Astoria Greengrass was feeling rebellious.
The ruse was that she had arranged a meeting with one of her dressmakers in London that would require most of the early afternoon, to discuss and fit her for a few new styles and designs. While Astoria
was planning to stop by the shop, that wasn’t her primary objective and certainly would not take several hours. No, her goal for the day was simple: to make it to her weekly (though more often than not it was closer to monthly) ballet class, unnoticed. It was a pathetic sort of rebellion, but the small sliver of freedom was a breath of fresh air for the nineteen-year-old. She had taken quickly to dance as a child; while her parents allowed regular lessons as she was growing up, they had recently made clear their express disapproval of the slight muscle tone and mass she had gained (apparently it was “unladylikeâ€) as well as the time it took away from other “important responsibilitiesâ€: like attending parties, making connections, and having new dresses made. Not to mention that her
condition tended to complicate things.
So the demure witch yielded effortlessly to her parents’ superior expertise, arranging a meeting with her dressmaker straightaway to please them without so much as a syllable of protest. She did, however, insist on attending the shop in person – as opposed to having the dressmaker come to the house, as her mother suggested – given that she was feeling rather well and the weather was mild. But all the while, her gears had been turning.
That was the beauty of being the obedient child all these years, she felt; of being observant, clever, careful. Any tenuous suspicion ended there, and Astoria was essentially free to do as she pleased – provided that she covered her tracks sufficiently. This was made substantially easier since she had come of age and, thus, no longer required a chaperone when she wanted to venture out. The young woman who ran the studio was in her late twenties and also from a more traditional Pureblood (or at least mostly Pureblood) family: she understood Astoria’s plight all too well, offering her private lessons to maintain secrecy. It felt ridiculous, to have to go sneaking about like she did for something so seemingly insignificant, but it was one of the few ways to guarantee absolute privacy. She needed to feel as though she exerted
some degree of control in her own life, however covertly, at least for the time being.
Astoria could feel the tension leaving her shoulders as each stride brought her closer to the small studio, its teal blue awning fluttering a welcome in the harsh March gale. But her heart sank clear through the cobblestones as she drew close enough to read the sign on the door:
CLOSED TODAY DUE TO UNEXPECTED ILLNESS.
APOLOGIES FOR THE INCONVENIENCE.
“Perfect,†she muttered darkly, shaking her head at the irony. Certainly, the brunette was sorry that the older woman wasn’t feeling well – Astoria considered her a friend, after all – but the timing was especially unfortunate. Usually it was
she who was unwell.
Now what?
But then, as if drawn by a magnet, the youngest Greengrass cast a glance over her right shoulder to a visually familiar intersection a few blocks ahead – and her pulse quickened. There was something inexplicably exhilarating about the potential to explore an area that had been heretofore forbidden to her…
Glancing about surreptitiously, Astoria drew the hood of her cloak closer around her face and set off towards the signage, feeling a tiny shockwave of excitement mixed with anxiety in the pit of her stomach. It was undoubtedly a stupid, reckless decision that the sensible witch would otherwise never pursue – but today was an exception.
Taking a steadying breath, she turned the corner and vanished.
The alleyway she had chosen was narrow – so narrow that two people would need to press uncomfortably close to pass abreast. Fortunately, the stretch before her was deserted, and she pushed ahead before she had a chance to change her mind.
It was uncanny how quickly the atmosphere changed from the wide, bright, bustling expanse of Diagon Alley to the dingy, stifling, deserted one that characterized Knockturn Alley. The air was heavy and damp, and Astoria couldn’t help but habitually step over the various substances of questionable origin pooled on the slick cobblestones. Perhaps this wasn’t such a grand rebellion, after all.
She was intent on visiting Borgin & Burkes, however. While not at all interested in
performing dark magic, the nineteen-year-old was nothing short of enthralled by magical artifacts and the mere nature and power of magic in general. It was common knowledge that the shop had many rare (and dangerous) objects, and the intellectual was determined to lay eyes on them herself.
She hadn’t gone much farther than the length of a Quidditch pitch before a faint rustling behind her announced the presence of someone – or something – nearby. Reflexively, her heart began to pound in her chest as her awareness heightened, palms tingling as a cold sweat broke out on them.
Just a rat, she tried to dismiss; but then she
felt the presence of something much larger, immediately followed by a decidedly non-rodent articulation that made the hairs on the back of her neck stand on end.
“Weeell, now, aren’ ye a fine wee lass? Wot are ye doin’, all by yerself?â€Out of context, the words were harmless enough – but the tone in which they was spoken set off every alarm bell in her head. Astoria closed her eyes briefly in a mixture of shock, fear, and a twinge of annoyance; her step faltered and her knee-jerk reflex was to stop dead, but she forced her legs to keep moving at a regular pace. If she sped up, he would know he’d frightened her. If she ignored him, though… maybe he’d get bored and wander off. But even as she ran through the hypothetical options, she knew full well that the latter was extremely unlikely.
And that was before his grip closed around her small wrist, evidently annoyed at having been ignored.
“Don’ be rude. I gave ye a compliment – now, wot d’ye say?â€Astoria bit back a gasp of pain as his grip tightened; she could already
feel her hypersensitive skin bruising, contouring his grimy fingers.
‘
Mother wouldn’t like the look of that,’ she thought dryly, feeling oddly detached from the situation despite her mounting fear. She was certainly in a very uncompromising position; her wandwork was quite good, but she would need to actually
reach her wand first, and without drawing attention to it. If it came to needing to run… well, she was clean out of luck on that one. A surge of lightheadedness pulsed through her, and she clenched her jaw tightly.
‘
For the love of Merlin, now is not
the time,’ she told her body irritably.
Summoning every ounce of courage and poise, she turned slowly to face her aggressor, her hazel eyes boring into his muddy brown ones.
“Might I suggest,
sir, that you kindly release me.†Her normally friendly tone was now edged with steel; she could only hope that the jackhammering of her heart wouldn’t give away her fear. She made no move to pull away but her fingers twitched ever so slightly for her wand, her mind whirring as she weighed her options. “I have an appointment to keep presently. Woe be to you if you make me late.â€
Astoria was so dialed-in to her current predicament that she almost didn’t detect a second set of footsteps approaching from behind her. Her pulse quickened and her mouth went dry: her situation was about to get markedly better – or markedly worse.