Subject: "Miss Saibhir?"
Author:
Posted on: 2018-02-23 20:16:00 UTC

Faolan's head jerked off her chest and her cheeks pinked when Jessica snickered beside her. "Yes! Yes, sorry, what is it?"

"I asked you to pass your essay up," Professor Longbottom said gently.

"Right, yes, of course," Faolan stammered, scrambling for her bag and digging through it. There were her textbooks, and her Charms essay, and her star chart for Astronomy that night, but her essay over fanged geraniums was nowhere to be found. "Er." She looked up, face burning with embarrassment. "I think I forgot it in my dorm, Professor."

Professor Longbottom nodded as he collected the remaining essays. "Would you mind seeing me after class, Miss Saibhir?"

She nodded, keeping her eyes on the table in front of her. Jessica leaned over to Denise and whispered something, and the two girls giggled.

The bell rang and students rose from their seats, and Professor Longbottom had to raise his voice to be heard over the clamor. "Elspeth, ten points to Ravenclaw for answering all my questions correctly. Next week, we'll be starting on Screechsnaps, so don't come late!"

Faolan slowly approached Professor Longbottom's desk, stifling a yawn. She'd stayed up all night working on not just her essay, but Jessica's and Denise's and Alisha's. And tonight she had to do their manticore diagrams, and start on their Transfiguration homework—

She was jolted out of her thoughts when Professor Longbottom snapped his briefcase shut. "I didn't want to say something in class that would be seen as favoritism," he began, "but if you can run back to your dorm and bring me your essay before the end of lunch, I won't count you late."

Relief spread across Faolan's face and she nodded. "Thank you, Professor," she said. "I'll go get it right now—"

She turned to leave, but Professor Longbottom cleared his throat. "I hope you know you can talk to me if there's anything bothering you."

Faolan turned back, forcing a smile. "Nothing's bothering me, Professor," she said, internally cringing at the thought of what her dorm mates might do to her if she tattled. "But thank you for the offer."

Professor Longbottom studied her face, her gaunt cheeks and sunken eyes with their dark circles. He knew something most certainly was bothering the girl, but without seeing proof for himself, his hands were tied. "Alright," he finally said. "I'll see you later."

"Bye," Faolan said, and bolted for the door. She had to get to her essay before her dorm mates could.

She sprinted across the grounds, praying nobody could be bothered to look twice at her lurching gait—up the wide stone steps—across the entrance hall—up another flight of stairs—another—another—

"Doxy bites," she panted when she reached the portrait of the Fat Lady, and it swung open. She scrambled through the portrait hole and drew on her last reserves of energy to run up the stairs to the girls' dorm, sending up a silent prayer of thanks that they hadn't decided to flatten on her today.

She was too late. Of course she was too late. Her bedside table was empty, and when she checked inside her trunk and under the bed, it was nowhere to be found.

Her dorm mates would be in the Great Hall now, she knew, and Caitlyn had taken to haunting the library in preparation for their O.W.L.s, so that refuge was no longer safe. Faolan trudged back down the stairs, resigned to spending another lunch period in Moaning Myrtle's bathroom.

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