Blood Bound | By : Vashka Category: Harry Potter > Het - Male/Female > Draco/Hermione Views: 16006 -:- Recommendations : 0 -:- Currently Reading : 0 |
Disclaimer: I do not own Harry Potter and am making no money from this story, all Harry Potter copyrights belong to J.K. Rowling. |
Ron’s face flushed bright crimson, and he clenched his hands into tight fists.
As Ron retorted angrily, Hermione rolled her eyes. Oh, Ron. Why must you fall for his stupid lines every time? Sometimes you’re just too easy… Hermione flushed at this traitorous thought, and concentrated on staring sufficiently balefully at Malfoy’s sneering face.
The exchange was so familiar that they might as well have done it via rote memory. Hermione barely listened to the sneers and insults and wondered at the dark circles under Malfoy’s eyes and the lines of strain around his mouth that hadn’t been there a few months ago.
“… spineless, inbred coward…”
He doesn’t have the complexion for stress, Hermione thought absently.
“… that’s right, you’re too poor properly groom yourself…”
Formalities concluded, Draco swept to the front of the line, leaving the Gryffindors behind him.
“Does anyone know an Elizabethan play about the battle of the sexes that begins with the letter M?”
000
Mandrag’s Café wasn’t the best café in wizarding London, nor was it the most popular. On that particular morning, however, it boasted a phenomenal increase in its usual Saturday morning patronage. Being next to the telephone booth entrance to the Ministry, it had always survived on the convenience of location, rather than excellent service or wonderful cuisine. Being that this was an unusually busy morning at said Ministry, Mandrag’s was a surprised benefactor of the strange Ministry mandate.
The small, wobbly tables were packed with young wizards and witches, most of them trying to forget the ruination of their Saturday morning, and brightening it up with a cheerful breakfast out. Unfortunately, the staff at the café had not heard of the mandate and the waitstaff was unable to accommodate the influx of new patrons, leaving the dining experience something to be desired.
One table in particular received distinctly sub-par service, even by Mandrag standards. Three infamous wizards sat in a dim corner booth with cracked, blood-red vinyl cushions. They seemed completely unfazed by the palpable dislike of the waitress, most of the patrons and the world in general.
Gregory Goyle sipped on his skinny raspberry macchiato (extra whip, chocolate drizzle) slowly even though it was ice cold by the time the waitress had gotten around to bringing it to the table. He put it down and stirred the pink beverage vigorously with a bent spoon, glaring at it all the while, as if hoping to revive some flavor into the disappointing beverage.
Giving up, he said, musingly. “I still haven’t been able to dig up anything about this particular Ministry mandate. It’s driving me batty.”
Blaise raised an elegant brow. “I’m surprised. Your contacts are top notch.”
Greg scowled, the expression carving deep lines onto his stern face. “Usually. Right now they can’t tell me shite about this mandate. It is not sitting right with me, especially now that the ministry has my blood sitting in their vault.”
Blaise took a sip of his sludgy cappuccino, his fingers tapping restlessly against the cup, his elegantly manicured nails making annoying click-click noises on the porcelain. “Peculiar. Very peculiar. There are endless magical uses for human blood, and none of them sit well with me.”
“I know,” Greg said grimly. “I have a bad feeling about this. But as former enemies of the state what else can we do but obey like good little citizens?”
“Draco? What’s your take?”
“Couldn’t care less,” Draco sneered, annoyed at being pulled out of his private musings.
Blaise rolled his eyes and the conversation resumed, this time without even lip service paid to Draco’s presence.
Draco didn’t give a flying fig what Blaise or Greg thought, as his mind was elsewhere. The Ministry mandate bothered him, of course. The whole bloody setup practically screamed ‘nefarious plot.’ But as his usual Ministry contacts could not bribe, threaten nor get their hands on the information, he triaged that worrisome annoyance farther down his mental list. If the war had taught his anything, it was to expend energy on problems he could do something about, and leave the rest for later.
He sipped his coffee slowly while beating down competing feelings of exhaustion and frustration. Was there no acceptable female on this entire godforsaken island?
He had to find a wife, and soon. He was the only heir to the Malfoy fortune, and with that came significant responsibilities. Chief among them was marrying a pureblood and popping out a passel of brats.
Draco enjoyed his bachelorhood as much as the next bloke, and certainly thought twenty-three was too young to marry.
His parents thought differently.
If he didn’t want to be saddled with an ugly, stupid but undoubtedly pure cow, Draco had to take matters into his own hands.
And now that Father is… Draco cut off that line of thought abruptly and concentrated on the task at hand. Namely, finding his future wife. While the other former Slytherins were conversing quietly, he snapped open his briefcase and leafed through his recent correspondence. Finding the letter he had in mind, he quickly re-read it.
Draco Darling,
Your Father and I have agreed to your request. You may continue the search for a bride on your own. However, we are not prepared to wait forever. You may have until the end of the year to claim her hand, or we will take the decision out of yours.
Your loving Mother
Much better than he was expecting, but less than he had hoped. The end of the year was four months away. Still, it wasn’t a total loss. Shoving his half-finished breakfast to the side, he quickly scribbled a reply.
Mother,
I am most thankful for your consideration of my unusual request. Be assured I will procure a suitable bride by the appointed time.
Your Son,
Draco
He folded the note quickly and slipped it into his jacket pocket. The first step had been cleared, but there was still the task of finding said bride within the time limit.
Feeling a headache coming on, Draco leaned on the breakfast table, narrowing his eyes a little as he mentally ran over his list of options. In his mind, he started to methodically make notes. Let us go over this again, shall we? Not that I missed anything the first time.
Pansy Parkinson, Daphne Greengrass, and Millicent Bulstrode were sitting a nearby booth, sipping cappuccinos and giggling over a letter Daphne had received from an admirer she had met while on Holiday in the French Riviera. Ugh, marrying one of them would be like marrying my sister. If I had one, of course.
The younger Slytherins had the correct breeding, but again, there was no mystery, no intellectual challenge in marrying someone who was so similar to one’s self.
Bored with the prospects in his backyard, Draco decided to broaden his horizons. A radical thought, but if one was going to research anything, he reasoned, one must be thorough. Leaning back in his seat, he glanced about the cafe while munching on his last muffin and scoped out his possible prey.
His gaze first landed on a group of former Hufflepuffs. Pathetic. As if I would ever touch one of those bints. Still for the sake of his future, he must steel himself to mentally check every possibility, no matter how repulsive they may seem.
Hannah Abbot was sitting at the coffee bar and was currently making calf-eyes at Ernie McMillian, giggling every so often at one of his comments. Draco retched a little in his mouth.
A knot of female Ravenclaws sat by the sad, crumbling fireplace. Draco recognized Lisa Turpin and Padma Patil from his year, and thought a few of the other girls looked somewhat familiar. They looked to be discussing something very seriously, very sedately.
They interested him about as much as watching his mother knit. He liked a girl with a little more passion, a little more bite.
And Turpin had on a tweed jacket. Tweed.
Enough said.
The rest of the café was sadly filled with couples and men.
He was doomed.
I might as well let Mother and Father arrange a marriage for me. I’m not even sure why I bother.
As Draco contemplated a lengthy and undoubtedly futile sojourn to the continent, the café door gave another cheerful chime. He drained his over-brewed, bitter coffee and contemplated the possibility of caffeine jitters versus feeling completely alert. He glanced at the new arrivals and his mood soured even more.
A cuppa to go, then.
Of course, Potty, Weseal and the Mudblood had to patronize the same café as he did, at the same time. Of course.
The adulation of the Gryffindorks was almost too much for Draco to handle. The staff practically fell over themselves to seat them. The manager came out to wait on them personally. They probably would get the meal on the house.
“I think we’ve overstayed our welcome,” Draco said bitterly. “Let’s pay the tab and leave.”
Blaise, always calm and composed, looked amused by his reaction but said, “Let’s.”
But the check was a long time coming. Their surly waitress looked at them sourly and sulked off to hover around Team Idiot like the rest of the lemmings, leaving Draco seriously considering whether to dine-and-ditch for the first time in his life.
As he waited, he glared at their table, somewhat grateful that they didn’t notice the group of Slytherins, but also somewhat offended. However, wounded pride aside, it afforded him an opportunity to really study the group in a way that he had not since Hogwarts.
It somewhat surprised him how little Potter and Weasley had changed. Most everyone else had either gained a little weight, cut their hair, changed their clothing style, or something in the past five years. Put them into their school uniforms and they could have stepped into class without missing a beat.
Probably so that they would be recognized more easily.
Prats.
Granger, however…
Granger had not been an attractive child. She was a small thing, and had been absolutely overwhelmed by her own features. Everything about her screamed too much. Too much hair, too much teeth, too much eyes, too much mouth.
However, he had to admit that by the end of their years at Hogwarts, she had grown somewhat less cow-like. Her face had grown and settled in to a pleasant evenness, her features well balanced. Her teeth, thanks to him, were small and straight. Her hair, of course, had still been a complete nightmare.
Yet when she wanted to, she could even look pretty.
Not pretty… His mind whispered. He brushed it off and continued his study of the girl.
The last time he had really paid any notice to her had been during and after the last battle against the Dark Lord. Then, she had been painfully thin, almost wasted looking. The constant stress she had been living under had made her skin wan and pale, dark bags hung under her eyes, and her hair had been worse than ever, snarled and matted.
Now… Well, now she looked positively lush in comparison. Her face no longer looked thin and gaunt, her cheekbones no longer knife-like, but striking. Her lips still hovering on the border of ridiculously full, but they were now balanced by the rest of her face. Her brown eyes were wide and almost too big in her heart-shaped face, but the sharp, biting intelligence kept her expression from vacant and naive. Her hair, that Achilles heel, was still itching for a good hair product, but had been tamed to where the frizz was actually somewhat charming rather than revolting.
She was still too much. Too much intelligence, too much snark, too much abrasiveness, too much lushness, too much hair, too much lips.
She was the exact opposite of everything he was looking for in a woman.
The sour-faced waitress had finally given them their bill. Draco put down a galleon for a nine knut tab, but didn’t want to wait for the change.
“Draco,” Greg said, mouth curving snidely. “Do you want to give the idiot brigade a hard time?”
Draco felt an uncomfortable churning sensation in his gut as he stared at the table across the room. “No. Let’s just get out of here.”
So Draco, Blaise and Greg left the gloomy café quietly, and the Gryffindor Trio never noticed.
000
A/N: A new story? Yeah I know. I resisted writing this story for months, but it won’t be silent anymore. Unfortunately. So here is the beginning of my Marriage Law fic. *sigh* Who knew I could be so cliché? Many, many, many thanks to Ravyn for being my beta and overall writing buddy. Without her, none of this would have happened!
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