets hold of the information, and because maybe Stella can
answer some questions about Scorpius that need to be resolved.
Stella is there, curled up in an chair reading with her legs hooked over the armrests.
“Al,” she says, turning when he arrives in the Floo. “Hugo’s at The Flying Ford.”
“Yeah--” Albus starts. “I was just--I’m quitting the Aurors.”
“Lovely,” she beams. “That’s lovely, Albus. Scorp will be so pleased.”
Albus blinks at her and perches himself on the armrest of another chair.
“He actually already knows.”
“Does that mean you two are getting on, then?” Stella asks. She’s smiling in that way she does,
benign and frightening and like she knows something you don’t.
“Not really, no,” Albus says. “But we had lunch the other day, and he mentioned--I thought I
ought to tell him.”
Stella frowns at him, then.
“He likes you, you know,” she says.
“What?” Albus asks.
Stella shrugs.
“He just--he likes you, Albus,” she says. “Don’t mess around with him.”
“What?” Albus repeats.
“Albus,” Stella sighs. “I’m not supposed to tell you this, but it’s been forever, and just--let him
down easy, if you need to.”
“Do you remember by break up with Sean?” Albus asks, and Stella snorts.
“Of course I do,” she says. “It wasn’t that long ago.”
“Did you think--was it my fault?”
“Yes, Al,” Stella says. “It was.”
“What if I do it again?”
Stella meets his eyes, and hers are bright and brimming with hope.
“You don’t know that, Al,” she says. “You try. If you’re willing to try, that’s enough.”
Albus desperately hopes that Draco has gone home, and Floos back to Scorpius’.
“Thanks for the soup,” Scorpius says when Albus floos in. “Dad tested it for poison and said there
was none, so.”
“Right,” Albus says. “I must’ve forgotten that ingredient.”
“He said you can never trust a Slytherin,” Scorpius continues.
“I’m trying to escape house stereotypes,” Albus replies.
“How so?” Scorpius asks. He’s sitting on the couch, still wearing his socks that sag around the
ankles, still pink about the nose. He’s looking at Albus with nothing much in his face, like he’s
tired and drained of emotion, and Albus suspects this may be the wrong time to do this, but he
doesn’t know of a better time.
Albus doesn’t actually know how he’s trying to escape house stereotypes. He sinks down onto the
couch besides Scorpius, looks over at him.
“Did you like the soup?”
“Good as mum’s,” Scorpius replies. “But she didn’t--you know--make soup.”
“Right,” Albus replies. They sit there in silence for a few minutes and then a few minutes more.
“Did you have something else to say?” Scorpius asks. Albus is still wearing his coat, and Scorpius
is wearing a robe and socks, and Albus isn’t sure what he meant to say, but it’s there, something’s
there.
“Scorpius,” he says finally. “I like you.”
Scorpius is silent, watching him, not patient, exactly, but waiting.
“I’m kind of an arse,” he says. “Sometimes.”
Scorpius kisses him, putting one hand on the back of his neck, snake-quick, and pulling their
mouths together. He tastes like dill and lemon and Pep-Up Potion, and he’s moving his mouth
against Albus’ like he’s trying to say something.
“I’m sick,” Scorpius supplies when they pull apart. “Sorry about that. It’s probably contagious.”
Albus will care slightly more when he falls ill the next week and it turns out that Scorpius doesn’t
know how to make any sort of soup, but for now he pecks up on his pinkened nose and kisses
him again, thoroughly.
“So we can try this?” he says.
“Yes,” Scorpius replies. “We can.”
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