°°° SPARROW. °°°

Sparrow’s eyes flew open. It was dark, well before dawn. Jill’s warm embrace was about her. But she would have to leave it, for in the moment her eyes had opened she remembered what she had missed last night – the meeting with Miranda. She had forgotten to even beg a postponement.

°°° THE WALKWAY BETWEEN THE ASTRONOMY AND THE DRAGON TOWERS. MEET ME THERe. °°°

⋄⋄ RIGHT RIGHT, I’M REALLY SORRY. I’LL BE THERE SHORTLY. ⋄⋄

°°° YOU’RE ALWAYS SHORTLY. °°°

⋄⋄ OH, EVERYONE IS SHORTLY TO YOU.⋄⋄

Sparrow slid out of Jill’s arms. It was thankfully still warm within the curtains of the now-repaired four-poster. Courtesy mostly of Jill, who was a furnace all by herself. The girl shifted in her sleep, looking a little uneasy, as if feeling the loss – Sparrow laid a gentle kiss on Jill’s cheek. That would have to do for the moment. Jill smiled faintly.

Sparrow took a deep breath, and steeled herself for the cold, before opening the curtains. It would be but a moment for her to find her wand and cast a warming charm, but in that moment the cold was stealing into her bones, her fingers and toes aching in protest, even before she had to put them on the cold wooden floor.

Not a moment after she stood, she felt slender arms wrapping about her, and she nearly gasped aloud.

"Am I a decent substitute?" whispered Jocasta. "I couldn’t match Jill, but maybe I can do what I can."

"Mmm." Sparrow leaned into the embrace. "Warm enough. What are you doing up then? Couldn’t sleep?"

"Sometimes I can’t," whispered Jocasta. "Sometimes it’s a little too loud in this head of mine, even with my girls here. Don’t worry about that, I’m doing better than I was. What are you doing up? Wanted to get your recitation done at the first little crack of dawn?"

"When did I even conk out last night?" said Sparrow. "Nine? I’d have had enough sleep even if I wasn’t an early bird."

"Oh no no," murmured Jocasta. "That’s why you’re awake. Why are you up, dear? Why are you leaving poor Jill to be alone?"

Sparrow tilted her head back to rest against Jocasta’s shoulder. "Had a meeting last night I missed. Figured I’d apologize this morning. But then I got woken up by her Sending, like she’s been waiting all night. Pfft. I’m the early bird and Miranda’s the night owl."

"And this is the time your schedules meet," murmured Jocasta. "So be it. Unsettling hour to be about, though, 3 AM is no time for any but the odd and the underhanded. And us, it seems...can I walk you to your meeting?"

"Miss me too much to let go?"

"Just want to make sure you don’t trip and fall down the stairs. Or whatever scrape you might get into today. Or at least I can be there with my wand when you crack your skull."

Sparrow glanced at the four-poster. "And leave poor Jill alone?"

"I’ll give her a kiss goodbye." Jocasta released Sparrow, leaving the girl to shiver again as she climbed back in through the curtains.

As Sparrow was retrieving her wand and casting a warming charm over herself, she could hear noises from the four-poster that sounded less like a gentle kiss goodbye and more like the two of them couldn’t consider letting go of each other. Nor indeed did they seem to be stopping, even after Sparrow had got all her day’s school uniform on. Sparrow cleared her throat pointedly.

Jill and Jocasta both tumbled out of the curtains laughing, their hair both in rumpled messes. "Run Sparrow," said Jocasta, eyes twinkling with mirth, "save yourself."

But it was too late, for here was Jill looming over her, hands cupping her cheeks, leaning down – hesitating –

Sparrow nodded eagerly.

Between the warming charm and the fire of Jill’s kiss, Sparrow was still sweating as she approached the door to the high walkway, arm-in-arm with Jocasta.

"I’m good from here," said Sparrow.

"You sure?" said Jocasta. "I wouldn’t mind hanging around, seeing the sunrise with you, listening to your adorable voice as you do your incantation."

Sparrow sighed. "Well, maybe I’m not so good from here. So good would be you and Jill with me. But this talk is personal stuff. Confidential. Asking after why Miranda’s eyes glow blue."

Jocasta hissed as she sucked air in through her teeth. "Right. I’ll just be waiting at some window, then." She kissed Sparrow on the top of her head, then patted her shoulder. "Good luck, little bird, and don’t freeze to death, alright? Love you." There was a small thump of air as she took the form of a fly and disappeared.

⋄⋄ AND I YOU, MY DEAR. ⋄⋄

• OH I KNOW. •

Sparrow steeled herself, and pushed open the door.

Immediately she regretted what the warming charm and Jill’s kiss had done to her, for in the chill of the night wind, her sweat turned against her, and she shivered. She should have brought an extra cloak, instead of relying on her uniform cloak and a charm. Even as she cast another warming charm upon her, she could tell it was fighting against the wind chill, and it always did more for her core than her extremities anyhow. She shoved her hands into her pockets, hoping the cloth would warm them well enough.

But it was not only the cold wind that set her to shivering. The figure standing at the battlements, pitch-dark against the starry sky, looming over her – if Sparrow was a little bird, then the figure felt like that creature which any little bird most feared to find in the dark night. She knew what it actually was – she knew who it was, for it had that striking quality of inexplicable visibility that could let Sparrow pick out any of her friends in pitch darkness. But, familiar friend though it was, still little Sparrow did not dare speak aloud.

"Lumos."

A little bead of light appeared at the end of a wand, held by the girl whose face was lit with a gentle golden glow – Miranda McClivert.

"My lady of the cauldron," whispered Sparrow. "You, uh...seem to have regained the full use of your arm. Did the potion just take a while to work?"

Miranda shook her head. "I just had to refine it a bit. A small tweak to the ingredients, a couple new things from my private greenhouse, a few precious minerals." She shrugged. "Not what I’d call too much trouble."

"Well I’ll tell you what’s trouble," said Sparrow, as she shivered. "Did we have to meet out here, where a little bird like me could freeze to death?"

Miranda looked apologetic. "I am sorry, my friend, I did not consider that issue. I am never affected by the cold, and I...had to indulge in a bit of dramatic flair, to feel like I was directing the conversation. In light of the topic at hand."

Sparrow shrugged. "It’s cool. It’s a touchy subject, I can imagine you’d feel nervous."

"Can you?" Miranda turned to the battlements, looking out over the grounds. "Goodness, if I could make you feel what I feel...you would never forgive me."

"What do you mean?"

Miranda sighed. "I’m not sure where to begin with this."

"I wish I could say you can take your time." Sparrow glanced at the horizon. "But there is only so much time before the dawn. Would you feel better doing this tonight, when we could take as many hours as you need?"

"No," said Miranda. "No, I… I need to get this over with." She looked up at the stars. "If I am to find a way to cease being so distant and cold, I can no longer let my anxiety dictate my actions."

"Then begin at the beginning," said Sparrow.

Miranda turned around and lowered herself to the stone of the walkway, sitting back against the crenelation. She patted the walkway beside her, and Sparrow sat there, her back against the cold stone.

"What is the beginning," murmured Miranda. "Well. Tell me, Sparrow, do you know the names of my parents?"

"Nnnnnno? Should I?"

"It is an unfair question. There is no way for you to have known, nor any way for anyone here, even the Headmistress, in fact. Let me ask you another question, and this will also be a trick. Do you know where I go home to, when school is not in session?"

"I will admit," said Sparrow, "I never sought to ask after the details of your home life. You could be living in Glasgow, or Liverpool or...you recognized Wren’s accent and – ah, shit, I’ve just run my mouth off –"

"I know about our favorite redhead, Sparrow."

"But –"

"You seriously think they wouldn’t have told me, of all people? When I’m busy brewing potions for Iffy?"

"Wren said they wanted to come out their way!" said Sparrow. "It is not my information to blab! I have my honor!"

Miranda was beaming. "That you do, sunshine, that you do. But you were saying about Wren’s accent?"

Sparrow took a deep breath. "As I was saying, before I was rudely interrupted by myself...you recognized Wren’s accent, and you seemed to know a bit of North American dialect, so I thought perhaps you were born somewhere on that continent. But then you’d...shit, where does Wren go in the summer? I bet they’re with Iffy..."

"These days yes," said Miranda. "But after they got apparently exiled to this island, they stayed at the castle for a couple summers before making an arrangement with Iphis’ family. I’m...not sure what their custody situation actually is, at this point, I have no idea what manner of communication or legal paperwork there could possibly be between Wizarding Britain and Flimsy Remnant of Chicago. They might actually be a ward of Hogwarts...the same way I am."

"Wait," said Sparrow, "you what?"

"And there is the answer," said Miranda. "Where do I go home to? Gryffindor tower. What is the name of my mother and father? It does not figure, and none here could ever have known, because they are dead, along with so many, and they died without records of their existence to their name, nor any such thing as paper records in my little village by the big river."

"Oh," murmured Sparrow. "I’m sorry."

"Should you be?" Miranda drew her knees to her shin and rested her arms on them. "There are none who ought to be sorry for me. Not after what I did."

"What did you –"

"I killed them."

Sparrow had been reaching a hand out to pat Miranda’s shoulder, but she froze, unable to comprehend what she had heard. Here was Miranda, the girl who had been so scrupulous of her honor that she had demanded forthright honesty towards her benefactor, heedless of the cost for her or anyone. Here was the one who demanded integrity, who abhorred duplicity, who would not permit hypocrisy – she who had only joined Sparrow’s crew when she knew that Sparrow would not direct anyone anywhere she would not go. This girl, of all children, had killed her own parents, and more.

Sparrow rested her hand gently on Miranda’s shoulder, prompting the girl to whip her head around and stare at Sparrow’s hand in shock, then meet her eyes, utterly bewildered – terrified. She shook Sparrow’s hand off and scooted sideways, her eyes downcast. "I appreciate the gesture, but right now I don’t want to be touched. Wouldn’t want to be even if I hadn’t just said what I said."

"Sorry." Sparrow let her arm fall. "Why...why did you kill them? What happened?"

Miranda looked up again, giving Sparrow a stony glare. "Is that the first question you ask? Not ‘how dare you’? Not ‘will you kill again’? Not even ‘will you face judgment’? Oh, but of course you would forgive your friend anything, you’re the perfect Hufflepuff, loyal to a fault and beyond. You think I deserve anything like pity?"

⋄⋄ I DON’T CARE WHAT YOU OR ANYONE MAY DESERVE. ALL I KNOW IS THAT YOU OF ALL PEOPLE COULD NOT HAVE DONE IT OUT OF MALICE. ALL I WANT TO KNOW IS WHAT THE FUCK HAPPENED. ⋄⋄

"You’re not exactly beating my allegations."

⋄⋄ TELL ME. PLEASE. YOU WANTED TO LET ME KNOW.⋄⋄

"Alright, alright…" Miranda took a deep breath, and sat up straight, sitting cross-legged and resting her hands in her lap, a model of practiced calm. She held silent, a moment, before speaking. "There were... two things that happened to me, at roughly the same time. One that could be expected of a magical child of the age of eight...and one that very much could not. But let us begin with the latter. Have you ever heard of such a thing as precocious puberty?"

"I’ve heard of late bloomers," said Sparrow. "As for early...hm. Among my own people in London puberty is a thing for 14 and 15-year-olds, really. I was surprised when I came to Hogwarts and people were already going through it, even moreso when I started myself! Is it a Wizard thing?"

"Only in the sense that magical people have retained better access to proper nutrition," said Miranda. "In days of old, before the super-abundance of food in the 20th century, children tended to begin that process at the ages of fifteen or even later, due to malnutrition."

"So what?" said Sparrow, "did you have the best food in the world in your tiny river village?"

"If only." Miranda sighed. "I wouldn’t have seen elders go off to starve and die to save the rest of us, were that the case. No. And, when I think about it...if I hadn’t been suffering the same malnutrition as everyone else, would this all have happened even earlier? Would my brain have been broken before I could form the words to understand it?"

"What do you mean?"

Miranda fell silent.

"Are you okay?"

Miranda laughed nervously. "Am I okay! Have I ever been? Maybe more okay now, I suppose, now that I have a path forward...now that I’m in a place that can stay my hand if I go out of control, a place where I can cloister myself for everyone’s safety without starving. A place where I can throw myself into the collaboration of research, and forget about pain, for a moment. I cannot imagine a better place, not even when I am old."

"Not many options left anyway," grumbled Sparrow. "But go on, what was that about your brain being broken?"

"The thing is," said Miranda, "I was not raised as a girl."

"I know that part," said Sparrow. "But, like, did you ever come out to your people?"

"Not at the outset. Because it was...not quite as if I was raised as a boy, either. I simply raised myself as a girl, and, being rather oblivious at that age, simply forgot to specify it to anyone. I played with the other girls and nobody objected, as far as I noticed. I considered myself one of them, and nobody said otherwise – and at that age we were all wearing the same hand-me-downs and salvaged goods anyway, so I genuinely didn’t see any gender distinctions in the people my own age. And as for the...certain body parts, between one’s legs, well, mine were different, but I didn’t see what effect that had."

"Until?"

"Until." Miranda dew her knees to her chin again. "Until I was eight and a half, and certain body parts began to make themselves known to me. Certain highly insistent parts, distracting, overwhelming...annoying as hell. Stupid. Useless. I couldn’t see the purpose. Until finally it was all explained to me, what I was, or what they thought I was – I at last objected, and everyone thought I was insane. Oh sure, I was going insane, what with sensations I could not comprehend and did not agree with – Pain, pain, only pain."

Sparrow hissed as she sucked air in through her teeth. "Yikes. I’m sorry."

"We’re getting to the part where I’m the one who has to be sorry," said Miranda. "What happened in my year of hell...it wasn’t just that everyone finally specified to me the different jobs that men and women were supposed to do, it’s that once they noticed what was happening to me, then they decided to tell me about what men and women were supposed to do with each other, and what my role was, and...what exactly I was supposed to do."

"I’m assuming you objected strenuously?"

"I tried to tell them that everything hurt and felt weird," said Miranda. " I tried to tell them that I didn’t want to do anything they were demanding because it sounded boring and stupid. But they wouldn’t listen. They kept insisting. They...were extremely keen, on the idea of everyone procreating."

"Oh gross," muttered Sparrow. "It’s like those people in the Slug Club."

"Worse than that," said Miranda, "there was even a religious aspect to it. Do you remember what I said, back at the Dragon Tower, about racism?"

"You sounded like you had a lot to say and weren’t going to say it."

"Yeah." Miranda sighed. "I couldn’t figure out how, without talking about, well, everything that happened involving this. It was...my little town, it was on the Gulf Coast. The South. I don’t know if that means anything to you as a Brit born and bred, but...let’s just say, in a world living in the aftermath of cataclysm, plenty of villages of white folks around were keen on keeping the black folks around them in their place. My village existed because a particular Methodist preacher gathered all of us, you know, banding together, and all that, but he was, well, keen on population growth, for effectively military reasons. So. Procreation. Mandated, to make up for the infant mortality rate, and never mind the mother’s mortality rate."

"Oh God," whispered Sparrow, "talk about the absolute worst place for someone who wants to be cool and logical like you."

"Not much logic going on in my head at that point," said Miranda. "I sure was trying. But it was mostly pain. Even...even to this day, to a certain extent."

"But you have your potions now," said Sparrow. "And you have your transfiguration now –"

"And both of those only do so much," said Miranda. "I’m not as good with wandwork as you – which is a high bar to clear, I’ll admit – so sometimes, the transfiguration doesn’t take. Some days it just fails too early. Those are the moments the old disgust takes me again...when it’s like I’m wearing a thorned collar that bites me with every move, when I can only breathe halfway between hyperventilating and hideous sobs. Those are the days I can only retreat, not wanting to be touched, not daring to be seen. But...it is easier, these days, knowing that I have an escape from my pain. It is no longer the same horror it was. But back then...when there was no escape...when all I was, was a pressure cooker. There was a day it all came to a head."

"How?"

"Well." Miranda took a deep breath in through her nose. "Well. There was an evening, where I was feeling at my lowest. It was a cold, clear, moonlit night. I was sitting around the fire with my family. One of my aunts said she’d finally had enough of my talking crazy, and that she might beat some sense into my head. And then another aunt said that she knew of a woman, a proper Conjure Woman in the next town over, who could...fix me."

Sparrow began to breathe more heavily as her heart beat faster. "They...what?"

"Don’t let your eyes glow yet, my friend. The story isn’t over yet. The point of it all is that the following morning, I was roused early from my sleep by my father, who said it was time to go. We would be going to the Conjure Woman, and I would be fixed.

"I bolted out of bed before Papa could say another word, and dashed out the door of the shack, only to run into a bunch of people waiting there for me – aunts, uncles, relatives, siblings, church ladies, oh, half the town was gathered there around the Preacher Man to see me off, wasn’t I just so lucky to have a chance to become a man. At least that was the part of the conversation I heard before I scampered through the crowd and away, and it took everyone half a second to realize I wasn’t going along quietly. So, they gave chase, and it was something of an even match, between their long legs and my ability to slip through gaps in things.

"I wound up crawling beneath a big thorn bush. Figured nobody would be able to follow me in there. But then my mother hacked through the thing with a machete and reached in and hauled me out – never mind what scrapes that left on me – so, I was caught. Still wasn’t going down without a fight, though, I kicked and I punched and I bit and – and then I saw people coming towards me with ropes and gags."

"So then," whispered Sparrow, "what happened?"

"Well." Miranda rested her head back against the stone. "Can you guess?"

"You said something about something appropriate for your age happening," said Sparrow. "And...that’s usually the age when Wizard kids express their magic, almost never in a controlled manner...and you said the cold can’t affect you...and people call you the Ice Queen...and you did that ice thing when we met with McGonagall…and you...you said you killed your parents..."

"Let me show you," said Miranda, "the shape of the first magic I ever did." She slowly rose to her feet, stepping out onto the middle of the walkway, standing tall. She faced away from Sparrow, spreading her palms out to her sides, looking up to the starry heavens. "Here I will let myself loose."

All at once the wind began to pick up, and Sparrow was forced to cast an extra warming charm upon herself, before hurriedly shoving her hands back into her pockets. She fervently wished for Jill’s embrace as the wind grew wilder and colder about the walkway. It hissed over the crenels, it whistled through the embrasures, it howled above. Sparrow wrapped herself tighter in her school cloak, drawing her knees up to her chest and ducking her head. And the wind became a gale, and the gale became a storm, and Sparrow shivered violently, the warming charm pitiful in the face of the icy blast.

⋄⋄ ALRIGHT, MIRANDA, YOU CAN STOP.⋄⋄

The wind did not abate. When Sparrow dared to raise her head briefly, she could see Miranda still standing there, arms spread wide, a blue aura about her. Sparrow fancied she could hear Miranda’s wailing amidst the howling of the wind. Snowflakes were pelting Sparrow’s side, caking the crenels, piling up in drifts in the embrasures, and even all the way down the walkway where rose the Dragon Tower.

And swiftly it piled up against the translucent dome of golden light that Sparrow cast over herself. There was no sense in enduring this foolishness without some sort of protection. Yet, to her dismay, Sparrow realized that though the dome blocked the wind – which did a marvelous job of cutting down on the cold all by itself – the dome itself did not prevent a loss of heat, any more than it had blocked the heat of Jill’s fire back in the empty tower. The cold was creeping more slowly into Sparrow’s bones, but in it crept, until once again Sparrow’s warming charm was struggling.

And to her horror, Sparrow realized that, now that she had let things go this far, were she to let the shield drop she would be instantly flash-frozen – and yet if she did not, then who would reach Miranda and get her to stop? She was caught in a trap of her own making. And outside, the wind raged on.

Sparrow squeezed her eyes shut and concentrated on the image of Jill in her head. But though she could soon see the figure made of flame, against the starry sky, she felt as if she could only see it through frosted glass. ⋄⋄ JILL, HELP.⋄⋄

But the figure did not acknowledge her in any way.

⋄⋄ JILL – AH, SHIT. ⋄⋄ Sparrow let the connection fall. It had been no connection at all. She cast her memory desperately through the bits of the MSL spells that she’d bothered to pay attention to. There was a warming charm in there somewhere, it would probably work against this cold – more likely turn her bones to ash.

Yet the howl of the wind at once began to ebb, and Sparrow looked up, to see Jill, standing there facing Miranda, arm raised, reaching to brush her fingers against Miranda’s cheek.

Sparrow immediately dropped the shield spell to shout at Jill to stop – but as she drew a breath in she realized how hasty a decision that had been, for icy air filled her lungs. She fell to her knees, hacking and coughing, gasping for breath. ⋄⋄ JILL!⋄⋄

But Jill was already brushing Miranda’s cheek with her fingers. Miranda’s head whipped around, staring at Jill, eyes alight with icy blue. At once the wind howled again, the snow pelted again, all in one direction this time – directly at Jill.

But though the wind howled, Jill did not bow to it. She stood like a rock, letting all the wind blast her, and no snow could find purchase on her. Once more she reached out – but not to Miranda’s face, this time. She offered the girl her hand, palm up.

Miranda took it. The glow from her eyes faded. And the wind at last went still.

Miranda’s legs were shaking, knees buckling. She held Jill’s hands as she was guided down to kneel upon the stone, back bowed, head hung low.

Then all at once Jill was sweeping Sparrow up into a fierce embrace, and Sparrow felt warmth spread all through her, her fingers at last unclenching, her toes at last uncurling. Jill was sitting down, curling Sparrow into her lap.

"I’m sorry," whispered Jill. "I saw you, in my dream, but I could not hear you. Jocasta had to come tell me what was happening."

Miranda remained kneeling upon the stone, still with her head hung low, staring at nothing. Until her head snapped up and she looked around wildly, as if searching for something – she spotted Sparrow and froze.

Then she scrambled backward until she was up against the other side of the walkway, before trying to rise to her feet, looking back and forth at either tower –

⋄⋄ MIRANDA. IT’S ALRIGHT.⋄⋄

°°° HOW COULD IT POSSIBLY BE ALRIGHT? I ALMOST KILLED YOU! I TRIED TO KEEP IT UNDER CONTROL AND I COMPLETELY FAILED! °°°

⋄⋄ HOW MANY OF US HAVE IT UNDER CONTROL? SOMEDAY EVEN MY TIME MAY COME. ⋄⋄

††††† EVEN I BEAR YOU NO ENMITY, MY FRIEND. I KNOW WHAT IT IS LIKE TO LOSE ONE’S GRIP. †††††

Tears brimmed in Miranda’s eyes. "I don’t – I don’t understand."

⋄⋄YOU DON’T HAVE TO. JUST, COME HERE. BE HERE, WITH US. NOT AS A COLD AND DISTANT ALLY, BUT AS A FRIEND.⋄⋄

At last Miranda stepped forward from the battlements, warily approaching Sparrow and Jill – eyes alert upon them, as she lowered herself to sit a couple feet away, tears streaking down her cheeks.

There was a small thump of air as Jocasta appeared, bending to wipe the tears from Miranda’s eyes. Perhaps it was a mark of how exhausted the girl was that she did not even flinch away this time, only gazing into Jocasta’s eyes with a pitiful expression.

As for Jocasta, her teeth began a racket of clattering as she shivered violently. "Fuck’s sake," she muttered, "this is what I get for an insect animagus form, I can’t keep my body heat for shit. Whoa!" She yelped as Jill grabbed her by the hand and dragged her down to enfold her in the embrace with Sparrow.

"You’re all really not mad?" whispered Miranda.

"I kind of figured this would happen," said Sparrow. "I ask the people I love to let me in, their magic starts to get out of control...this is what happens when we’re sealed by secrecy, while the pressure of pain and guilt builds. Right? Pressure cooker. We explode if we let loose without letting off steam. I’ve been through this twice already."

"You’ve endured a portion of it twice already," murmured Jill.

"Maybe I’ll face the full blast someday," said Sparrow. "Miranda, do you want to continue the story?"

Miranda let out a long breath. "If you wish to hear the rest? Well. What I was about to do to you, slowly, I did to a crowd of people in an instant. I found myself standing there, amidst a field of corpses frozen so suddenly that they remained upright, even for a little while in the summer heat. And...then the rest of the townspeople, coming to see what had happened...they said at once I had done it, that I was an evil witch. Some of them came at me with sticks, the rest fled far away from me.

"But there were still the people with sticks, so I ran, and I ran, and I tumbled down dry creek beds and stumbled over rocks, and then – there was a pale lady standing over me, clad in leather that was strapped to her torso and arms and legs, and she had a neater broom than I’d ever seen, and it hovered in the air, and she offered me a place on it...and it wasn’t any odder than what I’d already seen that day."

"Hang on," said Jill, "am I supposed to be hearing this?"

"I got through the most confidential sections," said Miranda.

Sparrow nuzzled closer into Jill’s embrace. "Stay."

"Seconded," said Jocasta.

"Alright, alright." Jill chuckled. "Continue."

"You see how I came to this castle," said Miranda, "on the broom of Professor Clearwater. She must have known...I wonder how much she foresaw, and could have forestalled. But I should not ask her. The point is, I became a ward of this castle. Here is the room that is mine, here is the food I am given, here is the home that will always take me in, until I am of age, if not forever. And here is…a headmistress and divination professor who both know what I did, and I fear they remain wary of me, along with much of the faculty."

"That’s hardly fair," whispered Jill.

"I’d call it fair," said Miranda. "Or formerly fair. Before it was clear the rest of you might go off bang, the faculty knew I could. Perhaps that’s why I was encouraged to spend time in the greenhouses? But there I met the professor who, above all others, saw not my past, but my future. Professor Neville Longbottom."

"Ah yes," murmured Jocasta, "your – uh –" She chuckled nervously. "I was about to put my foot in it again."

Miranda fixed Jocasta with a level glare. "Professor Longbottom took me into his care and guidance, those years before I was to officially begin my schooling. It was he who introduced me to the world of Wizarding Britain; he who let me help him with the greenhouses; he who bought me my wand; he who comforted me, who dried my tears when I was told that I could never see North America again, per the Statute of Wizarding Secrecy. It was he who advocated for me, before the rest of the faculty, that I would pose no more danger to the students than any other student, if I was given the chance to focus on my learning, like any other student. I would never say he has favored me as a teacher, only held me to higher standards that I have met, and yet...though I might never say it to his face, I see him as my adoptive father."

"Oh," murmured Jocasta. Her eyes grew wide. "Oh."

"Yes," said Miranda, "he is not a sugar daddy."

Jocasta hung her head. "I trample upon the feelings of others too often."

"Better that than flash-freezing your whole family," said Miranda. "How does anyone put up with me, when they know?"

"Because they see you," said Sparrow, "and they see what you’ve become, what you’ve made of yourself, beyond what you were. They see what you’re trying to be. You wear your ambition on your sleeve, you bear the heart of a lion. It is what I saw of you from the start, even before our dance last October. I daresay it outweighs your past."

"But –"

"And you were eight years old," said Sparrow, meeting Miranda’s eyes. "You were a child, and from your story you clearly didn’t know much about anything."

Miranda’s gaze was warm. "You were also eight. Do you blame yourself?"

"I can only resolve to do better now. So it is for you. Do you understand?"

Miranda looked up to the starry sky. "I can do the same. But...getting close to anyone, emotionally or physically, well. It’s easier to hang back and away like the moon, and cast my light down upon people. Always easier to be cold. Safer."

"And yet you danced with me?"

"I said easier," said Miranda. "I am a Gryffindor. I must show courage."

"That is certainly something you can continue to exercise," said Sparrow. She glanced up, where the sky was just beginning to lighten. "And we can think of the dawn, and the days ahead, instead of the days behind." She unfolded herself from the embrace of her girls, rising stiffly to her feet, and, facing the dawn, shook her wand out of her sleeve, pointing it at her heart. "Amato animo animato animagus."

As she felt the spell take hold, she spotted Iphis and Wren coming through the door to the astronomy tower. She whirled to face her friends. "Right, and that’s the other thing. Miranda, Jocasta – Iphis, Wren, good morning – here I must speak as your captain. Not even in a lighthearted pirate-adventure way, but as the one you asked to lead you all. Jocasta. Do you truly believe that your expertise in transfiguration can aid Miranda and Iphis in their quest for human transmutation?"

Jocasta looked prideful. "I should think I could offer insight at least! I should think the details of transfiguration provide a solid foundation for transmutation. Goodness knows an animagus form holds itself indefinitely, it does not depend on constant mental upkeep."

"Very good. You two –" Sparrow pointed at Miranda and then Iphis – "need to either allow Jocasta to consult with you, or –" but then Wren was grabbing Sparrow’s pointer hand and dragging it to themself. "What, three?"

"I did say I wanted to be the girlfriend now and then," said Wren.

Jocasta sprang to her feet and thumped Wren’s shoulder lightly with her fist, grinning madly. "I like the cut of your jib, mister-sister."

"Okay fine! You three! Get Jocasta here involved or, I don’t know, gird up your loins and ask McGonagall to help, and also ask Madame Abbot to give you your potions so you have your cauldron more free for other things, because we are going to be very busy."

Miranda looked frustrated. "I have my reasons for avoiding that request. I have never believed that the faculty could help me directly."

"Well stop avoiding it," said Sparrow. "Get that out of the way instead of going it alone. I don’t want any of my crew to suffer. Understood?"

"Is that an order?" said Miranda.

"Do I have to make it an order?"

Wren saluted smartly. "Aye, cap’n."

"Yo ho ho," muttered Iphis.

"Come on," said Miranda, taking Wren and Iphis by the hands. "There’s enough time to do research before I fall asleep for the morning. Jocasta, you come along too."

Jocasta looked shocked. "Now? But it’s four in the – oh alright, hang on." She gave Sparrow and Jill each a kiss on the cheek, then turned into a fly and lighted on Wren’s shoulder.

Sparrow turned to Jill. "That just leaves us, then...back to…" But she did not complete the sentence, for she was out nearly as soon as she had collapsed into Jill’s arms.