Minnow ([info]minnow_53) wrote in [info]remusxsirius,

Fic: Sweet Sixteen

Sweet Sixteen
By Minnow

Disclaimer:
These characters belong to JK Rowling and various corporations.
Pairing: OTP (Remus/Sirius)
Era: Mainly MWPP, Sixth Year, but set post-series.
Summary: Remus relives a day in the past.
Rating: PG-13


Posted on my journal and [info]remusxsirius.


Sweet Sixteen

‘What have you got for me, Professor?’

The thin, greying man put a battered case on the counter, opened it and drew out a few books, a handful of knuts and sickles, a gold chain.

‘That’s not a lot.’

The thin man shrugged. ‘It’s all I have.’

The old man behind the counter considered, then said, ‘Well, times are hard. I suppose that’ll do. Have you chosen your day?’

‘Yes.’

‘Better tell you the drill, then.’ The old man gave a toothless grin. ‘You won’t be able to change anything. You will act and speak and feel exactly as you did on that day. You may find you can alter things when the spell is wearing thin, but don’t even try. One false move and the magic is aborted instantly.’

Remus understood perfectly.

‘Now, I can bring back the child, Professor Lupin. But I can’t take away the man. When people return, they tell me their perceptions were - a little strange. Are you prepared for that?’

‘Of course.’

The old man took a piece of parchment from the pile on the shelf behind him and shoved it across the counter. ‘If you could just sign this waiver…thank you, Professor.’

*

Remus put the quill down, and woke up in his bed in the dorm. Now, that was a weird dream. He lay for a minute trying to figure it out.

The man dropping in for the day luxuriated in the warmth and softness; it was a while since he’d slept anywhere so comfortable. He would have smiled, but he had no control over the boy whose body he was inhabiting. And Remus wouldn’t have smiled when he woke that particular morning.

However, the boy in the bed turned at the sound of footsteps, and then he did smile, and sat up expectantly. The curtains parted, and Sirius whispered, ‘Budge over.’ He leaned toward Remus and they kissed, a lingering, expert kiss that probably went on for a good ten minutes, yet felt like just a few seconds.

The kiss summed up everything that had been missing all these long years. The man’s heart leapt, just as the boy’s did, filled to overflowing with this wonderful emotion. He’d so missed being in love, with its extremes of joy and misery... The terrors of the hours to come loomed ahead, but his worries vanished with Sirius in his bed, his hands everywhere, ministering to Remus until he gave a choked cry, and Sirius whispered, ‘Ssh, Moony, for heaven’s sake! I forgot the charm.’

Remus didn’t care. For a moment he felt a joy so pure that both the man he was and the boy he’d been could have wept with it.

Remus was grateful that he'd once been uninhibited enough to lie and look straight into Sirius’s eyes. He drank in the beloved, beautiful face, with its high cheekbones, and the big grin that Sirius never quite managed for anyone else, even Prongs. Oh, Sirius, Sirius… He was dying to put his arms round Sirius, tell him he adored him. And so was the Remus of long ago, but he would never have dared. Instead, he blushed a bit, ducked, and said, ‘Pads, you shouldn’t have. We’re in enough trouble already.’

You are. ’

‘So are you,’ Remus said indignantly. It was peculiar talking without any apparent input into what you were saying; no doubt one of those strange perceptions the old man had mentioned.

‘I’m seventeen. And come on, Moony, aren’t you a bit glad my parents aren’t going to get involved? They’d probably run you out of the country on a rail or whatever those Muggles do.’

‘They’d probably Avada Kedavra me.’

‘I wouldn’t let them.’ Sirius wrapped his arms round Remus again, and the older Remus felt the boy’s worry receding. While Sirius was there, while they were together, nothing could hurt them. Though come to think of it, it was precisely because they were together that this was going to be a really awful day. He pushed Sirius away.

‘We better get up. I want this whole bloody mess out of the way.’

Sirius was laughing. ‘Getting dressed at six o’clock isn’t going to make the day go faster! More likely the opposite. Hey, c’mere. You got off and I didn’t. Not fair.’

No, not fair, and Remus was very happy to redress the balance. The Remus in the background knew, of course, exactly the status of their sexual progress on this particular date in their history. They had not yet gone all the way, as he still put it to himself, in the Shack: that would be happening about a week from now, and the memory, the triumph and glory of actually having had sex, still lingered all those years later. He had nearly chosen that day: but this one was just a fraction more luminous.

He thought of the first time still to come as Remus kissed Sirius all down his body, lost in the sensations of his younger self touching and caressing; and by the time he’d finished he was wanting Sirius again so much it hurt. He’d forgotten the lusts of sixteen, the way the body was so impatient and just couldn’t wait. Especially when the most gorgeous, wonderful person in the world was right beside you.

‘You really are fucking insatiable, aren’t you?’ Sirius teased.

Yes, but only with you, because I can’t and won’t and never will get enough of you. He put his arms round Sirius and drew him close. We had this at least. It’s something to hold on to, isn’t it?

There was the sound of a shrill alarm. ‘Oh, bugger, Prongs’ll be up. C’mon, Moony, I better go.’

Remus, on automatic pilot, got up, got washed and dressed, and oh, no, no. If he’d been in charge of the body, his knees would have buckled. James, dear James, oh God, just to see you one more time… I don’t know if I can bear it.

James was holding a small hand mirror and trying to style his untidy hair with a wand and a tube of gel. Remus laughed, genuinely amused, but was surprised by the slight edginess he felt as he watched. Edgy about James? About Prongs? But I loved him so much.

Remus said, ‘Good morning, Prongs,’ quite naturally, though his stomach was clenching itself in knots. Now, what was that all about? The feelings the adult Remus had experienced so far, the love, being with Sirius, were old and familiar, forged into his blood and his bone, but he had completely forgotten this one. He tested it. So obvious, really. Him and Sirius, having secrets, terrified of James finding out.

‘Okay, Moony, are you going to tell us?’ James asked, applying gel liberally.

‘I already did.’

‘Come on! You don’t lose your prefect’s badge because Snivellus knows you’re a werewolf. You’d have lost it months ago, anyway.’

Remus avoided his eyes. ‘I know. He was probably waiting to eat his revenge cold or something.’

‘Hey, Prongs, leave him. He doesn’t want to talk about it.’ Remus at sixteen would have known this, but older Remus was surprised that Sirius also felt edgy toward James. But then, it was his secret too.

‘Can’t you lot just shut up?’ A querulous, still rather high-pitched voice. Remus didn’t think he could bear to look, but he had to, because on this long-ago morning he had looked, had smiled, had said in an astonishingly conciliatory voice, ‘Sorry to wake you and all, Wormtail, but we’ve got to be at breakfast in ten minutes.’

He was glad he hadn’t remembered how awkward it felt to walk into the Great Hall for breakfast today, with pupils at all four tables staring at him curiously, how the lack of the prefect’s badge on his robes assumed such weight and importance as the whispers followed him. When he thought about it, he did recall a few of the rumours, most of them fairly farfetched – ‘Lupin started a fire in the Slytherin girls’ dorm’ - none of them remotely correct, thank goodness. The distance between the door and the Gryffindor table felt like miles, and when he finally sat down he was unable to eat a thing.

After breakfast, Professor McGonagall stopped Remus on the way out of the Hall. Both Remuses knew this was going to happen, were expecting it, but all the same his stomach clenched again as she approached, the way it had with James. Had he really been so nervous? Thank God he’d outgrown that, at least.

‘Mr. Lupin, please don’t forget your appointment. My office, at break. Wait outside and I’ll come and fetch you when we’re ready.’

‘Yes, Professor McGonagall.’ He avoided her eyes too. I was a furtive little bugger, wasn’t I? No wonder Padfoot thought I was the spy.

The first lesson was Herbology. It was a beautiful May morning, warm but not hot, smelling of newly mown grass and sunshine. Remus drew in deep, appreciative breaths of the sweet air with its faint haze as they strolled to the greenhouses.

He knew what they would be doing, of course. Herbology was far from his best subject, but they were working with Muggle ferns, which contained a narcotic substance that acted as a powerful painkiller for magicians. Remus loved the ferns: their delicate fronds, their green, earthy smell, the feel of them tickling, caressing his hands and face as he potted them. He was disappointed at how careless he had been then – for goodness’ sake, how had the boy ever passed his Herbology OWL when he couldn’t even tamp the soil neatly down in the flowerpot? – but he enjoyed his vague daydreams about Sirius.

Sirius was on the other side of the greenhouse, and they occasionally looked up and glanced at each other. Remus was astounded how comforting those glances were, how every time his eye caught Sirius’s, there’d be a lick of flame in his stomach that had nothing to do with sex and everything to do with the way he felt when he just thought of Sirius, of his hands and mouth, of his laughter, of his stupid bloody puns. He fell into the serious/Sirius trap all the time, he recollected fondly. But there were also endless plays on ‘lupine’ and wolves and flowers.

The bell rang for break, and they trooped back up to the castle. James lingered behind, trying to strike up a conversation with Evans, and Sirius caught up with Remus, flinging an arm round his shoulder.

‘I’ll come and wait with you, okay?’

‘No, don’t. I’ll be fine. Anyway, I don’t really want McGonagall to keep seeing us together.’

‘She’ll have to get used to it. For Merlin’s sake, we’re friends, aren’t we? She should know that by now.’

‘Why don’t you go and have your snack? It’s Chelsea buns today.’

‘Tell you what, I’ll bring you one. Be along in a sec.’ And Sirius loped off to the Great Hall, as at least three girls gazed after him lasciviously. Remus stared after him too, for a full minute, before sighing and hoisting his book bag to his shoulder and making his way to McGonagall’s office.

He leaned against the wall outside and tried to think of something other than the confrontation with his parents that was about to happen. Older Remus knew how it had turned out, of course, but younger Remus was frankly scared and embarrassed. He wanted to hide in the Shack for a few weeks and not come out until everything had blown over. He might, in the occasional melodramatic moment, feel that his thing with Sirius was worth every ounce of anguish, but he didn’t want actually to suffer the anguish.

He stared fixedly at the portrait opposite, a sleeping lion that never seemed to wake up. He was tempted to go and poke at it, as Sirius had once, but decided that he was enervated enough already.

Instead, he fantasised about how he would run off with Sirius. Sirius was going to buy his own place soon, and they would leave school and live together there. It sounded wonderfully wicked, and Remus found his mouth curving in a smile. He shivered slightly too as he thought of Sirius touching him…

He jumped when he felt Sirius’s hand on his arm. ‘Hey, wake up. Here’s a nice bun. And some milk.’

‘Is the milk warm again?’

‘Not yours. I performed a wonderful cooling charm on it specially for you.’ Sirius leaned over and his lips brushed against Remus’s. Remus pushed him away.

‘For goodness’ sake, Sirius. My parents are in there! And McGonagall’s going to be out at any second.’

I pushed him away! I pushed Sirius away!

Sirius looked aggrieved. ‘Oh, all right.’

Remus felt a stab of guilt at his miserable expression. ‘Padfoot. You know it’s not you. You know – ’ He leaned his forehead against Sirius’s shoulder. ‘I just, I just want us to be together, without it being a big deal.’

Sirius enclosed him in one of his big hugs. ‘Moony. We will. It’s nearly the holidays.’

I can’t believe I did that! However did I dare? McGonagall about to come and fetch me, and my parents waiting, and I go and let Sirius hug me, and oh, God, I am so glad I did because it feels so wonderful. Warm and safe, and I want to hug you for all eternity, Pads. I wish I could, oh, I wish I could, but this will do for now. At least I have this again.

They sprang apart seconds before the door opened, but McGonagall looked daggers at them all the same. ‘Mr. Black, you have no need to be here. I think you had better run along to Potions. Mr. Lupin, your parents are ready to have a word.’

Remus reluctantly followed her in. He knew what came next: he didn’t want to relive it, but without it he wouldn’t have the rest of the day, and he so needed the rest of that day if he was to go on at all.

McGonagall, rather stiffly, said, ‘Your parents want to talk to you by yourself for a moment.’

He wondered what exactly she’d told them, what variation on Spying Snape Sees Black and Lupin Snogging. Had she played it light? He doubted it. Had she spouted about phases and hormones and adolescent boys? Probably not, at a mixed school like Hogwarts.

McGonagall opened the door to her private office, which was a white, rather sterile cubby hole off her main office, with three upright orange upholstered chairs and a fire burning in the grate, in spite of the warmth of the morning, presumably so his parents could Floo to Hogwarts and home again.

He felt completely torn in two for a moment. His adult self was flooded with a happiness that was almost pain, a love unike his love for Sirius, but deep and abiding nonetheless. It had been so long! His father was only about five years older than he was now, he realised with a shock, his mother round the same age. They looked incredibly young to his adult self, just as they looked old and nondescript to young Remus. After all, they were only his parents; he found them stupid and boring. He was absolutely mortified to see them here, knowing they knew what they knew.

But they were dead, and had been briefly brought back to life. Yet he couldn’t fling his arms around them and cry unashamedly and say he was sorry he hadn’t valued them enough, hadn’t appreciated their sacrifices for him more fully.

All he could do was stand for a moment, deep in thought, then look up and meet his father’s eyes unflinchingly. ‘What did McGonagall tell you?’ he asked. Well, I was a Gryffindor, older Remus thought, almost impressed.

‘Oh, well,’ his father said, looking away. ‘She told us something about you and that friend of yours, er – ’

‘Sirius Black,’ his mother supplied. She was steadfastly looking down at the carpet. Remus thought she might have been crying.

‘Well,’ Remus said. ‘Did she mention anything about Severus Snape?’

‘Uh, yes, the other boy, the one who -- ’

‘Was spying on us,’ Remus said. ‘Look, I know I deserved to lose my badge. I’m sorry. I was stupid. But McGonagall hasn’t really let us explain. I’m sure you will.’

How did I manage to stay so calm?

He took a deep breath. ‘It was a joke. Snape is always spying on us, and we saw him and we thought we’d give him something to look at. So we pretended to kiss each other.’

‘You kissed each other!’ his mother said, scandalised.

‘Oh. Didn’t McGonagall mention that?’ You bloody idiot, Remus chided himself.

‘She did, yes. I think your poor mother was a bit traumatised, by that stage.’

‘No need to be, Mum,’ said Remus in a mock-cheerful tone that set even his teeth on edge. ‘It was a joke. We weren’t really kissing. It’s okay.’

Both his parents perked up to such an extent that it actually hurt. Shit, was the truth that bad? No wonder he felt he had to lie to them.

McGonagall knocked tactfully on the door and came back in. ‘Have you had a chat with your parents, Mr. Lupin?’

‘Everything’s sorted out, Professor,’ his mother replied chirpily, ‘Remus has explained that it was only a joke.’

‘It was silly and irresponsible,’ his father added. ‘He deserved to lose his badge. But no harm done, fortunately, eh?’

McGonagall gave Remus a very sharp look but said nothing. ‘Well, I’m glad you’ve discussed it now. I’m so sorry to have called you in. As Remus is only sixteen, the Headmaster and I had no choice.’

‘No problem, none at all,’ said Remus’s father heartily. ‘Pleased we got it all sorted.’

When they were gone, Professor McGonagall, said, ‘Now, Mr. Lupin, we’d better get along to Transfiguration.’

They went down the draughty corridor, McGonagall uttering the occasional pleasantry, about the NEWT mocks, Remus responding politely, not really taking much in. After the tension of the past twenty-four hours, he felt almost light-headed with relief.

Just outside the Transfiguration classroom, McGonagall stopped abruptly and said, in what was, for her, a gentle voice, ‘You know, Remus, if you ever need to talk about any problems, I am your Head of House and you can always come to me. All right?’

‘Yes. Thank you,’ Remus stuttered. He could feel his face going red, and cursed himself for having fair skin and a low embarrassment threshold. He preferred her acerbic and calling him Mr Lupin.

He escaped into the classroom and plonked himself down in his usual seat at the back, waiting for the others to come in from Potions.

Sirius sat next to him, looked at him expectantly and mouthed, ‘Well?’

‘Ssh. McGonagall’s watching us.’

They got out their textbooks, and listened to a long lecture about why transfiguring animate to inanimate objects was only legal if certain precautions were taken. Remus tried to scribble down a few notes, but was distracted by Sirius tearing a strip off his parchment. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw Sirius flick his wand slightly, and the parchment landed silently in front of Remus. He flicked his own wand, and it opened. ‘What did they say? Are they angry?’

Remus shook his head.

McGonagall and Peter handed out hedgehogs. Remus herded his into the centre of the desk with the edge of his quill, remembering the legality clause, which wasn’t unlike the disclaimer he had signed in Knockturn Alley a few hours ago. This animal fully agrees to its Transfiguration and understands that it is only temporary… He swished his wand and it turned into a slightly lopsided tea cosy. He decided to add a patchwork pattern.

Sirius scrolled some lace around the edge of his rather more accomplished tea cosy. He then put down his wand and said, ‘C’mon, tell me.’

McGonagall was helping a few Hufflepuffs who couldn’t get the incantation right. Remus lowered his voice and explained to Sirius what he’d said. Sirius squawked, ‘Bloody hell!’

‘Language, Mr Black! Five points from Gryffindor.’

‘Shit,’ Sirius murmured. ‘Honestly, Moony. D’you really think you’ll be able to hide this from your parents forever?’

‘It’s all right for you. You didn’t have yours sitting in McGonagall’s office looking like the world had come to an end. I think they were less upset when I was bitten.’

‘I had mine calling me a filthy pervert and every foul name under the sun,’ Sirius said grimly.

Remus suddenly felt as if he were about to cry. ‘Look. I did what I could. I panicked.’

McGonagall came round to check their cosies, and told Remus off. ‘I do not accept sloppiness at NEWT level. Look at those seams! Do that again, Mr. Lupin.’ The adult Remus cringed. If he could have apologised profusely for the teenage Remus, he would have done so.

The bell rang for lunch, and after lunch there was History of Magic. It was a sadistic move on the part of the professors that everyone had to continue the subject after OWLs, even though virtually nobody took History of Magic NEWT. ‘We aim to provide a rounded education,’ Professor Dumbledore explained when irate parents challenged him on this.

The last thing Remus wanted was to spend his precious day sleeping. But the night, which he had not relived, had been rather a short one, with Sirius in his bed and both of them awake until well past midnight, not to mention his being up so early that morning. So he had actually slept through Binns’s lesson on that long, drowsy afternoon so far in the past.

He duly closed his eyes and within moments was immersed in the dream of twenty-two years ago, featuring him and Sirius and a flying horse. Adult Remus, hovering in limbo, was worried that he would never wake up, would somehow miss the rest of his single magical day. He was intensely relieved when he was jerked awake by Peter poking him, and resurfaced to the sound of the professor’s familiar drone.

Then, the school day was over. The man knew it would be the last time he would ever spend a day at Hogwarts, either as a pupil or a teacher. He had no more possessions to pay the shopkeeper in Knockturn Alley, for a start.

However, Remus at sixteen was pleased that the dreaded interview with his parents hadn’t gone too badly, that he didn’t have much homework and it was chocolate cake for tea. He and Sirius sat together in the common room, and James came over and perched on the edge of Sirius’s chair.

‘Hey, you two. Never seem to see you any more, Padfoot. Where did you get to during break?’

He didn’t wait for an answer, because Lily Evans walked past them, and James got that glazed look that was probably, Remus reflected, similar to the expression he wore when he was watching Sirius. ‘Okay, Padfoot, Moony. Gotta go. She knows what the Charms homework is, and I missed it.’

Remus and Sirius glanced at each other and smiled and shrugged.

Adult Remus was, he had to admit, extremely annoyed with his younger self while he was doing his homework. For goodness’ sake! How could he not even have tried? Had he been so busy thinking about Sirius that he only just made the required length on his Defence essay? He wondered how he'd ever developed a reputation for being studious at school. Let alone become a professor.

The Remus at school, the Remus who was in love with Sirius Black, shoved his rather sketchy homework away in his bag, and put it upstairs in the dorm. He ate a huge supper of roast beef, Yorkshire pudding, tinned peaches and custard.

Afterwards, Sirius grabbed him by the hand, and said, ‘C’mon, let’s go for a walk.’

The May evening was mild, and it was still light, though the first stars were just beginning to come out in the sky. They strolled along hand in hand. I don’t understand how we were so careless. We’d just been caught! When was I ever so young and reckless? Something in the older man broke a bit when he thought that.

They sat against the tree looking out over the lake, which was calm and glassy on this beautiful evening.

‘Moony,’ Sirius said hesitantly, ‘that thing about it being a joke. You were just saying it, weren’t you?’

The tone of his voice, a bit – guarded? – tore at Remus’s soul. ‘Yes, I was. I didn’t mean it.’ Now, was that the right answer or the wrong one? Why did being in love make you so insecure, so uncertain? In a moment, Sirius would say something like, ‘Oh. Well, I think you had a point, actually. Perhaps we shouldn’t take this so seriously.’ And he’d smile a bit at the pun, as he always did, but not one of his big, wide smiles.

Or maybe Remus had offended him so much that he was going to suggest they went back to being just friends, before they got into any more trouble.

The adult Remus knew what was coming – that was, after all, why he’d chosen this particular day in the first place – but the boy didn’t. His palms were sweaty, and he had to wipe them on his robes. His heart was pounding and filled with hopeless, desperate fear, and adoration for Sirius, with his dark hair hanging in his eyes, who was pulling him over for a kiss.

‘I’m glad it’s not a joke. Because, I think, well. I may be in love with you, Moony.’

And Remus, still just a bit afraid to make the full admission, replied, ‘I think I’m in love with you too.’

It was ridiculous how a few silly, short words could change everything, could make the world spin upside down and dizzy, make you want to laugh and cry, and turn cartwheels over the grass. But because Sirius was, after all, of age, and Remus was a mature young man of sixteen, they didn’t actually turn cartwheels, though both of them would secretly have liked to.

The sky grew dark, and the new moon was clearly visible, hanging benevolently in the sky.

‘Make a wish,’ said Sirius, and Remus made a wish that his older self knew would never come true.

They lay quietly in each other’s arms on the grass, which was eventually drenched with dew. The scents of the night, somehow so much headier and more powerful than the scents of the day, wafted across the lake: flowers and new leaves and fresh water. Remus knew he had never been so happy; and he knew that he would never be as happy again.

Very soon, they would fall asleep outside, under the night sky, and when they woke Remus’s precious day would be over, and he would be back in the dingy shop again. The moon set, and the world was utterly silent; and Remus reflected that these last few seconds of wakefulness were the last few he would ever spend with Sirius.

Just before he drifted to sleep, with an immense effort, he said the words he had never had the chance to say before.

‘Goodbye, Padfoot. Love you.’

He was sure Sirius heard him; but he had interfered, he had torn through the barrier and broken the spell.

*

The old man, still in exactly the same position behind his counter said, ‘The time was nearly up anyway.’

‘I know.’

‘Hope it was worth it.’ He nodded towards Remus’s meagre possessions on the counter.

‘It was.’

Remus left the shop, one of the last standing in Knockturn Alley, and the bell on the door jangled merrily as he opened it. He walked back through the ruins of Diagon Alley, to a world so destroyed that not one of those children at Hogwarts so many years ago would have begun to recognise it.

He didn’t even notice. All he saw was the sun, gentle in the autumn sky, and he felt a slight breeze and smelt the dusty, petrol smells of London on a September afternoon. For the first time in years, he was almost at peace, and the constant ache in his heart was just a little lighter.


End

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  • 61 comments

[info]topaz_eyes

February 21 2005, 16:16:47 UTC 7 years ago

Very bittersweet. Which is to say, very very good. Brava!

[info]minnow_53

February 21 2005, 16:43:51 UTC 7 years ago

Thank you! You can have my new and possibly illegal icon.^_^

[info]topaz_eyes

7 years ago

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]topaz_eyes

7 years ago

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]abstruse_soul

February 21 2005, 16:49:39 UTC 7 years ago

oh, the ending.
i ache.
thank you for this<3

[info]minnow_53

February 21 2005, 17:14:58 UTC 7 years ago

Thank you for commenting. Sorry to be depressing again... :(
^_^

[info]themegaloo

February 21 2005, 16:54:13 UTC 7 years ago

...why is that everytime I read a story in the library I end up on the verge of tears?

That was simply beautiful. No other words for it. Just beautiful.

[info]minnow_53

February 21 2005, 17:14:18 UTC 7 years ago

Thank you. I'm really glad you enjoyed it, though 'enjoy' is probably the wrong word. I am going to go and do a few raucous 1001 fics now, I think, because I'm even depressing myself. Thanks for commenting! ^_^

[info]themegaloo

7 years ago

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]themegaloo

7 years ago

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]themegaloo

7 years ago

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]themegaloo

7 years ago

[info]moony_girl3

February 21 2005, 16:58:47 UTC 7 years ago

I'm crying.

...


...That is all.

[info]minnow_53

February 21 2005, 17:12:42 UTC 7 years ago

Soory! :( But thanks. :)

[info]kabeyk

February 21 2005, 17:00:25 UTC 7 years ago

Sighhhhh....

I think I secretly love bittersweet stories like this, even though they do horrible things to my emotions.

You got Remus down just so perfectly; his adult self and teenage self. The way he felt about his schoolwork and his parents and friends was just so right. Again my ability to express myself fails me, but you understand what I'm getting at.

One niggle: he was anticipating chocolate cake for tea, then didn't get it. Poor boy, but then he got something better, didn't he.

And, damn it, I have completed nothing since last time I was complaining about your productivity.

kx

[info]minnow_53

February 21 2005, 17:11:28 UTC 7 years ago

Thank you! I think he did get his cake for tea: in my head, they always have a table with cake and so on in the common room after school. But if I don't say it, nobody else will see it, right? *kicks self* I think my productivity has come to an end: the fic I have started is so off the wall that I'm going to have to abandon it. Sadly.

By the time I post anything else, you'll have resolved the UST in Dating Disasters! Well, I hope you resolve it a bit faster than that. Can't wait.

It's great that you enjoyed this and commented. I don't know where the Happy Bunny has gone, though..
^_^

[info]kabeyk

7 years ago

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]kabeyk

7 years ago

[info]manraviel

February 21 2005, 17:20:00 UTC 7 years ago

Ah, excellent job, Minnow. Very beautiful. I feel I could cry, cuz Remus always makes me cry. :Thumbs up:

[info]minnow_53

February 21 2005, 17:23:56 UTC 7 years ago

Thank you! I'm glad you've changed your icon to appropriate puppy one. ^_~

[info]aura218

February 22 2005, 02:26:05 UTC 7 years ago

*sigh* Really liked this. Liked all of Old Remus' reactions, from missing James to being surprised at his age. When he said goodbye to Padfoot, my heart broke. :~) Just, a really cool story, and a unique way of telling it.

[info]minnow_53

February 22 2005, 06:55:51 UTC 7 years ago

Thank you. Glad you liked it. This has had a really disappointing response, actually. So it's good to find a couple of comments this morning. Thank you very much.
^_^

[info]paulamcg

February 22 2005, 06:16:38 UTC 7 years ago

I have so much to say about this amazing story that I still don’t have the time to compose my review. (Are we supposed to write extensive reviews on lj? I’m still so new here I don’t really know. I don’t know how friending works either. And I wonder when I'll get to posting my own fics. I do have a few stories – although it seems to take me longer to write a review than it takes you to write a story.)

(Anyway, as for this story,) I can second e.g. everything aura said above. But that’s not all. I doubt I’ve ever cried so genuinely for Remus when reading a fic. Although I had some doubts about this plot device at first, you completely won me over. I’d like to analyze what made me identify with Remus more thoroughly than ever and what made these moments I lived through more significant than simple reality.

[info]minnow_53

February 22 2005, 06:57:59 UTC 7 years ago

Thank you! You can make your reviews as short or long as you like. Some people quote great swathes, some leave one word, some leave one symbol!

I think a lot of people had doubts about the plot device (won't say where I nicked it from!) because I am disappointed with so few comments. Which makes it doubly nice to get yours this morning. And I am really glad that you enjoyed it. ^_^

[info]mushroom18

February 22 2005, 10:42:25 UTC 7 years ago

Wonderful and bittersweet and sad and...sigh. This is a unique fic, because it's realistic. Especially the part about Remus' parents, that's reality, actually. Loved it.

[info]minnow_53

February 22 2005, 11:54:36 UTC 7 years ago

Thank you. I'm glad you found it realistic; I always feel that the magical universe works precisely because it is based on reality. So that is an amazing compliment. I'm really, really pleased you liked it!
^_^

[info]veratiserum

February 22 2005, 11:24:00 UTC 7 years ago

Wow. This is wonderfully written. Very emotionally touching, without becoming soppy, whiny or angsty on the long run. I think you've nailed Remus's character in particular magnificently. Also, the contrast between the young, reckless boy and the old, weary man was so real it feels as though you're secretly JK using a nickname. Or Shakespeare, I don't know. :3

This is one of the best fics I've read in a long time. It's right up there with the thrilling posts of shoebox's glory days.

[info]minnow_53

February 22 2005, 11:52:17 UTC 7 years ago

I can't believe you said that...

Gosh, that is an amazing review! Thank you. I am so happy that you enjoyed it. The Shoebox comparison...well, I am sort of overwhelmed.

Thanks a million. ^_^

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]westwardlee

February 22 2005, 14:57:40 UTC 7 years ago

Minnow, you did it again. Just lovely, the way that Remus chose the day when Sirius said "I love you" as the most memorable. I was expecting something memorable anyway, as he didn't choose their "first time" day.

I wish we all could have this ability, for a few (or a lot) of Knuts to relive the most memorable days of our lives... Knowing what happened, without the tension that the unexpected brings us... Oh, why can't we??? I know, I know, we're Muggles - darn!

On a side note, I think it's amazing how our minds seem to be working in tandem - you wrote about homophobic!James and I was doing the same (finally went to beta - yay!!! What a relief!). Here is the potential coming out to mom and dad - this one should be going to beta soon - I promised myself I'm NOT touching any of my plot bunnies until it's DONE.

[info]minnow_53

February 22 2005, 16:11:51 UTC 7 years ago

Great, I can't wait to see those! I don't remember seeing a proper coming out to parents fic, so that will be really interesting. I hope you'll be tending to your bunnies as soon as it's gone to be beta'd.

I'm so glad you like this. It kept me awake all night last week, but I resolutely didn't get up to write it, except bits in my notebook. Then when I did stagger down to the computer it had disappeared! I was not happy. Luckily it came back again, I think.

What I'd like is the occasional Groundhog Day day, when you could make all the bad things go right. As long as you could move on in the end!

I am working (slowly) on the multimedia, but it'll be a while.

Thank you very much for commenting! ^_^

[info]paulamcg

February 22 2005, 19:55:33 UTC 7 years ago

Having read this story last night, I’ve still cried at times today, even before I started rereading. I don’t think any other story has ever made me feel like this.

I want to start my second post here by commenting on some of the recent reviews. Yes, the story is realistic – absolutely (if reality can be absolute), even doubly! And yes, we can relive our past, can’t we? With the magic of art, perhaps, it can be almost intense enough to be compared to Remus’s experience. Just because of that I don’t think the plot device was too unnatural, after all.

If you are disappointed with the amount of reviews, I’m clearly not the first person to discover your talent. Have you heard of such a consolation that your story is too good to garner more reviews? Perhaps the mainstream readers would have chosen the day one week later and urged Remus to observe the details of the physical interaction.

The story didn’t make me think you had to be JKR or involved with the Shoebox Project. What struck me was your ability to make me identify, first of all, with the adult man – and, in a most unique way, with him identifying with his sixteen year-old self.

Some of the most heartrending emotion has now been evoked in me by a couple of understated details, which I hardly noticed immediately: “it was a while since he’d slept anywhere so comfortable” and the listing of what there was for supper, as well as the nice bun and the milk… I hope you don’t think I’m crazy. Of course, I adore this kind of parts, too:

“He drank in the beloved, beautiful face, with its high cheekbones, and the big grin that Sirius never quite managed for anyone else, even Prongs. Oh, Sirius, Sirius… He was dying to put his arms round Sirius, tell him he adored him.”

It’s wonderful how you get to the point so soon at the start of this most luminous of days: the old Remus just wants to take in the gift of Sirius being there. The simple trick of repeating the name like that still brings tears to my eyes again…

My review is too long for one post, so I decided to split it here.

[info]minnow_53

February 22 2005, 20:45:41 UTC 7 years ago

Okay, I read the second part first, obviously! So much for opening the top post... Now, I've already answered the second one, so will now happily deal with this...

If you are disappointed with the amount of reviews, I’m clearly not the first person to discover your talent. I feel ashamed of that comment. I know that rxs can be fickle. I also had a fair amount of reviews in my journal. This is spoiled child stuff: sorry. Not worthy. :( If I don't get 50 lollipops, I whine...

Some of the most heartrending emotion has now been evoked in me by a couple of understated details, which I hardly noticed immediately: “it was a while since he’d slept anywhere so comfortable” and the listing of what there was for supper, as well as the nice bun and the milk… I hope you don’t think I’m crazy.

Far from it. I'm pleased when anyone notices the detail, because that is just so much fun to write. But important, like the comfortable part. I hoped that would come across.

The story didn’t make me think you had to be JKR or involved with the Shoebox Project. Well, obviously I'm far from JKR, and the SP reference was actually a big compliment. That was a sweet comment and I appreciated it, just as I appreciate yours!

You'll have seen the second/first part of my reply already, I hope. So you do need to know how lovely it is to get such a thoughtful review. You won't get a headline, cos this is the second part of my reply, if not your wonderful comment, and I was so absorbed in your first review that I didn't think of putting a header then. So I'll just say many, many thanks. I really am overwhelmed by the thought and trouble you have put into your comments.
<3<3<3

[info]paulamcg

7 years ago

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]paulamcg

7 years ago

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]paulamcg

7 years ago

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]paulamcg

February 22 2005, 20:00:25 UTC 7 years ago

My excessive review continues.

At the same time you intrigue the readers, who have to wonder what there can be that is so nerve-racking about this day, which Remus has chosen as the best one. You did not make this into a one-dimensional account (if it would have been even possible with your plot device) of a sweet perfect day. Instead, you included excellent controversy between the young and the old Remus’s emotions. For instance, you justified well enough that during that period both Remus and Sirius had easily felt uncomfortable in James’s company – and you showed how unimportant those feelings had turned out to be in the long run, so that Remus could have only remembered having always loved James as his dear friend.

My only nit-picking concerns the otherwise wonderful scene with Remus’s parents. I think he should have not had to guess how old his mother “probably” was. I suppose you meant to emphasize that he compared his father to himself, thinking about his age, but he must have been able to think that his mother was, as always, for intance two years younger than his father, or am I wrong?

There’s one other point I’d have written differently – if I had ever been able to write this story. I prefer to identify with the viewpoint character from the very beginning of the story. I’m curious to know why you started with what looks like an outsider’s perspective to me. In the very first paragraphs we can only see the “thin, greying man”, which is, as such, a perfect description. Perhaps you wanted to guide the readers into the story somehow gradually, and give them the pleasure to recognize your protagonist. You also ended up emphasizing the growth of intensity in Remus’s experience at the moment when he arrived in his past.

I suppose you chose not to let us explicitly share the hardships of his life in the ruined world (by not, for instance, starting with something like: “Remus spread out the last of his possessions: a couple of books and the few sickles he had managed to save by sacrificing…”) You left it for me to extrapolate that in this ruined world he probably had no shelter and he might not even survive the coming winter. That must be just additional tragedy…

…while he doesn’t brood over it himself. What matters is that he had this unique chance to spend a day with Sirius. The last moments by the lake were the most intense experience I can think of having ever shared with a fictional character. For Remus lived it all wholly as the sixteen-year-old – but also with the added significance given to it by his later life. The sense perceptions of the surroundings as such were described in a breathtaking beauty, because they were interpreted by both the young boy and the man – who sensed it all as he had sensed it once but also as something that he was deprived of and had missed in his current life. The final climax was how he managed to utter the forbidden words.

Although I continue to cry, I don’t think this is a depressing story. I hope that the most luminous day will stay with Remus until the end, as it will stay with me. Thank you so much.

[info]minnow_53

February 22 2005, 20:32:40 UTC 7 years ago

This is going to be long: I think such a thoughtful and intense review deserves a commensurate answer.

I think he should have not had to guess how old his mother “probably” was.

That's a use of a word (on my part!) that shouldn't have been used. I didn't mean to imply he didn't know: the 'probably' shouldn't be there and will be taken out. Though I have to say that children can be vague about their parents' ages. I always have to do maths...

There’s one other point I’d have written differently – if I had ever been able to write this story. I prefer to identify with the viewpoint character from the very beginning of the story. I’m curious to know why you started with what looks like an outsider’s perspective to me. In the very first paragraphs we can only see the “thin, greying man”, which is, as such, a perfect description.

The beginning. How I agree with you! But I couldn't go straight into it without some sort of intro. You can't imagine how hard I tried, but it just wouldn't work. I kept it as brief as I could, but, particularly in light of the ending, I couldn't dispense with it. The points meant to come across were that Remus had given everything he possessed for the experience, that his older self would still be conscious, that he couldn't interfere with the magical process. I tried to do this in as few words as possible. I entirely see your point, because i made it to myself as well. If I could have incorporated this successfully into the story, I'd have done so.

I am really so happy that you mentioned the scene by the lake, and that it came across as it was meant to. That bit wrote itself, at 3 in the morning. I tossed and turned and then put on the bedside light and wrote the whole thing in my notebook. Glad it was worth the effort. And one pissed-off husband!

I don’t think this is a depressing story. I'm glad, because it was one of my few (recent) happy endings! The idea was that Remus finally got closure (only possible expression, hope you're okay with it) after the Veil, and not being able to say goodbye to Sirius. I felt that the sense that Sirius in the past and Sirius in the cosmos had heard him would be very heartening and help him go on with what would be a very difficult life. But it wouldn't matter how hard it was, because Remus would feel at peace emotionally.

I think I should thank you for the review! I hope this answers a few of your points at least.

^_^

[info]paulamcg

February 23 2005, 11:33:01 UTC 7 years ago

Yes, thank you for this detailed reply to the second part of my review, too. I suppose I should move on, as you have your next story already written, but I can’t help commenting at least once more.

I still think you could have written the beginning from Remus’s own point of view – without changing much. On the other hand, as you’ve seen, I’m ready to look for even particular justification for starting from an outsider’s perspective, which must be quite a natural choice in many writers’ styles. In any case, the decision to make the opening scene informative but brief seems excellent to me. I don’t think it would have been good to make the hardships of Remus's current life more explicit.

I also want to clarify that I, too, found the saying of goodbye essential, and I liked the way it was put so plainly in the story! At the same time – while it was such a simple and natural and vital thing for Remus to do – you did justice to its importance by giving it the status of the fatal move which he was not supposed to make, according to the rules.

Finally, I need to add some praise for the Herbology scene. It was lovely as such and a brilliant parallel to the scene by the lake. Against the excellently painted background – all those valued sense perceptions of the ferns and the critical view to the young Remus’s work – you showed to the older Remus and to us how much he had actually loved Sirius. In fact, you showed that all through the day – so clearly just because this was not an easy day, and Remus needed the comforting glances and daydreams.

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]paulamcg

7 years ago

[info]minnow_53

7 years ago

[info]malakhai

February 23 2005, 06:26:35 UTC 7 years ago

I am so far behind on my R/S reading, but I do try to make a special effort to read your stories.

This has completely gutted me. I am simply devastated by this...I always save your fics to my hard drive, but this one I know I will be reading again and again.

He finally got to say goodbye to Sirius.

Oh, I'm going to cry again...

*bawls head off*

[info]minnow_53

February 23 2005, 07:15:23 UTC 7 years ago

He finally got to say goodbye to Sirius.

I think you're only about the second person to mention this, and nobody's put it quite so plainly: and I'm happy to see it, cos that was one of the points. That he wasn't only happy that he'd relived what was also a pretty stressful day, but that he finally said goodbye.

Right, I am incredibly happy to hear you like my fics. There are an awful lot of them! New one up tonight, but it's very different from my usual stuff. Plus a lot shorter, yay!
^_^

[info]_emeraldgreen

February 23 2005, 21:40:05 UTC 7 years ago

Oh, that made my heart hurt! It was Remus' reaction to seeing James again that really brought tears to my eyes (I don't think I was expecting it) oh, and when Sirius said "make a wish"...



[info]minnow_53

February 24 2005, 07:15:18 UTC 7 years ago

Thank you! I'm glad you liked. ^_^ Don't always do James and Remus silently glowering...

[info]celerywench

February 26 2005, 14:33:07 UTC 7 years ago

This made me want to cry, just rip my own heart out and scream. Luckily I resisted. But I did feel a prickle of tears. It was very sad, but it was very sweet too-in a sad way...bittersweet that's it. Ok, I'm rambling now. Anywho, good story, write more!

[info]minnow_53

February 26 2005, 16:33:50 UTC 7 years ago

Thank you. I am glad you resisted, and survived to write this comment! I'm really glad you liked it.

Anyhow, good story, write more!

Uh, I've written more. Tons more. Far too much more, probably. My fics litter the back pages of [info]remusxsirius like you wouldn't believe! :(

^_^
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