December 24th, 1885; the wee hours — The Carmichael Home
The dog—no, it was a wolf, she realized—snarled at Virginia before lunging for her. Instead of its teeth sinking into the soft, white flesh of her neck, however, the overlarge beast soared right over her as she ducked. Shaking, Ginny straightened and turned round to see where it had gone, inexplicably able to flee. Lowered on its haunches, the canine turned now to face an entirely unaware George. Though she opened her mouth to call out to him, no sound would leave her desperate tongue. On the ground between woman and wolf lay the mangled body of the family's former maid.
Suddenly, the maid opened her eyes.
"You did this," she said dispassionately as the wolf launched itself at George.
Virginia Carmichael sat up in bed with a start, chest heaving with the effort of her heavy panting. The hair around her face and the sheets beneath her back, on her pillow, were damp with the sweat that glistened in the light of the moon outside her unshuttered window. A night before, that same light had forced Ginny into the same skin as the beast from her dreams. Now, though, the waning orb was merely a ticking clock, one whose hands she knew would once again strike midnight in a month's time.
It had been some time since the witch had taken Divination, but even so, she knew dreams that vivid—dreams from which the reek of stale blood still clung in her nostrils, making her want to retch—meant something. Could mean something. Something dire.
Once her breath settled, she peeled back her sheets and swung her legs to the floor, padding softly to her clothes stand to retrieve the thin, silk robe she had received as an early holiday gift from Gwenda. Though the limited light present could not reveal them, sprigs of lavender were embroidered along the cuffs and hem, and the faint smell of the flower drifted into her nose as she put it on over her nightclothes, replacing the stench of her dream. Another deep breath to calm herself, and Virginia was in the hallway, closing her bedroom door softly behind her.
It was a journey she had made before, the forty-three steps of her childhood decreasing to a mere twenty-one as her legs lengthened with time. She past the familiar portrait of a great-great-grandfather—non-moving, for he had found magical portraits unsettling—and an antique Greek vase before arriving at her destination.
Gingerly, Ginny rapped at the door before opening it a crack, eyes closed for the sake of propriety, as she poked her head in.
"Elliot?"

— bee is a goddamn wizard ❤ —