Hermione sank into the plush armchair by the window, the city lights below a cruel contrast to the darkness festering inside her. The skyline twinkled with a deceptive kind of joy, vibrant and unburdened, while she sat there, suffocating under the crushing weight of her own sins.
At twenty-four, she had already borne more than most. The war had ended, peace had tentatively settled over the wizarding world, but the victory felt hollow in her chest. Because while she had walked away from that battlefield without blood on her hands, she couldn't say the same now.
Not after Lucius Malfoy.
The memory was a raw, festering wound, impossible to ignore. She had never killed before—not in the war, not even when she had the chance. And yet, when it came to him, she had done it without hesitation. The precision, the calm detachment with which she had acted, terrified her more than the crime itself.
The justification had been simple then. It was for Draco. For their future. A necessary evil to rid the world of a monster who would never change. But now, in the oppressive quiet of the penthouse, the justification felt paper-thin. The truth bled through the cracks.
She had killed a man. And worse—she had felt nothing when she did it.
Draco was out, caught up in some business affair or another, leaving her alone with the silence. It clawed at her, filling every corner of the room, amplifying the unease that had been lurking beneath the surface for weeks.
The memory played behind her eyes, unrelenting. Lucius, lounging with that insufferable smirk, thinking himself untouchable. The cup in her hands, steady, deliberate. The slow, inevitable unraveling of his life as poison worked its way through his veins.
A sob clawed its way out of her throat, raw and jagged, shattering the hush around her. She pressed trembling fingers to her lips, as if she could force it back down, but the tears came anyway, hot and unyielding.
She had buried this part of herself, locked it away in some deep, unreachable place. But tonight, the door had swung open. The guilt, the horror, the self-loathing—it all crashed over her like a tidal wave, dragging her under.
She was no longer Hermione Granger, the brilliant witch who had defied dark lords and rewritten history. She was something else entirely.
Something she didn't recognize. Something she feared.
How could she reconcile this act with the unwavering Gryffindor principles she had once held so sacred? The guilt was a relentless viper, coiling tighter around her heart with each passing moment, squeezing the life out of the fragile happiness she had found with Draco. He had accepted her, their unconventional love, without hesitation, facing down society's scrutiny with his usual unshakable resolve. But even his unwavering devotion couldn't silence the torment festering inside her.
Tonight, as she stared at the city sprawled beneath her, the past felt unbearably close, its shadow stretching across the present. The penthouse, normally a sanctuary, now felt suffocating, its silence a mirror of the turmoil echoing in her mind.
She had spent her life believing in justice, in fairness, in the immutable line between right and wrong. Yet, with a single, calculated act, she had crossed it. It hadn't been impulsive, hadn't been born from fury or recklessness. It had been measured. Deliberate. A quiet decision carried out with precision.
And that terrified her.
The Hermione Granger she once knew—the girl who had stood defiant against Voldemort, who had fought for the weak, who had never let fear dictate her actions—felt like a ghost, a distant relic of a time before she had learned what it truly meant to be ruthless.
A shiver ran through her, cold and insidious. Had she changed irreversibly? Was she merely wearing the mask of the person she used to be, hiding the monster lurking beneath? Or was this guilt just another weight of survival, an inevitable scar from the war and all the choices it had forced them to make?
But if that were true, why did this feel different? Why did the guilt gnaw at her so viciously, whispering that she had become the very thing she once fought against?
She curled into the couch, her hands trembling as she whispered to the empty room, "I see a sad little sinner in the mirror." Her voice cracked, barely audible. "The devil works hard, like my conscience. I don't want to be alive, but I don't want to die."
A sharp sob wracked her chest, her breath coming in shallow gasps. "A fistful of pills and rivers in my eyes. I have nothing left to lose."
Tears blurred her vision, hot and relentless, streaking down her face as she let out a broken plea. " Dear God in the sky, hear my cry… When it's too dark to see, let there be light."
But the silence remained unbroken, offering no solace, no absolution.
The weight of her secret pressed down, suffocating, inescapable. She was trapped in a labyrinth of her own making, wandering corridors of regret with no exit in sight.
The once indomitable Hermione Granger—sharp, brilliant, unwavering—was slowly fading, dissolving into something fragile, something unrecognizable. The minutes bled into hours, and outside, the city pulsed with life, indifferent to the storm brewing inside her. The lights twinkled like laughter, cruel in their contrast to the darkness suffocating her soul.
The Floo flared to life, spitting Draco into the hushed stillness of their penthouse. The lingering scent of smoke clung to his coat, the familiar grit of Diagon Alley still on his skin. He barely had time to adjust to the dim interior before his gaze landed on her—slumped by the window, lost in a silent war with herself.
A sharp pang of unease settled in his chest as he moved toward her, his instincts coiled tight with alarm.
"Love," he murmured, his voice low, careful. He knelt before her, his hand cupping her cheek, his fingers trembling with the quiet desperation of someone terrified of the answer. "What's wrong?"
She didn't pull away. Instead, she leaned into his touch as though grounding herself, her body sinking into his warmth as though seeking refuge. But when she finally spoke, her voice was thick with something raw, something fractured.
"I can't shake it." Her breath hitched, a sob barely suppressed. "The guilt. The feeling that there's something wrong with me."
His heart clenched. He knew the weight of a war that never truly ended, of ghosts that lingered long after the battlefield had been abandoned. He pulled her against him, his arms strong, steady—a shield against the tempest inside her.
"Tell me," he urged, his voice a tether, an anchor. "Tell me what's haunting you."
For a moment, silence stretched between them, thick and suffocating. He felt it—the hesitation, the war waging inside her. And then, finally, her walls crumbled.
"It's your father," she choked out, his name sharp on her tongue, bitter like poison. "The guilt of it all... I thought it would be different. I thought that killing him would set us free. But the weight of it—" Her voice broke, a tremor rolling through her frame.
His breath caught. He had known, of course, about her doubts, the shadow that had lingered in her eyes since that night. But seeing her unravel now, seeing how deeply it had sunk into her bones—it was a fresh wound, a new kind of pain.
He tightened his hold on her, his grip firm, grounding. "You did what you had to do," he said fiercely, his voice unshakable despite the turmoil inside him. "And don't you dare let anyone—especially yourself—convince you otherwise. We have faced horrors people can't even begin to imagine. This... this was just another battle in a war that never really ended."
His words hung in the air, settling between them like a shield against the self-condemnation eating away at her.
"We carry this together," he continued, softer now but no less resolute. "You are not alone in this. We have faced worse and survived. We will survive this too."
He cupped her face again, forcing her to look at him, his thumb brushing away a tear as it fell. "You are still the bravest, most compassionate witch I have ever known," he whispered, his voice raw. "Don't let this darkness define you. Don't let it take what's yours."
She clung to his words, to him, her tears soaking into his shirt. "I just... I need to find a way to forgive myself."
He tilted her chin up, his silver eyes burning with conviction. "And you will," he promised. She took a shuddering breath, something shifting inside her—fragile, but real. The despair was still there, but now, there was something else too. A flicker of something stronger.
"Alright," she whispered, the smallest ember of resolve sparking in her chest. "
Let there be light.
~~~~~~
She sat at her writing desk in the quiet of her library, the weight of her actions pressing heavily on her heart. She picked up a piece of parchment, her hand trembling slightly as she dipped her quill into the ink.
· ─ ·𖥸· ─ · ·
Lucius,
Here I sit, pen in hand, addressing the man who would never deserve the dignity of spoken words. Lucius, your absence, though undeniably convenient, has become a lead weight around my neck.
Forgive the theatrics, but absolution is as relevant to you as basic hygiene. This, then, is a necessary intellectual exercise, an attempt to reconcile the cognitive dissonance your demise has wrought. The act, while strategically sound to secure a future unburdened by your suffocating machinations, was undeniably distasteful.
Don't mistake this for remorse.
This is not a plea for your nonexistent forgiveness, a concept as foreign to you as basic human decency. No, this is a cathartic exercise, an attempt to exercise the serpent of guilt you've managed to posthumously implant within me.
The act, though necessary to secure a future free from your venomous influence, was intellectually repugnant. A stain, yes, but a necessary one – the excision of a cancerous tumor from the body politic, so to speak.
Let me disabuse you of any notion of emotional catharsis. Malice, a concept you reveled in, played no part. This was a calculated act of neutralization. You were, in essence, a particularly virulent strain of magical Dunning-Kruger, a festering intellectual tumor nestled within your own son.
Let history remember you not as a formidable opponent, but as a pustule lanced, a blight eradicated. Perhaps, in time, the guilt will lessen, replaced by the knowledge that my actions ensured a future you so desperately sought to defile. Until then, you remain a persistent itch, a nagging reminder of the price of progress.
Until then, your memory lingers – a persistent cognitive itch, a reminder of the ethical compromises necessitated by a world poisoned by your ilk.
In the quiet moments, however, a sliver of doubt persists. Was there another path? Could Draco have been saved without resorting to such an extreme measure? The specter of a life taken, even one as intellectually barren as yours, weighs heavily. I acknowledge that I have transgressed a line, one I swore never to cross, even during the darkest hours of the war.
Yet, I also recognize the consequence of my actions. Draco thrives now, free from the suffocating shadow you cast over him. Witnessing this flourishment brings a flicker of solace, a fragile comfort I desperately cling to, hoping it will someday outweigh the burden of guilt.
As I commit this letter to the flames, I release a portion of the weight that has been crushing my spirit. May you find whatever peace exists in the afterlife you undoubtedly scoff at, Lucius. And may you understand, with whatever limited capacity you possess, that my actions, however extreme, were driven by a desperate love for your son, a love you were demonstrably incapable of offering.
"If there is a hell, I am certain our paths will cross there imminently,"
Good riddance, Lucius.
Mrs. Hermione Jean Granger - Malfoy
· ─ ·𖥸· ─ · ·
She folded the letter carefully, the crisp parchment a stark contrast to the turmoil churning within her. A bead of crimson wax, melted by a miniscule flame she conjured with a flick of her wand, sealed the fate of her words.
She approached the fireplace, its flames a mesmerizing dance of orange and yellow, a stark contrast to the icy grip of guilt that threatened to consume her.
Taking a deep breath, a silent plea for absolution or perhaps even understanding, she cast the letter into the fiery heart of the hearth. The parchment flared briefly, the penned accusations and justifications turning to ash in a matter of seconds. As the wispy remnants danced up the chimney, a sliver of hope flickered within her.
Perhaps, with the physical evidence of her deed gone, a part of the burden would follow suit.
The logical side of her, honed by years of study and sharpened by the war's brutal realities, understood the necessity of her actions. But logic was a cold comfort in the face of the ethical transgression that gnawed at her conscience. Time, she knew, would be the only true arbiter.
~~~~~~
As Hermione's birthday approached, he found himself unable to rest. Sleep eluded him, his thoughts consumed by the need to make this birthday extraordinary. Gifts of flowers and chocolates felt offensively mundane—trite offerings that paled in comparison to the depth of his feelings for her.
He needed something more. Something worthy of her.
She was a woman who lived and breathed knowledge, who found solace between the pages of forgotten tomes and wonder in the whispers of history. Her love for the written word was not just a pastime—it was a calling, a hunger, a sacred pursuit. If he was going to give her something, it had to be more than a gesture. It had to be an experience.
Then, like a sudden stroke of lightning, the answer struck him.
The Library of Alexandria.
The thought sent a thrill through his veins. Not just a historical relic, but a lost sanctuary of knowledge, a place that had once held the greatest collection of wisdom the world had ever known. A perfect gift for his habib hayatuh —his love, his life—one that embodied both his admiration and his devotion to the woman who had shattered his world and rebuilt it in ways he never thought possible.
The days that followed blurred into a feverish haze of preparation. He contacted a network of smugglers who specialized in rare magical antiquities, his palms slick with sweat during each clandestine negotiation. He pored over ancient maps, decoding long-forgotten enchantments, his mind consumed with the logistics of something that had never been attempted before. Protective spells were meticulously woven into their traveling cloaks, every safeguard put in place for what was to come.
On the morning of her birthday, anticipation thrummed in his chest like an unspent spell. He held a single book in his hands, wrapped in deep emerald silk. Its worn leather cover bore the weight of centuries, filled with passages that had been thought lost to time. Nestled within its pages lay a charmed portkey, pulsing with a soft blue glow—a key to an adventure unlike any other.
He could already picture the way her eyes would light up when she unwrapped it, that indescribable spark of magic she carried within her.
A silent promise. A journey through time. A love letter written not in words, but in the very essence of discovery.
~~~~~~
On the morning of her birthday, she awoke to a slow, intoxicating pleasure blooming deep within her. A soft, breathy moan escaped her lips as warmth pulsed through her thighs—hot, wet, and utterly consuming. His mouth moved with unhurried precision, each languid kiss along her folds sending sparks licking up her spine. His tongue danced over her clit in sinful, fluid motions, the kind that made her toes curl and her fingers twitch against the silk sheets beneath her.
The air was thick with heat and the faint scent of sex and clean linen. The early morning light filtered in through the curtains, casting soft golden streaks over his pale, perfect skin. A shiver ran through her—equal parts pleasure and disbelief—as the delicious haze of sleep tangled with reality, blurring her senses.
She blinked slowly, heart racing, and looked down. Her breath caught, a ragged hitch in her throat, at the sight of him nestled between her thighs like he belonged there—like he owned her. His silver eyes gleamed with intent, hungry and reverent all at once, as if she were some decadent offering made just for him.
"Happy birthday, my love," he murmured, his voice rough with desire, low and intimate like a velvet caress. His lips, slick with her arousal, curled into a wicked smile—but he didn't stop. No. His tongue flicked over her again with maddening precision, and her hips jerked upward instinctively, seeking more, craving it.
A gasp tore from her throat as her fingers tangled in his tousled blond hair, nails scraping lightly over his scalp. The heat of his breath seared against her sensitive skin, every exhale stoking the fire coiled in her core.
"Oh, gods, Draco…"
He smirked against her, the vibration sending a ripple of pleasure straight through her. One large hand slid up her thigh, warm and grounding, before pressing firmly against her lower belly—pinning her, claiming her. "This is my birthday treat," he said, dark mischief threading his words, "and I intend to savor every inch of you."
The sudden slide of his finger inside her made her gasp—slick, slow, deliberate. He curled it expertly, brushing against that spot that made her entire body tense with need. Her back arched, a helpless cry leaving her lips.
"Please," she whimpered, nails digging into his scalp, toes curling against the sheets. Her skin felt too tight, too sensitive, every nerve lit like a live wire.
"Shhh, darling," he crooned, slipping a second finger inside her. The stretch was delicious, maddening. "Let me enjoy my favorite breakfast."
His mouth returned to her clit, tongue stroking in sync with the slow, delicious thrust of his fingers. Her body trembled, sweat slicking her skin, the building pressure almost too much to bear. The friction of the sheets beneath her, the cool air on her fevered skin, his warm, wet mouth—every sensation crashed over her in a tide of raw ecstasy.
She came undone, her orgasm ripping through her like lightning, her body shaking, convulsing with the force of it. Her thighs clamped around him as she rode the waves, breath caught in her throat, the world narrowed down to nothing but his touch, his mouth, him.
Even as she shuddered, boneless and wrecked, he didn't stop. He coaxed every last tremor from her with relentless devotion, kissing her through the aftershocks, licking her gently until she whimpered from oversensitivity.
Only then did he rise, sliding up her body like silk and sin. He caught her mouth in a deep, hungry kiss, letting her taste the lingering sweetness of her own release. Her lips parted willingly, drinking him in, her chest still heaving.
"Happy birthday, my love," he whispered against her mouth, his voice thick with promise. "And that was just the beginning."
His smirk deepened, devilish and irresistible. "Get dressed, love. We're going on an adventure."
She arched a curious brow but didn't argue. She slid out of bed, noting that he had already laid out an outfit for her—comfortable yet elegant, as if he anticipated every detail of the journey ahead.
As she dressed, he stood by, holding a single, beautifully wrapped book in his hand. Its worn leather cover whispered secrets of forgotten ages, promising knowledge long buried in time. But nestled within the delicate parchment pages lay something even more extraordinary—a small, charmed portkey, pulsating with a faint blue glow, waiting to transport them to a place steeped in history and magic.
The morning was a blur of anticipation, her practical nature warring with the undeniable excitement radiating from him. She turned the book over in her hands, fingers trailing over the faded leather, its weight comforting yet mysterious.
"Draco, this is..." she started, but the look in his eyes stilled her words.
A thrill rushed through her as she carefully opened the cover. The scent of aged parchment filled her senses, a tangible whisper of the past. Her eyes flickered over the text—a treatise on ancient teleportation methods—but tucked between the pages, folded with deliberate care, was a note written in his unmistakable handwriting.
"Close your eyes, love. This is your birthday present."
Her breath caught in her throat. She glanced up at him, who simply extended his hand, waiting. Trusting him implicitly, she laced her fingers with his, inhaled deeply, and shut her eyes.
The familiar pull of magic enveloped her, the world spinning, disorienting, weightless—until, just as suddenly as it began, they landed.
Warm air kissed her skin. The scent of spices, sun-warmed stone, and something tantalizingly foreign filled her lungs. Her eyes fluttered open, and the world before her erupted in a dazzling array of color and movement.
They stood in a bustling Egyptian marketplace, the golden sun casting a brilliant glow over the endless maze of stalls and winding streets. Vendors called out in rapid Arabic, bartering over fabrics rich with jewel-toned dyes, their threads shimmering in the light. The aroma of roasting meats and fresh bread mingled with the sharp tang of exotic perfumes. The hum of the city was alive with energy—chaotic yet intoxicating.
She turned in place, drinking in the sights, the language, the movement, the sheer history pulsing beneath her feet.
"Draco," she exhaled, barely above a whisper, her voice filled with awe.
He stood beside her, hands in his pockets, watching her reaction with an air of smug satisfaction. "Welcome to Alexandria, love."
Her gaze darted from the towering structures of the ancient city to his knowing smirk, her pulse hammering in her chest. But beneath the lively chaos of the marketplace, something else lingered—something powerful. A hum in the air, a quiet but undeniable pulse of magic, reverberated through her.
"This is..." She struggled to find the words.
He stepped closer, his breath warm against her ear as he whispered, "The Library." A proud, almost reverent smile curved his lips. "Or at least, what remains of it."
Her breath hitched. The Library of Alexandria. One of the greatest wonders of the ancient world.
And Draco had brought her here.
A thrill shot through her, electrifying her from head to toe. The Library of Alexandria—once thought to be nothing more than a legend buried in the annals of history, whispered about in the dust-laden corners of academic journals—stood before her, within reach. Her logical mind urged caution, reminding her of the dangers of chasing ghosts, but the relentless hunger for knowledge, the fire that had always burned within her, drowned out all hesitation.
Hand in hand, they stepped off the curb, stepping into a realm where history and myth blurred into one.
The library—no longer the grand colossus of legend—had risen anew, a modern tribute to its lost splendor. Gone were the towering marble halls of her imagination, replaced by sleek glass and steel that shimmered beneath the relentless Egyptian sun. Yet even as the structure gleamed with contemporary design, Hermione felt the unmistakable weight of history pressing down on her, a silent echo of whispered secrets and lost wisdom carried on the desert wind.
At the entrance, twin statues of Plato and Aristotle flanked the doorway, their carved expressions stern, as if scrutinizing every visitor. The contrast of past and present sent a shiver of anticipation down her spine. Stepping through the threshold, the sudden coolness of the interior enveloped her, a stark relief from the scorching heat outside.
This was not the labyrinthine archive of ancient scrolls she had envisioned, with dust motes floating in sunlit air. Instead, rows of pristine bookshelves stretched toward the horizon, interspersed with glowing interactive displays and flickering holographic projections. It was a space where ancient knowledge had been reborn, woven seamlessly into the fabric of modernity.
Her breath caught as she took it all in. Artifacts meticulously preserved beneath glass cases pulsed with an almost otherworldly glow. Magical scrolls hovered midair, their golden ink shifting and rearranging before her eyes, offering glimpses of lost languages and forgotten spells. Even the sleek computer screens, lined up in perfect symmetry, brimmed with digitized records of texts that had once been thought irretrievably lost to time.
She turned to him, wonder lighting up her face. "It's… incredible," she whispered, her voice reverent, as if afraid that speaking too loudly might shatter the spell of the moment. All doubts about this adventure evaporated. This was no mere library—it was a resurrection of lost brilliance, a monument to the unyielding pursuit of knowledge.
He watched her, his own expression softer, full of quiet pride. "Happy birthday, my love," he murmured, warmth threading through his voice. He had always known that material gifts would never compare to the thrill of discovery for Hermione, but seeing her stand here, eyes alight with the sheer joy of possibility, confirmed it beyond doubt. This—this was the gift she deserved.
"Let's explore," he said, offering his hand once more. "See what treasures history has left behind for us."
With a shared look of exhilaration, they stepped further into the heart of the Library of Alexandria, ready to unearth the echoes of the past, to walk the bridge between history and legend, and to lose themselves in the boundless ocean of knowledge that awaited them.
Biggest swot in history having her knickers drenched by the mention of an ancient library.
The sterile modernity of the entrance faded behind them, giving way to a space that breathed with the whispers of history. Nestled within the heart of the library was a reconstructed section, an homage to its former grandeur. Towering bookshelves, carved from dark, polished wood, thrummed with an ancient magic that made the very air hum with knowledge. Scrolls and bound tomes lined every surface, their presence exuding a quiet authority, as if they were aware of their own significance. The heady scent of aged parchment and worn leather filled the air, a perfume of antiquity that wrapped around them like an embrace.
She moved through the space with the reverence of a pilgrim reaching sacred ground, her fingers grazing the cool, enchanted wood. At her touch, faint glyphs flickered to life, their glow like murmured secrets from a forgotten age. He trailed behind her, his arms crossed, a smirk playing at his lips as he watched her, utterly lost in the depths of history.
She darted from artifact to artifact, unable to contain her wonder. A weathered clay tablet bore inscriptions from a civilization long buried beneath time, its cuneiform script a riddle waiting to be unraveled. A papyrus scroll, its ink faded but stubbornly legible, whispered incantations of lost magic through the delicate fibers of its pages. Every discovery sent her into a flurry of questions, theories spilling from her lips faster than he could answer. He had expected to indulge her curiosity, but what he hadn't anticipated was how easily he was drawn into it himself.
Hours slipped away unnoticed as they poured over relics of forgotten knowledge. They debated the efficiency of ancient spellcasting techniques—Hermione tracing intricate glyphs with delicate fingers, he countering with knowledge gleaned from old pureblood grimoires. They pored over celestial charts, her fascination with the mystical significance of the stars intertwining seamlessly with his practiced explanations of constellations and their movements.
As the afternoon light slanted through the high windows, stretching long shadows across the marble floor, a comfortable silence settled between them. They stood before a striking display—a reconstructed astrolabe, its delicate gears catching the waning sunlight, casting shimmering reflections onto the walls. She traced the intricate pathways carved into the instrument, her brows knitting together in contemplation.
"We could learn so much from this," she murmured, her voice tinged with both awe and longing.
He stepped closer, his hand brushing against hers, grounding her. "We will," he said, his voice firm with promise.
She turned to him, and in her gaze, he saw it—a fire that mirrored his own. This wasn't just about the library. It was about something far greater—a shared thirst for knowledge, an insatiable hunger to uncover the secrets of the past. More than that, it was about them, about a connection that had transcended their history, their old enmities, and found something deeper, something real.
And in that moment, standing amidst the echoes of lost civilizations, they didn't just share knowledge—they shared a future.
°°°°°°°
As the sun dipped lower, casting long shadows across the library floor, they lingered before a gleaming astrolabe. She traced its intricate pathways, her brow furrowed in thought. This gift wasn't just about the library—it was a testament to their shared passion, a love of knowledge that bound them beyond the past.
A soft chime signaled closing time. Hermione sighed. "We should head back."
"Not yet," he said, a smirk tugging at his lips. From his pocket, he produced a small, ornately wrapped package.
Curious, she unwrapped it, revealing a leather-bound journal embossed with an astrolabe. Her initials gleamed in gold.
"A place for your discoveries," he explained. "A record of our adventures—starting here."
Emotion thickened her voice. "Oh, Draco… it's perfect."
He took the journal, carefully inscribing the first page: To Hermione, my love, explorer of past and present. Happy Birthday.
Tears pricked at her eyes as she leaned into him. "Thank you, Mon lapin. This has been the best birthday ever."
He kissed her temple. "You deserve it, darling."
She looked up, love shining in her gaze. "I love you."
"I love you too," he murmured.
They stood amidst the echoes of lost knowledge, their future unwritten but bound together, ready to explore the world—side by side.
~~~~~~
The shadows writhed at the periphery of her vision, curling like tendrils of smoke, reaching, twisting—hungry and insistent—as if they too sensed the unraveling of her mind. Let there be darkness, she murmured, not as a plea, but as a surrender, the syllables like ash dissolving on her tongue. Yet it wasn't darkness she truly craved—it was silence. Stillness. An end to the ceaseless noise, the relentless war that thundered beneath her skin. An end to herself.
The mirror offered no mercy. It reflected not one, but two haunted eyes—dull, sunken things that barely resembled the woman she once was. Gone was the firebrand, the girl who defied empires and rewrote the rules of their broken world. What stared back now was hollow. A shell. Her strength had crumbled into ash, her resilience buried beneath the debris of too many losses, too many compromises. Grief echoed in her bones like the tolling of a bell, and guilt—insidious, patient—coiled around her ribcage like a serpent, slowly squeezing until she could no longer breathe without pain.
In her trembling hand, the vial shimmered faintly, its sickly glow mocking her despair. Its contents promised something deceptively gentle—oblivion, detachment, the bliss of not having to feel. It had started as idle research, a whisper of an idea from the yellowing pages of a long-forbidden book buried deep in the Restricted Section. A sip for silence, a swallow for peace. That's what the text had promised. Peace. Freedom from memory.
But it lied.
The relief it offered was empty, sterile. It didn't soothe; it erased. It smothered the fire, yes—but also the warmth, the joy, the color of her days. It was a hollow ending disguised as mercy. A slow vanishing. A betrayal, not just of Draco or of her friends—but of the fierce, unwavering girl who had once believed she could change the world.
And still, her fingers hovered. Still, she stood at the edge.
She exhaled—a ragged, uneven breath that trembled its way out of her chest like the dying gasp of something breaking inside her. The cork slid from the vial with a soft pop, but to her ears, it sounded like a gunshot in the silence. The bitter, acrid stench of the potion hit her instantly, a scent steeped in misery and resignation, burning the back of her throat like regret made tangible. She raised it to her lips, the trembling rim brushing her skin, the promise of numbness—of escape—so tantalizingly close she could already feel the chill of oblivion curling around her spine.
But then— No .
It wasn't a word. It was a heartbeat. A pulse of defiance that shivered through her bones, faint but furious. A memory of fire. Of purpose. Of the girl who had once stared down death with a wand in her hand and steel in her soul. She would not go quietly. She would not surrender to this—thing—this emptiness she had mistaken for safety.
With a choked sob and a surge of fury, she flung the vial across the room. It hit the wall with a violent shatter, glass exploding outward in a cascade of razor-edged sound, the potion splattering like blood against the white floorboards. The silence that followed was deafening. But it wasn't hollow. It was a statement. A scream without sound. A battle cry from the last part of her that still remembered how to fight.
She turned from the mirror with slow, aching movements, as if peeling herself from the edge of a cliff she no longer wanted to leap from. Her fingers gripped the windowsill like a lifeline, nails biting into the wood as the first hesitant blush of dawn crept over the horizon, painting her face in the soft, golden promise of another chance. But behind her—silent, patient, poisonous—another vial sat untouched on the nightstand. Its contents swirled like liquid honey, warm and glimmering in the morning light, mocking the cold, hollow ache blooming inside her chest.
"Just one more," she whispered, the words cracking as they escaped her. Her voice sounded like it belonged to someone else—tattered, ghostlike, unraveling at the seams. Two weeks ago, it had been a single vial of Dreamless Sleep. Just one. Just to quiet her mind. Just to keep the guilt from clawing through her ribcage in the dark. Just to sleep without hearing his voice in her head. That first dose had been mercy.
But mercy had long since turned to poison.
Now, it wasn't sleep she craved—it was absence. Now, the potion wasn't an escape. It was a need. A crutch she leaned on until her bones forgot how to hold her upright. One vial became two. Two became three. And then, before she could stop herself, it had become routine. Pour. Swallow. Fade. Repeat. A ritual of survival that hollowed her out with each passing night.
It no longer dulled the pain. It erased her.
Each swallow took something—her clarity, her fire, her self. She was unraveling slowly, piece by piece, stitched together only by habit and shame, a specter draped in a familiar face. She was still breathing, yes—but barely living. And in that pale, flickering half-life, she could feel herself vanishing. A little more with every dose. A little less Hermione each day.
He had noticed. Of course he had. The way her eyes seemed to glaze over, the way she would disappear inside herself, lost in a realm where he could no longer reach her. He had tried—Merlin, he had tried—to talk to her, to break through the invisible wall closing in around her. But shame was a cruel master, and she could not let him see just how deep the rot had spread. So she pushed him away, time and time again, until even his presence felt like an unbearable weight pressing down on her brittle bones.
The vial trembled between her fingers, the viscous liquid catching the dim light, shimmering like liquid gold. A cruel deception. She uncorked it, the scent of false comfort curling into her nostrils. No hesitation. The glass pressed against her lips, and she drank deeply, feeling the icy tendrils of oblivion slither down her throat, coiling around her insides like a waiting beast.
Somewhere, deep in the untouched corner of her mind, a whisper clawed at her, weak but insistent. You can't keep doing this. You need help. You need to stop. But where? Who could she turn to? How could she tell him that the woman he loved was unraveling, that she had been rotting from the inside long before he noticed?
She closed her eyes, the weight of the potion dragging her under.
Let there be light.
°°°°°°
He'd sensed it for hours—long before the words left her mouth. The way her laughter never quite reached her eyes, the ghost of something brittle in her voice, how her fingers trembled ever so slightly when she reached for her wine, only to set it down untouched. The way she kept looking away when he spoke, as if trying to hold herself together with silence. So when she murmured, "I'll be right back," with a tight smile that didn't reach her eyes, every instinct inside him screamed.
He waited.
One minute. Five. Ten.
Too long.
The quiet stretched into something unbearable—oppressive, unnatural. A silence that didn't feel like solitude but like absence. Like grief waiting to be named.
Draco bolted upright, his heart thundering against his ribs like a warning drum. "Hermione?" he called, forcing steadiness into his voice, but it cracked anyway. No answer.
He crossed the floor in three frantic strides. The bathroom door was closed. Locked. He knocked sharply, the panic rising fast, sharp and sour in his throat. "Darling? Love, are you alright?"
Silence.
His stomach dropped. The hair on the back of his neck rose.
He pounded on the door harder this time, urgency clawing at his composure. "Hermione, open the door. Now. Please—"
Still nothing.
"No—no, no, no."
His hands shook as he pulled his wand, blasting the lock with a violent spark that shattered the silence like glass. The door slammed open against the wall—
—and the world stopped.
She was on the floor.
Unmoving. Pale.
The empty vial rolled lazily in the corner like it had all the time in the world.
His knees hit the tile before his brain even caught up, and a sound ripped from his throat—raw and broken and nothing like the man he pretended to be.
She lay crumpled across the cold tile floor like a fallen statue, her limbs limp and boneless, her skin leached of color—pale as moonlight, as death. His breath caught in his throat, jagged and unwilling to leave. The sight hit him like a curse, a punch to the gut that knocked the world off its axis.
No. No. No, please, no.
"Hermione!" The scream tore from his throat, hoarse and feral, as he dropped to his knees beside her. His hands were everywhere at once—cupping her face, brushing the hair from her damp forehead, reaching for her wrist like he could summon a pulse just by sheer will.
Her head lolled against his chest, her body terrifyingly still. Her lips were parted slightly, her breath so faint it barely stirred the air. Her lashes fluttered once—then nothing. A shudder racked through him as dread pooled in his lungs like poison.
"Wake up," he begged, rocking her slightly. "Love, please. Wake up. You have to wake up." His voice cracked, desperation twisting it into something unrecognizable.
His wand slipped through his trembling fingers, clattering to the floor before he snatched it up again, hands unsteady and slick with sweat. "Diagnosticum," he whispered, barely able to enunciate. The shimmering outline of her vitals flickered weakly into the air.
A pulse. Weak. Fading. But there.
It was enough. Enough to cut through the paralysis, to force his mind into motion. He didn't think—he couldn't. With one arm wrapped tight around her, he grasped his wand and Apparated, the world splintering around them into a whirlwind of light and sound.
They landed hard in the emergency wing of St. Mungo's. Draco stumbled forward, not even registering the searing pain that shot up his leg from the impact. Hermione was still in his arms, her body growing heavier with every second, her skin unnervingly cool against his.
"Help!" His voice cracked through the ward like thunder. "She's had an overdose—please, she's not—she's not breathing properly—"
Healers swarmed them in an instant. He felt hands prying Hermione from his arms, heard spells being cast in rapid succession, voices shouting codes and instructions he couldn't understand through the roar in his ears.
"Don't touch her!" he snarled at the first Mediwitch before reality snapped back into place and he stepped aside, surrendering her into their care. His arms fell limp to his sides, suddenly weightless. Useless.
They placed her on a stretcher, her curls spilling over the edge, her hand trailing like she was reaching for something in a dream.
Then she was gone, swallowed by the swinging doors.
And Draco was alone in the hall.
He stood frozen, blood roaring in his ears, his breath sharp and shallow like it had to fight for space in his chest. His heart was galloping out of control, his knees threatening to buckle beneath him.
He stared at the door she'd vanished behind.
All he could see was her hand, limp and pale, disappearing from view.
And then there was nothing—nothing but sterile air, too-white walls, and the unbearable weight of waiting.
~~~~~~
The stark white walls of St. Mungo's felt suffocating, pressing in on him with a sterile indifference. Every rune carved into the ceiling pulsed faintly, a rhythmic reminder of the magic working to keep her tethered to life. Yet to him, it felt like a cruel mockery, a silent accusation of how badly he had failed her.
She lay motionless on the bed, her face devoid of the fire that once burned so brightly. The image of her crumpled on the cold bathroom tiles, the half-empty vial of Dreamless Sleep slipping from her fingers, was seared into his mind. It looped relentlessly, a waking nightmare he couldn't escape.
Guilt dug its claws into his chest, relentless and merciless. He had seen the shadows in her eyes, felt the distance creeping between them. He had sensed her slipping away, retreating into a world where he could no longer reach her. Yet, wrapped up in his own grief, in his own demons, he had let it happen. How could I have been so blind?
A strangled, guttural sob ripped from his throat—harsh, broken, and so raw it echoed off the sterile walls like a scream into a void. It tore through him without warning, a sound he didn't recognize as his own. His chest heaved with the weight of it, every breath catching on shattered edges of disbelief. He crumbled to his knees beside her hospital bed, his trembling fingers reaching out in a futile attempt to fix what he couldn't undo.
Her curls, always wild and alive with movement, now lay flat and damp against her temple, dulled by sweat and stillness. He brushed one gently aside, his touch reverent, terrified—like she might shatter under the pressure. Her skin was cold beneath his fingertips. Not the kind of cold that meant she'd been resting in a chilly room, but the cold that whispered of the edge—the brink. The space between life and everything after.
"Hermione," he gasped, the name barely more than a breath on his lips, his throat constricting around it like it hurt to say her name aloud. "My love..." The words fractured as they fell from his mouth, his voice a wreck of pleading and pain.
He clasped her limp hand in both of his, pressing it against his chest, right where his heart was breaking. His grip tightened as though if he held her tightly enough, the thread of her life would tether itself back to his. As though love alone could will her lungs to draw breath again.
"Don't you dare leave me," he whispered, and then louder—desperately—"Don't you fucking dare." His forehead dropped to the mattress, resting beside her arm, his body wracked with silent shaking. "Stay with me. Please... gods, please just stay."
The sound of monitors hummed on indifferently around them, the sharp scent of antiseptic thick in the air, but Draco only heard the deafening quiet of her stillness.
"I can't do this without you," he whispered through the storm of his grief, the words sticking in his throat like splinters. "I was never meant to outlive you. I don't want to. You're the only thing that ever made me good. Please… just wake up. Please."
And still, she lay silent, her hand unmoving in his. And Draco—Draco held on like the world would end if he let go. Because for him, it already had.
His voice cracked, the weight of his fear suffocating him. He bowed his head, pressing his forehead against their intertwined hands, whispering silent prayers into the void.
The door creaked open, and a stern-faced Healer stepped inside, her expression professional yet softened by a quiet kindness. "Mr. Malfoy," she said gently, her voice a lifeline to his frayed nerves. "The potion is wearing off. She should wake soon."
Relief crashed over him in a dizzying wave, so sudden and overwhelming that he had to grip the edge of his chair to steady himself. Thank Merlin. The words left him in a breathless whisper, hoarse from a night spent pleading with the universe.
He turned back to Hermione, the fragile rise and fall of her chest the only thing anchoring him. This wasn't the end. It was a reckoning. A battle not yet won but one he refused to lose. He wouldn't let her face the darkness alone. If she was drowning, then he would dive in and pull her back—kicking, screaming, fighting—whatever it took. She had saved him once. Now, it was his turn.
As the first fragile light of dawn crept through the hospital window, it painted the room in a gentle wash of gold, like the world was daring to hope again. And then—so quietly it almost didn't register—a single tear slipped from her closed lashes, carving a glistening path down her cheek like a confession too painful to speak aloud. A tremor stirred in her limbs, the barest flicker of life, but to him it felt like the thunderclap of a miracle.
He lurched forward as if pulled by gravity itself, his heart slamming against his ribs, barely believing what he was seeing. "Hermione," he breathed, his voice catching and breaking, thick with disbelief, grief, relief—all tangled into one unbearable sound.
Her eyes cracked open slowly, glassy and unfocused, their usual fire dimmed but not extinguished. For one agonizing second she didn't see him—and then she did. Her gaze locked onto his, recognition blooming in the shattered remnants of her expression.
He reached for her like she was made of something holy, brushing his knuckles along her cheek with infinite care, as if she might vanish again if he blinked. "I'm here, my love," he whispered, the words aching with devotion and devastation. "I never left."
Another tear slipped free, this time from him, falling without shame. It traced down his jaw, warm and slow, a twin to the one that still glistened on her face. "I'm sorry, darling," he choked, the words ripping from his throat. "I'm so sorry I wasn't enough to stop this. I should've seen. I should've known."
He kissed the back of her hand, trembling against his lips, and didn't let go—not once. For hours, he stayed right there, not daring to move, not daring to look away. He watched every breath she took like it was a lifeline pulling her back to him. His heart still thudded with terror, but beneath it—beneath all the helplessness and the guilt—something new took root.
A vow.
Silent but unshakable.
As the sun climbed higher, casting its golden fingers across sterile walls and shadowed memories, he let his eyes flutter closed, if only for a moment, his body sagging with exhaustion. The war wasn't over. Not for her. Not for him.
But this was his battleground now.
And he would fight for her.
For every piece of her soul she thought was too broken to love.
For the version of her that didn't know she was still worth saving.
He would fight—for them—until the end of the fucking world.
°°°°°°
He sat by her bedside, his hand enveloping hers, his gaze never leaving her face. Every breath she took felt like a miracle, a fragile reassurance after the nightmare of finding her collapsed on the bathroom floor. He had never known fear like that—raw, all-consuming, a terror that clawed at his ribs and refused to let go.
Finally, she stirred. Her eyelids fluttered, her lashes damp with lingering exhaustion. At first, her gaze was unfocused, lost somewhere between the waking world and the abyss she had nearly succumbed to. Then, recognition dawned. She turned her head slowly, her movements sluggish, and met his eyes.
"Draco?" she rasped, her voice hoarse from the spells and potions used to pull her back from the brink. "What... what happened?"
His breath caught, and despite every effort to hold himself together, his vision blurred with unshed tears. "Oh, my love," he whispered, voice raw. "You had a breakdown. A collapse... I found you on the bathroom floor, barely breathing." He swallowed thickly, his hands tightening around hers as if afraid she might slip away again. "You scared me to death, my love. I thought I lost you." His voice cracked, and his fingers trembled. "Please... don't do this to me."
Her breath hitched, and the weight of his words settled over her like a heavy shroud. She became acutely aware of the ache in her limbs, the exhaustion weighing her down, the dull throb of regret pounding in her skull. She tried to sit up, but he was quicker, pressing a gentle but firm hand to her shoulder.
"Don't move too much," he murmured, his tone somewhere between a plea and a command. "You're still weak. The Healers said you're stable, but your body needs time."
Her lips parted, her brows knitting together as tears welled in her eyes. "Draco... I'm so sorry." The words came out fractured, broken under the weight of guilt.
His head shook instantly, vehement, as if the very thought of her apologizing was unbearable. "No. Don't." A tear slipped down his cheek, tracing a path of silent anguish. "This isn't your fault. I should have seen it—I should have known how much you were hurting."
"You couldn't have," she whispered, her voice barely above a breath. "I hid it from you. I didn't want you to see how lost I was."
He brought her hand to his lips, pressing tender, lingering kisses to her knuckles, as though anchoring her to him, as though breathing life back into her through sheer touch. "You're not alone," he swore, his voice trembling with fierce devotion. "You will never be alone. I love you. More than anything."
She squeezed his hand with all the strength she had left, her heart swelling with love and gratitude so profound it hurt. "I love you too," she whispered, fresh tears slipping down her cheeks. "You're the love of my life."
For a long time, they held on to each other, gripping as if their very souls depended on it. No words were needed—just the quiet, unbreakable tether between them, stronger than pain, stronger than fear.
Then, after a while, he spoke, his voice thick but steady. "Hermione," he murmured, brushing a strand of hair from her face, "I think we should move to your cottage permanently. Get away from all of this. Somewhere quiet... somewhere safe."
Her tears spilled faster, but this time, they carried something lighter—relief. "Yes," she whispered, nodding. "I think that's a good idea. I need... I need time away from everything."
The sterile white of the hospital walls seemed to fade as warmth, tentative but persistent, bloomed between them. It wasn't just hope—it was the promise of healing, however slow, however painful. They would leave this place, not unscarred, but together.
~~~~~~
Draco's hands trembled as he Floo-called Theo and Pansy, his voice taut with urgency. He barely registered their responses, only that they were coming, that he wouldn't be alone in this.
The journey back to their cottage was cloaked in silence. The nervous energy that had thrummed between them at St. Mungo's had dissipated, leaving only a heavy, contemplative stillness. The rolling hills and grazing sheep outside the window remained unchanged, but to Hermione, the world felt different—fractured. Irrevocably altered.
Stepping over the threshold, a wave of relief washed over her. The familiar scent of woodsmoke and parchment clung to the air, yet instead of warmth, it felt like the ghost of a memory—distant, unreachable. Then, amidst the quiet dissonance, a familiar presence stirred.
Crookshanks.
The moment the door shut, he darted across the room, his ginger fur bristling as he leaped onto her lap. His purr, deep and resonant, rumbled through her like an anchor, grounding her in something real. Hermione buried her face in his thick fur, clutching him as if he were the last tether keeping her from slipping away.
Crooks nudged her hand insistently, his sharp green eyes locking onto hers. There was no judgment in them, no disappointment—just an unspoken understanding. And at that moment, as a lone tear slipped down her cheek, Hermione felt it.
She had him. She had Crookshanks. And perhaps, just perhaps, she still had herself.
With a shaky breath, she stroked his head, the rhythmic motion settling something fractured within her. A single word left her lips, soft but resolute. "Together."
It wasn't just a promise to him; it was a vow—to herself, to Crookshanks, to the life she refused to surrender. One breath, one step, one heartbeat at a time.
The silence in the cottage stretched, broken only by the steady crackle of the fire. Draco led her to the couch, his movements gentle yet firm, as if she might shatter under the weight of her own grief. He sat beside her, his fingers seeking hers. Her hand, cold and fragile, hesitated before curling around his.
"I thought I lost you, love," he murmured, his voice frayed at the edges.
Tears burned in his throat, but he didn't blink them away. He had seen loss before—had lived in its aftermath—but seeing it written on her face, in her hollowed-out eyes, was a different kind of agony.
Hermione turned her head toward him, her expression unreadable—a collision of guilt, exhaustion, and something deeper, something raw. Her lips parted, her voice barely a breath.
"I'm so sorry," she choked out. "I didn't want to hurt you. I just… I just couldn't bear the pain anymore."
The confession struck like a dagger, sharp and cold. He had known she was hurting, had felt it in the distance between them, in the shadows that clung to her every movement. But to hear it—to hear how close he had come to losing her—was suffocating.
"But you have me, Hermione," he whispered, his voice tight with emotion. "We have each other. Whatever this is—whatever weight you're carrying—we face it together. Always."
His grip on her hand tightened, willing her to feel the truth in his touch. "Please, love," he pleaded, his voice cracking. "Let me in. Let me help. No more darkness—no more hiding. We fight this together."
And then, the dam broke.
Hermione's body shook as silent tears spilled down her cheeks. Her voice, raw and unsteady, came in waves—a confession of guilt, of fear, of the unbearable weight she had carried alone for too long.
He held her through it all, his arms unyielding, his love unwavering. Whatever haunted her, whatever battles lay ahead—they would fight them.
As she poured out her pain, he listened with a raw, aching intensity. Every word she spoke cut through him, but beneath the sorrow, a sliver of hope flickered to life. The darkness had thrived in silence, feeding off isolation and fear. But now, with her confession trembling between them, a fragile light began to pierce the gloom. The road ahead would not be easy, but one truth remained steadfast—they would not walk it alone.
Tears streamed down his face as he pulled her into his arms, holding her with the desperation of a man who had almost lost the most precious thing in his world. "I don't know what I would do without you," he murmured, his voice hoarse with emotion. "You are my everything. The universe could collapse around us, and as long as I had you, I'd still have my world. I have searched lifetimes for a love like yours, and finally, I have found my forever."
A sob tore from Hermione's throat as she clung to him, her fingers gripping the fabric of his shirt as though he were the only thing tethering her to the earth. "I love you so much," she choked out. "You are the sun to my moon, the light that guides me through the darkness."
He pressed a trembling kiss to the crown of her head, his chest tightening at the thought of how close he had come to losing her. "I'll always be here," he vowed, his voice breaking. "We'll get through this together. I will never, ever let you go."
A violent tremor ran through Hermione, and she curled into him, her breath ragged, her body wracked with exhaustion. "Help me, please," she whispered, the words barely more than a shattered plea. The weight of her pain, the burden of her guilt, pressed down on her like an unforgiving tide, and she was drowning.
Draco, his own heart a shattered vessel tossed in the storm of her suffering, met her anguish with unwavering resolve. He leaned down, brushing a tender kiss against her forehead—a vow in its own right. "We'll face this together," he whispered fiercely. "Therapy, healers—whatever it takes to bring you back to the light, I'll walk that path with you. Hand in hand. Step by step."
Her breath hitched, tears slipping from her lashes, blurring the edges of the world. She squeezed her eyes shut, seeking comfort in the solid warmth of him, in the way his arms encased her as if shielding her from every ghost that haunted her.
"Thank you," she rasped, her voice cracking under the weight of emotion. "Thank you for being my anchor when I was lost."
A shudder wracked his body, mirroring the storm that had raged within her for far too long. He held her tighter, as if pouring his own strength into her through the sheer force of his embrace. "There is nowhere you can go that I won't follow," he swore, his voice thick with love and unyielding devotion. "You are not just the love of my life, Hermione. You are the very air I breathe."
They stayed like that for a long time, wrapped in each other's warmth, their hearts beating in sync, as if willing the fractures between them to heal. The future was uncertain, but one thing remained clear—they would face it together.