The world's just spinning / A little too fast
If things don't slow down soon we might not last
So just for a moment, let's be still
If things don't slow down soon we might not last
So just for a moment, let's be still
September, 1865 — Hogwarts Grounds
Benedict Sterling
Around the time of his end-of-year exams before summer, Ari had discovered a new study spot in the grounds, a patch of grass tucked between the greenhouses and the slope down to the quidditch pitch, that was far enough from the path to be quiet, was always more deserted than the library, and caught the afternoon sunlight to boot.
He didn't have a great deal of homework to work on, yet - he was only a couple of weeks into fourth year (and naturally, had spent the summer reading ahead in all his new textbooks) - but he had settled on the grass there anyway, digging his Potions book out of his schoolbag to look over the instructions before their next class, and making the most of the September sunshine in the meantime. Merlin knew it wouldn't last long against the tide of autumn.
He could see some distant figures practising on the quidditch pitch, but someone was flying up here, not so far off; a boy in the year below. Ari found himself glancing up at him from over his book every few minutes. (Perhaps this was not the most productive spot to sit, after all.) It was interesting enough to watch, though - he hadn't been on a broomstick since the flying lessons of first year, which had primarily served to teach Ari how easily he got giddy. Which meant quidditch was a firm impossibility.
The dark-haired boy - he was on the Slytherin team, if Ari recalled correctly - seemed rather comfortable on his broom, though. It was hard to tell if he was actually practising or just showing off, or throwing himself into loop-the-loops and speeding about for the sheer fun of it.
Ari returned his eyes to his book, lest he get dizzy from just watching.
He could hear that the boy had gone into another dive - a fast one - by the way the air was whistling around him. When Ari next glanced up, it was just in time to see him narrowly avoid the ground, crashing instead into a nearby clump of bushes.
He didn't have a great deal of homework to work on, yet - he was only a couple of weeks into fourth year (and naturally, had spent the summer reading ahead in all his new textbooks) - but he had settled on the grass there anyway, digging his Potions book out of his schoolbag to look over the instructions before their next class, and making the most of the September sunshine in the meantime. Merlin knew it wouldn't last long against the tide of autumn.
He could see some distant figures practising on the quidditch pitch, but someone was flying up here, not so far off; a boy in the year below. Ari found himself glancing up at him from over his book every few minutes. (Perhaps this was not the most productive spot to sit, after all.) It was interesting enough to watch, though - he hadn't been on a broomstick since the flying lessons of first year, which had primarily served to teach Ari how easily he got giddy. Which meant quidditch was a firm impossibility.
The dark-haired boy - he was on the Slytherin team, if Ari recalled correctly - seemed rather comfortable on his broom, though. It was hard to tell if he was actually practising or just showing off, or throwing himself into loop-the-loops and speeding about for the sheer fun of it.
Ari returned his eyes to his book, lest he get dizzy from just watching.
He could hear that the boy had gone into another dive - a fast one - by the way the air was whistling around him. When Ari next glanced up, it was just in time to see him narrowly avoid the ground, crashing instead into a nearby clump of bushes.