Michael didn’t like to turn his collar up -- it made him look ostentatious, and vaguely vampiric -- but it was too cold not to, so he was trudging ominously through the muddy snow, twiddling with a thread coming loose on the elbow patch of his long coat -- it was older than he was, and long since overdue to fall apart, but he didn’t want it to.
His sisters had been well; he had wanted (1.) to apologise for Christmas -- mostly in the hope that they would rush to say Christmas hadn’t been his fault (a bust, as Esther had fixed him with a severe look and said,
you should be) -- and (2.) to engage them in pointless discussion of Quidditch and politics --
Mavis had a lot to say about all this Obliviation stuff, which had led them to (3.) asking about his girlfriend. Back in the day, they hadn’t cared at all who he was dating (back in the day he had done his utmost to come across as though he lived a lifestyle analogous to a hermit or a monk.)
Both his sisters had to study, which he suspected was their front for wanting to go hang out with their friends instead, so he had only been allowed to entertain them for about a butterbeer and a baked potato each before they’d made their respective excuses and departed, and Michael -- who hadn’t been to Hogsmeade in almost a year -- went wandering. It was late enough in the school year that the crowds of students had thinned out a little, the novelty of the village less interesting than the warmth in the castle.
The little blonde coming at him was looking at him like she recognised him; this happened less and less as the Hogwarts student populace grew up, but he was pretty sure the year above Esther had overlapped with his first seventh year at Hogwarts, and Esther was a sixth year. He opted to ignore it -- if he didn’t bother her, she wouldn’t bother him -- and to keep trudging. They passed each other, and Michael reached up to rub his nose, and then she bothered him anyway.
She remembered his name, so he turned around, holding his arms out in a
â€this is he†way, and then it sank in for him, too, who she was. God help him, he didn’t remember her name at all -- it was Wanda, or Wendy, or Winnie, or something like that -- he cleared his throat to override the instinctive way it’d closed up and said, “Well, damn me. How are you? I haven’t seen you in --†he didn’t think he’d even sought her out afterwards, so it could easily have been five years -- “a while.â€