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The Hidden Room
Why?
It was always the question they asked, when they heard
that she’d married him. Why Snape, they’d ask, why on earth choose him?
It was as if they thought she was under some sort of
obligation to explain her relationship, whilst the rightness of their
choices could be taken for granted. As if Lavender and Seamus were somehow
destined for each other. Though it seemed to her that anyone with a pretty
face would have done for Lavender, and anyone with a pulse for Seamus, which
was cruel and probably only half-true. But was it any worse than the blank
look of incomprehension, that they didn’t even have the courtesy to hide,
when they found out who she’d married?
Arrogant – and nosy – little shits.
She knew they wouldn’t understand, so there was no point
trying to explain, and she’d taken to fobbing people off with the platitude
that he was different when you got to know him.
It was the literal truth, after all. It was just a
half-truth, carefully edited for their understanding.
The whole truth was too complex to be easily condensed.
Severus was like an old, ramshackle house. It was gloomy and forbidding from
the outside, looming up at you and trying to frighten you into going away.
The door was heavy and difficult to open, and, once through, the entrance
hall was no more promising. Like all good wizarding houses, it was bigger on
the inside than on the outside, and there seemed to be hundreds of rooms.
The first rooms you entered were cold and uninviting, and it was easy to see
that most people would turn back, but if you pressed on then there were
other rooms that were well-cared for with light and warmth and plump
inviting sofas.
Of course, it was a tricksy house, and you couldn’t
assumed that, just because one path had worked last time that it would work
the next time you came to call, but you learned to tell when a corridor had
moved or a door had been hidden and ignored the attempts to lead you astray.
After several visits, the front door would open before
you had a chance to push at it, and the journey to living rooms seemed
shorter and easier, and you thought you’d learned all the secrets of the
house.
Until one day, when you spotted the door hidden in the
library, and you managed to half-open it and squeeze yourself though the
small gap to find that this was where the owner of the house lived. And you
knew no one else had ever been here but you and him.
It was a little untidy, with clothes scattered on the
floor, and books left half-open on the table that sat by the side of the
large bed with the covers thrown back and rumpled sheets as if the owner had
just left.
There was no one there, but you knew you were being
watched.
Being a neat sort of person you spend a couple of
minutes picking up the books, and putting them in a neat pile with the
reader’s place carefully marked, and the clothes folded and put on the
chair.
Then, you dimmed the lights a little, shed your clothes
and slipped under the covers. A shadow, a little darker than the rest,
detached itself from the others, and then there was someone next to you
wrapping you in their arms.
So, how could you explain that to Lavender when she
asked why? That you felt that the Hidden Room was home, and that he made
ordinary, prosaic Hermione think in poetry.
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