Laughing along with her friend, with her free hand Ginny gathered her skirts so as to more easily negotiate the crowd without getting stepped on (and save her
dress from a similar sticky fate as the sole of Cordy’s foot). Ginny’s dress had been bustled hours ago, but the remnants of her train were still a bit longer than the rest of her skirt (no doubt shaken looser thanks to her dancing)
and she was now barefoot.
“What kind of garbage neighbor would I be, to skip another Weasley wedding?â€â€œDunno…†she began with sarcastic nonchalance, “a batshit Dark Wizard wreaking havoc on Britain is a decent enough reason for the first, I s’pose.†She scrunched up her face dramatically to express her distaste, but snorted at Cordy’s next comment. “I'm definitely telling him that, he’ll be
crushed.â€
She let her friend drive the ship on the drinks, cracking a grin at the name of the first.
“…one for me and one for Missus Potter.â€Hearing Cordy address her as such aloud sent a pleasant tingling sensation rippling through Ginny’s chest; it sounded so
strange, but so
right at the same time. Sometimes it felt surreal that the ridiculous doodles she’d drawn all over her notebooks when she was ten years old (and even into her early teenage years, she was embarrassed to admit) had actually come to fruition.
She and
Hermione had discussed whether to change one’s name or not at length on many different occasions – and almost every time, Ginny had a slightly different opinion on the matter. She’d always enjoyed going against the grain, and the idea of raising her middle finger at stuffy traditions and the greater patriarchy was an appealing concept. Her family was important to her, of course, and she’d established an independent name for herself as a Weasley… so there was that. At the same time, the Weasley name
certainly wasn’t going extinct anytime soon – but the Potters could use a revival, and it would be especially meaningful to share that with Harry. Would she hurt her mum’s feelings if she replaced ‘Molly’ with ‘Weasley’ and picked up ‘Potter’? She wasn’t sure about a double-barreled surname; alternatively, did she
want two middle names? Ginevra Molly Weasley(-)Potter might be a bit much…
What Ginny
did know was that 1) she wouldn’t ask Harry to change his (though just imagining the uproar it would put the media in was almost worth doing), and 2) she’d bet her career that Hermione would either keep ‘Granger’ or double-barrel.
She’d spaced out, ruminating yet again on all of this – but Ginny had caught one unfamiliar word which brought her back to the present (though oblivious to the fact that Cordy had ordered them
three rounds of drinks).
“…The hell’s a ‘Matrix’?â€
When she didn’t get an immediate response, she turned her head to follow Cordelia’s gaze: where
Michael was standing with a group of his friends. In almost every respect, inviting one’s ex-boyfriend to one’s wedding was an… uncommon… practice – but at the same time, there was no bond quite like that forged through shared trauma. They were all inexorably linked, after all: the Order and the D.A. most tangibly, but also anyone who’d stood up to the darkness in whatever way they could.
Then the girls’ eyes met again, and with the subsequent comment it seemed it was now Ginny’s turn to swat at her friend’s arm (which she did with alacrity). Perhaps not all that much time had passed since Ginny and Michael had been ‘an item’ (though sometimes it felt like a lifetime ago), in the grand scheme of things, but a
lot had transpired. They certainly weren’t quite the same people they’d been when they’d met at the Yule Ball eight-and-a-half years ago. She opened her mouth to say as much but, for once, held her tongue when it seemed that Cordelia’s comment had been a lighthearted one-off and she was already on to the next thing.
Ginny smiled back with a roguish wink (and doing her best to suppress her
bloody hyperactive blush reflex, despite not being embarrassed whatsoever by the implications of said “sleepless honeymoonâ€).
“To lifelong friends, and great excuses to have a drink with them,†she replied, clinking her shotglass with her friend’s and downing its contents – and wrinkling her nose only slightly at the assault on her tastebuds.
“Merlin, who introduced you to
that one?†she asked, plucking the empty glass from her friend’s hand, stacking it in her own, and placing them on the makeshift bartop.
“Anyway…†she continued, sweeping a rogue curl out of her face with her now-free hand, “what’s the latest and greatest with top journalist Cordelia Leighton? Any juicy stories unfolding? Hot travel recommendations?â€
The bride could swear she was already feeling the effects of the alcohol: a pleasant warm sensation in her throat, traveling up to her head to lighten the weight of the tiara and her curls and simultaneously settling down into her chest. She let go the handful of her skirt, letting the soft fabric settle heavily on the tops of her bare feet.