Disclaimer: Characters belong to J.K. Rowling; no profit is intended. a few people to thank: kel for being there to crib from; whoever made the livejournal post about Fred/Hermione that spawned this in the first place; vik, who listened when I started yakking. everwood, from whom I cribbed the line "a little death had crept inside." also calico, since "double or nothing" also kind of started this. Antigone stood up to the whole of Thebes in order to bury her brothers.

antigone, falling - commentary.

 

Okay, first of all: the title of this comes from Sophocles' play "Antigone", so I'm going to talk more than a little bit about Sophocles. bear in mind that I graduated with a classical mythology and literature degree, so it might be extensive and more than anyone cares about. Anyway.

The play, "Antigone", is the third in Sophocles' Oedipus trilogy. the thing is, most people only know about the first play, where Oedipus finds out he married his mother and killed his father and then blinded himself. But there are two more - one where Oedipus, as an old man, dies at Athens, and then this one, about Antigone. The play's basic premise is that her brothers were at war over Thebes, and now they're both dead - and the current ruler has only given burial rites to one of her brothers, leaving the other to lay in the dust. She risks everything to give her other brother his burial rites, and is sentenced to death for it. Since it's greek tragedy, by the play's very nature, she has to die.

Anyway, that's the classical background for the play. Antigone's determination really reflected Ginny, to my mind - especially a Ginny that had survived all of this and was determined to win. The fact that Ginny was the center of this story unfolded really slowly - I wrote this totally by accident, with no idea where I was going until I was finished - and then, once I was finished, the title just came to me, because Ginny was burying her brothers. ultimately, it meant I had a really nice framework for a series - extant greek tragedies, based on whoever had died last.

 

take heart; you are alive, but my life died
long ago, to serve the dead.

Sophocles, "Antigone"

--

Hermione said, "Fred," low and soft and then they clutched each other's hands, and it was the only place where either of them were touching or being touched, inside or out. Fred touched his wand to the doorknob, securing the house to intrusion, and then took Hermione to the car.

So the story goes like this: somewhere on livejournal (and I have yet to find where), someone made a post either referencing Fred/Hermione, or talking about a Fred/Hermione story, or *something*. And I tried to see the logic in that pairing, and totally couldn't - not unless Ron and George were both gone, and Fred and Hermione were grieving. So I was sitting there in front of the computer, watching tv at the same time, and that first line came into my mind. And I typed it out, and stared at it for a while, and then started typing, as if I was possessed. the bit about securing the house I added in later, once I found the hook about "lock the door before I leave", but the very first line was really where this whole thing began.

--

The caskets, Harry noted dully, were the same size. He hadn't done anything after all, just bankrolled the funeral, since Molly couldn't afford anything now that four of her sons were laid to rest beside her husband. She didn't even pretend to say no anymore, and that, too, proved how even though Molly lived, a little death had crept inside. Harry called her by her first name now, and she didn't call him 'dear'.

That phrase, "a little death had crept inside," I ripped off from the first season Everwood finale. they're talking about Colin, for those people who haven't seen it, and though he cheated death, a little death had crept inside - about his seizures. It just really hit me, the one phrase, and I've really wanted to use it ever since.

The first time he'd stood in a cemetery, Cedric had died for good. The second, Harry was incredibly surprised to see how like Muggle funerals wizarding ones were. He didn't know how many times he'd been back to a cemetery now. The rituals were all the same.

They wore black robes, not black suits, and the minister was secular, but Hermione even grabbed a handful of dirt and threw it on the coffins, first, followed by the rest of the family still gathered, as well as a few of the old Gryffindors still in the country. Bill was holding his mother's hand tight while Molly wept quietly, standing off to the side. Hermione and Fred stood out at the front of the crowd - Fred was the only one not wearing black; he sported dark red instead, and hadn't shaved in a week.

I've only been to one funeral, and the only thing that stuck out at me was the throwing dirt on the burial part. As for Fred not wearing black - can you see him wearing black?

Dumbledore himself had stepped out to oversee this gathering, even despite the terror currently being paraded around in Kent.

"We are gathered here," he began, "to say goodbye to two fine young men."

Dumbledore had cried. Harry knew that. He knew that as he knew that Hermione and Fred hadn't, that Molly probably wouldn't ever stop. He knew that Remus wouldn't, that Bill would be the next to die. He knew that Ginny would come just at the very end. He didn't know where Ginny was, but he knew she would be here. Even when Fred and George were being held in Bulgaria, and Arthur was in danger of losing his life - even before Bill and Charlie had even made up with him, Ginny had come to say goodbye to Percy. She was the first then, and ever since she skipped all but the leaving.

I knew that, with the way the Weasleys were treated, they'd probably be the first against the metaphorical wall. But still, trying to figure out who hadn't survived was still really harsh. But, and maybe this is a bit of fanon creeping in, it always made sense to me that Percy would be the first. Because he's so isolated from his family.

"We all know how they died," Dumbledore said. "That's not what's important." He pulled out a handkerchief that had MM embroidered on it; that was right, McGonagall was fighting for her life. Kingsley and Tonks were already gone, Tonks had simply disappeared out of thin air. The day they buried Kingsley it was raining. "What is important," he said, "was how they lived."

Again, pulling what happened to people out of my ass at this point. it was just random. I didn't want to take any of it back, even though it's really sad about Kingsley and Tonks. I really like them both.

Harry let Dumbledore's speech die off as he stumbled away, among the gravestones. This was a half-Muggle graveyard, since the town where the Weasleys used to live wasn't that full of wizards. Ginny would ride up on a broom, he knew, and probably wrapped in the Invisibility Cloak that she'd inherited from Moody. Alastor was still alive, but he wasn't available. Harry snorted. His mind was gone, eaten away by a curse that they still couldn't counter. What a way to go.

"Seen enough?" Ginny asked kindly. She was waiting at the gate, sitting on a low stone wall, broom beside her and satchel stuffed full.

Harry shrugged. "It's the same old bullshit," he answered. That was new, too - he didn't bother being quiet about exactly what he thought, except around Molly. He couldn't add to her torment, especially when she'd already had to give up her house and her husband and her children, to live at Number Twelve Grimmauld place as messenger and de facto maid. Since Remus had beheaded Kreacher, the place needed dusting.

The Remus beheading Kreacher comes from kel's "no one ever said it would be this hard", of course. Also - Molly as the maid at Grimmauld Place. It's really dramatic irony, because she hated living there in the summer, and yet. also, the following mention of fish and chips is all because I read Calico's "Double or Nothing" right before writing this. and her scene about Fred and George and chips always kills me.

Finally: Ginny came as a bit of a shock to me, as I wrote this first scene. I didn't know she'd have that kind of strength and resilience in her. But I always view Ginny in light of the quote from OotP she tells harry: "Growing up with Fred and George as brothers, you start to think that anything is possible." She really has a *lot* in her, being the youngest of the Weasleys. I think people forget that, sometimes - but she's tough.

"I was going to get some fish and chips," she said. "Walk me to the gravesite and we can go."

Harry followed in her steps, because Ginny knew what was going on, and of all of them, Ginny seemed to take things in stride without them managing to break her back. They got there just as people were breaking up, to head back to the cars or to disappear quietly. The wake was going to be at Grimmauld Place too, as if there was any doubt. It was the only place they could all go that was safe as well as it was home.

"Dear," and Molly wrapped her arms around Ginny tightly, Bill's hand resting on Molly's shoulder as if to ward off demons. Dumbledore was the first to Apparate away, because having this many people at the house at a time was going to cause problems in security.

When my grandfather died, it was so weird to see my grandma's oldest son stand as if to protect her. But, of all of them, of course Bill would take on that role. He's the eldest.

Hagrid blew his nose and made as if to speak with Hermione. Harry grabbed his coat. "Don't."

"Yeh don't understand, Harry," Hagrid said angrily. "She's hurtin', and will for a good long while."

Does anyone else have this hard a time writing Hagrid? I cannot get him right to save my life.

"Of course I understand," and Harry finally looked at the brand new fresh dug dirt. They'd be gone before the old grave tender came to put the dirt back in the ground where it belonged. Harry thought perhaps, if he survived to see some peace, that he'd take a job tending a cemetery.

The thought that Harry would only be comfortable somewhere that he dealt with death is so sad. tending a cemetary - just so he could know that something was permanent, that things were quiet.

"Our Hermione needs someone, Harry," and Hagrid pulled his coat away, to go put a comforting hand on Hermione and Fred's shoulders. Harry let him. Maybe Hagrid knew what to say - after all, he'd seen more freshly dug dirt than nearly anyone else alive. Fred and Hermione seemed unable to leave the coffins, but Hagrid pulled them gently away.

Hagrid is a really sympathetic character - he couldn't possibly leave Hermione and Fred to grieve alone. at least, that's kind of how I saw it. is it in character? I'm not sure. He's someone that's seen a lot of pain, and is still himself, despite it all.

"Sometimes you have to step in," Ginny said from behind. "Let's get some chips. I haven't eaten all day."

Harry turned. "Aren't you going to say something?"

Ginny shrugged. "They can't hear me." She wandered over to the spot where Fred and Hermione had been standing just moments before, and peered down. Reluctantly, Harry followed her. "I think I keep coming," she commented, "just to make sure they're really dead."

That still kills me - Ginny peering into the ground. auror!Ginny kills me. I'm so in love with her. But I'll talk about her characterization later.

--

The chips were too salty. Ginny's bag smelled like sea water. "Where were you?"

Fish batter spat onto the table as she answered, fork already going for another bite to stuff in her mouth. "Fishing fleet, off Norway. Flew all night. Neville heard that they might have Tonks alive."

Salty and sea water - again, influenced by Calico's "Double or Nothing", I think.

Harry swallowed. Tonks. There was no service for her, because technically she wasn't gone, just absent, like a missing tooth; your smile was never the same. "Anything?"

I think that's probably one of the best lines I've ever written - the missing tooth. and I say that in a tone that means, "oh my god, I can't believe *I* produced a really good line." Sometimes I really wish I could figure out *how* I stumbled across such a nice line, but oh well.

"Possibly. I had to zip back when the Muggles started fighting each other. Fishing fleet was a cover for something else."

"Death Eaters?"

Ginny snorted, putting more vinegar on her chips. George liked vinegar on his chips. "Drug smuggling, I think. Can you believe it? It was a dead end, no sign of her. Still, one of the crew said he'd meet me next week for a drink. I charmed him." She flashed her eyelashes at Harry. "He liked my skirt."

Vinegar on his chips. Again. Calico.

"Wizard?"

"Of course. Criminal as they come. Could know something. You want those?"

There was going to be food at the house, Ginny knew that as well as Harry did. In one hand, she held a fork, and was shovelling food past her lips with abandon. Her lips were greasy, and her hair was messy, pulled out of her face. A stray piece kept brushing her eye lashes, and she blew it out of her face while she ate Harry's portion, too. There would be food at the house, but in one fist Ginny held her fork, and in the other she gripped Harry's hand tight. Ginny couldn't ever eat at Grimmauld Place. She had to steel herself to go home.

I really liked the idea that Ginny could handle anything the world threw at her, but at the expense of her home life. Like, she could go home, and she could pretend for her mother, but only for a certain length of time. And she couldn't eat at home. Like that was the line she couldn't cross - she could do these certain things, but eating at home was one too many. Also the idea that she'd indulge in things, rather than deny them, when someone died. It's a different reaction than most people have to death, and it sets her apart in a lot of ways - Ginny is constantly set apart in this.

Going back to Ginny as Antigone - Antigone was brave and determined and nothing anyone said was going to stop her. She didn't wilt in the face of death.

--

"--took them all night, but finally they pried it off, and sent it to Harry. A toilet seat!"

This is from, uh. was it the third book? the end of the first book? when Fred and George send Harry a toilet seat when he's in the hospital wing. I can't remember where it happens, now, but it's there somewhere.

The laughter started up, and Harry chuckled. Dumbledore held a crystal goblet - one of the few that hadn't been smashed or sold in the original cleaning of the house - and raised it, before winking. "I believe the toilet seat is still in Argus Filch's office, along with a rather large stack full of detention slips and confiscated items."

A lot of people had shown up, relatively speaking. George was popular, and so was Ron, and the Order headquarters weren't quite as direly secret as in previous years. Dumbledore met with people at the Ministry, rather than in their kitchen. It was just a place to keep safe.

I couldn't resist a wake scene. Or writing Angelina in. I really adore Angelina. Plus, I can really see grimmauld place's importance dwindling, the fewer people living in it. especially if Harry is out there in the world, working for the Aurors. He's the one that they want to keep safe - if the Order isn't underground, it would just be a house, a prison for Neville, and somewhere for people to go where they can be fairly certain people won't kill them in their sleep.

Angelina nodded fervently. "They were so adamant," she said. "It had to be a toilet seat. George yelled fit to be tied when Pomfrey removed it."

Neville, who couldn't risk leaving the house anymore, not with the reward posted on his life, snorted. "Maybe we could get it back here, hang it in the front hall."

People looked at each other sombrely for a moment; there was already so much hanging in the front hall. Once Harry had taken a burning spell to Mrs. Black's picture until the portrait itself coughed up the relevant magic to enable them to remove it - it had sold for a hundred galleons at auction last year, to make sure Neville wouldn't lose his family's house - the front hall had become like a museum. Harry didn't know who'd started it, but he suspected the twins, or possibly Remus. Percy's Head Boy's badge, that still read Bighead Boy, was pinned on the wall, and it was the first in a long line of souvenirs of people who had lived there and weren't there still. In the center was a picture of the old Order.

Harry hated the hall; he usually came in through the back garden.

Again, the detail of the museum in the front hall - when I was writing this, I had no idea what I was doing. it just happened. The idea that Harry would hate it, though - once I got through the whole story, it made perfect sense to me, because, okay. The more I thought about it, the more I came to realize. One of Harry's greatest fears, I think, is being the only one to survive. I mean, he has to think that he's going to live, since the prophesy says that either he or Voldemort is going to die, right? and if he wants to keep on living, if he wants the world to be a safer place, he has to face being a murderer. But that means that it's quite likely he's going to look on the rest of his friends, dying. It's a horrible thing to realize, and I don't think he'd appreciate any reminders of it.

"The real question is," Arabella asked, "would old Filch cough it up? It's evidence!" she screeched, and everyone laughed again. The imitation was uncanny. Harry knew that by tomorrow morning, Dumbledore would be sticking the damned toilet seat on the wall. He could only hope that if he died, there was nothing left of himself to preserve like some macabre exhibit, because he knew everyone would come to see it.

--

Upstairs, in Harry's room, Hermione was taking off her robes while Fred closed the curtains. They didn't really say much that the other could remember the next day. Hermione still had her engagement ring on.

Ron/Hermione is ingrained in my head nearly as much as Remus/Sirius, so the idea that she was engaged was always in the back of my mind. the more I wrote on this, too, the more I didn't want Fred or Hermione to say anything in it - rather, let their actions tell of their grief. even without the dialogue, it's still awful and heartbreaking.

--

When they came down again, Hermione even smiled while Harry told everyone about how Ron handled Lockhart. "And then he asked if we lived down there," Harry finished, "so Ron hit him over the head with a rock, of all things." Neville was wiping his eyes he was laughing so hard. "Poor fellow," he added. "Still at St. Mungo's."

Angelina passed another round of beer around. "Did he honestly hit him over the head?"

Harry put his hand on his heart dramatically. "Would I lie to you?"

I saw the second movie much more recently than I've read the second book. I'd have to look it up. But the story's funny, and that's what counts. I didn't pass it off as canon.

The truth was, he didn't remember whether Ron had or not, and the truth was, it didn't matter. The story was good and Hermione had smiled, hand still wrapped tightly around Fred's. Harry glanced at Ginny. oh.

"Want to get out of here?" Ginny asked, a ghost gliding to his side. Harry shook his head. "It looks like Hermione and Fred will be okay."

"She was only just engaged." Angelina started telling the story about Ron's first ever Quidditch win, Bill speaking up every now and then to tell everyone about the owl Ron sent the family the next day. Ringed around the table was the fate of the world, and their numbers were dwindling. It was every kind of cliche. Molly's eyes were tinged with red; Neville's face pale from hiding for so long. Angelina had been playing for Kent, but quit the team once Voldemort moved through the region last month. Harry was currently housing her and Katie, who'd left home after no one was left. Harry shook his head. "They'd only just got engaged, Ginny," he said. "It took him that long."

I still really like that, "ringed around the table was the fate of the world, and their numbers were dwindling." of course, I think I blatantly stole the line "it was every kind of cliche." I *think* it was from Sandy the Older, from The Wrong Band? but I'm not sure. if this is your line, please claim it and I'm sorry.

"Ron was an idiot," she answered, not bothering to lower her voice. Angelina halted in her narration, and Remus - quietly drinking in the corner - turned around. Ginny raised her glass, as people's conversations died down. The whole of the Order wasn't here, but everyone Harry had cause to still call friend. "To Ron and George."

I also really like that Ginny's willing to speak ill of the dead. It's like, she feels closer to them than to her own life, so of course she's not going to step lightly around it. Ron was an idiot because he couldn't get up the nerve to ask Hermione to marry him - of course she's going to say it.

Everyone toasted. Molly cried. The drinking lasted until dawn, when Harry passed out with Neville in Mrs. Black's bedroom. It still smelled a little like Buckbeak.

Buckbeak. oh. because Sirius's death - because death, in general - hangs over the entire household.

--

"Toast and eggs for you?" Molly poured a cup of tea, and added another when Neville stumbled in too. "They're hot."

They never did eat, day after a funeral, but Molly cooked anyway.

--

Neville paused at the back garden gate. "Are you going out?"

Ginny turned around. Neville was protected from the scryers looking for him while he was on Black private property; that protection extended only as far as the garden wall. Beyond that, he was vulnerable. Neville's grandmother's last wish was her grandson to be protected. They'd tried to get at his parents in the hospital the week after he'd moved in.

Again, something that just popped into my head at random, Neville locked up at Grimmauld Place. I have no idea why, but I'm kind of fond of the idea, despite it's randomness.

"I have to send the order for the headstones," she told him. "Mum forgot to send the owl, so they won't be up until later today."

"Do you want me to lock up after you leave?"

And when I was writing this, all the references to locking up after you leave, I wasn't quite sure where they were heading, to begin with. It wasn't until I was very nearly at the end of the story that I realized it had to do with Percy. Because Percy is where Ginny really started to change.

"No, I'll be back a little later. Taking Angelina to a friend's house so she and Katie can get out of the dungeon."

They'd picked up calling the Black house the dungeon from their very first summer there. After Percy's wake, all the Weasleys officially christened it, when Ron had stared at the table blearily and said, "at least he didn't ever have to live in this dungeon." It had spread far enough that nearly everyone used it. Even Professor McGonagall had been heard to drop the nickname, though in her case it was probably just as a last insult to the family that did so much damage and lost them the only good son it ever had.

"Can you send a letter for me?" Neville pulled it out of his pocket, and it was much creased, as if it had been sitting a while, waiting to be opened. It was addressed to Alice Longbottom, care of St. Mungo's. There was no need to ask whether it could be traced, or what it said. Neville had been living at Grimmauld Place long enough. Ginny took it, tucking it into the inside pocket of her Muggle coat - she rode the Tube whenever possible, to avoid detection - and then planted a kiss on his cheek.

Neville and Ginny. I really don't know what to say - the fact that I wrote so much of this fic in such a weird state means I can read and enjoy it, outside of the experience of writing it. It's as if I had nothing to do with this fic's creation, so really, I'm an outsider looking at it. Also, randomly, McGonagall still feeling the sting of Sirius's death is so sad. In my mind, it's McGonagall that recruits James, Sirius, and that lot - not Dumbledore - so I always envision her feeling responsible for their deaths. she was their Head of House, she was responsible for them, and she let them down. anyway.

--

"Morning to you, Harry." Remus flopped down in a chair beside the stove, and put his feet up on the hearthstones. The house, no matter what time of year it was, still felt chilly in the mornings. It was still early enough that the morning sunshine was watery, the first winter frost still visible on the pane where the hedge blocked the window from view. Remus looked bleary. "Where'd everyone get to?"

Harry and Remus's interactions were very heavily influenced by being in the middle of writing "nobody said it was easy" when I did this. so the sadness, and the kind of, companionship, it all kind of stems from that.

Harry shrugged. "Most are gone already." He handed Remus his own cup of tea. "We slept in."

Neville closed the kitchen door a little too loudly, and both of them jumped up, then - as they saw it was Neville - clutched their aching heads. Harry felt like his skull was going to crack open. Sure, it wasn't prudent, letting half the Order get drunk on account of two people, but sometimes a hangover felt good. It reminded them that there were things that could hurt just as much as the Cruciatus curse and they were self-inflicted.

"Ginny's off to run an errand," he told them. "Hermione and Fred stayed in bed."

Remus stood, scrubbing at his eyes. "I have to get off. Dumbledore has me in Austria this month." Harry never knew Remus to get drunk, but sometime between Sirius and Tonks, he'd picked up the habit of the occasional lapse. Maybe he thought that since Sirius couldn't drink, someone had to in his stead. "Make sure you lock up when I'm gone."

I really wanted to leave the ghost of Sirius hanging over this story, too - the ghosts of everyone that had come and gone already. Because that's what greek tragedy is about: inevitable, crushing, or lasting pain. And Remus, becoming just enough of Sirius that a piece of Sirius was still around, that was just so sad. I think that they'd all try and pick up enough pieces of people that they had the dead around them still - the same way Ginny picks up Moody, and Remus drinks. It's very much about what people have left behind.

"Ginny will be back."

"Then lock up after she's gone again." Harry nodded, tired.

--

The story went like this. Once upon a time, there was a prophesy made about he and Neville and Voldemort. Since that time, people had been tripping over themselves in order to protect one side or the other of that prophesy, while he and Neville ended up washing the dishes after the wake.

The sponge was soapy. "Is Hermione going to be all right?" Neville asked him quietly.

"Sure," Harry said, then he dropped a plate carelessly. "Damn." He repaired it, then added, "I don't know. Maybe."

"I sort of thought," Neville said, drying by hand, "that she'd turn to you."

It's not that I'm against Harry/Hermione, per se. But the way I envision Harry turning out - especially a Harry able to get the job done, one that could win against Voldemort - I don't see him having any room in his life for a real relationship. Not with someone like Hermione, who I envisioned as still being able to feel things quite acutely. Her and Fred are grieving. Harry can't let himself.

When Fred and Hermione finally emerged, still in dressing gowns, Neville put the tea on without comment. Harry said to Neville, "make sure to give Arabella her mail when she comes round, and we have to double check on the last of those houses." They were trying to get alternate accommodations for nearly half of Harry's school friends. Dean had moved to the States; Seamus was doing a scholarship in Ireland that was soon to be over, and he wanted to live somewhere Harry found. "I've got to go." Out of habit, he added, "lock up after I leave."

Harry had to be at the Ministry for two o'clock, because the Aurors had a meeting. Ginny, still not official, would have to be back by then. They could maybe go in together, and make the news of the deaths public. That was the hardest part, maybe, except for all the rest of it: having to bury the bodies as fast as possible, so that more hits couldn't be made while they were trying to throw the dirt on the caskets. A lot of the time people didn't go anymore. It was too obvious to show up to your husband's gravestone, it was inviting something stupid.

And the idea that they had to bury the bodies as fast as possible still gets me, too. I have no idea where this whole thing came from, and so many of the details still hurt my heart quite a bit. I mean, of course the Death Eaters would target funerals. they would be practically a given for people to show at. going would be stupid.

--

"We've just enough time," and Ginny puffed, legs pumping like pistons. "Damn, they're going to be so mad if we're late. I'm just glad Angelina and Katie are off all right on the train."

Harry pulled her tight against the brick of an office building, and put a hand over her mouth. He didn't need to, Ginny would have been quiet if he'd even looked at her properly. The truth was, there was no way to tell if that even was the person they thought it was, if it was really Vincent Goyle in the shop along the way. It wasn't likely. They probably could have taken him, if he'd recognised them, moreover. They could have flown away, or ducked around and pulled out the Invisibility Cloaks they both carried habitually. The truth was, it was just nice sometimes to touch someone.

And there, that's all I see Harry being able to handle, emotionally. In ootp, he wants to be an Auror, and I bet he'll be a good one - but let's look at Moody. Moody is too all about the job first, life second, to ever really find himself happy with someone else, I bet. It's partly being in the Order, it's partly being an Auror. maybe I'm talking out of my ass, but Moody was the model I based this Harry, as well as this Ginny, on, as well as a little bit of Remus's self-control and practicality. And we don't really ever see Moody or Remus having much in their life except the job.

Moments passed without incident, and Harry backed off, slouching down. "I'm not going to be able to visit Moody this afternoon," she said, face sad. "And I had him a present."

Ginny looked up to Moody, ever since he shoved her off a bridge to get her out of the way of a Dementor and a wand blast, taking the chill that was meant, as a Weasley, for her. "What did you get?"

And Ginny, being mentored by Moody, is my favorite thing ever. I don't know why or where it came from - I'm saying that a lot, aren't I? it's true. But oh, I can't let it go, now. Ginny and Moody. I think that Moody would appreciate her. you don't get as much of Ginny and Moody in this one as in "taking oedipus by the hand", so I'll talk about them there at length.

She pulled out a little toy dragon, that roared when you spoke to it. "His face reminded me of him."

They both laughed. The dragon looked incredibly annoyed somehow, permanently, and whipped his tail around.

--

This scene was a bit of me trying to sort out what was going on, and a bit of tragic exposition. a massive problem for me, especially when I'm 'creating canon' that I later have to follow, is that I have the memory of a goldfish, and can't ever remember what's really happened.

Harry thought it was funny sometimes, how he didn't remember any of the wakes, but he could remember the oddest things about the deaths themselves. Ron and George died trying to get back from Hogwarts; their train derailed, they were surrounded and caught and still the duel was visible from five miles away. That was how everyone got there in time to see the Death Eaters leave. Harry and Hermione even managed to catch two of the stupider ones, and they were currently sitting in separate rooms with no windows and no doors and no wands, being guarded by Grawp. It wasn't a perfect solution. Hermione had suggested they leave out the food until they got some answers. By that point, she was willing to trade Tonks' life for Crabbe's.

I wanted them all to be capable of things that you wouldn't usually see them do. We get a hint of how far they're willing to go, in the books - like, Hermione puts Rita Skeeter in a jar, for crying out loud. That's not a nice thing to do. it's not cruel, but it's not sweetness and light, either. It's common sense. in the commentary for "nobody said it was easy", I went on and on and on about how desperately I want the characters to exhibit common sense. This series was maybe a bit of wish fulfillment in that regard.

Charlie died from a dragon bite. It was, perhaps, the most shocking loss in the whole Weasley family. He was taking a holiday, at another dragon preserve, and they let him deal with them and he was bitten, bad enough that there wasn't anything anyone could do. He was the only one that didn't cause anyone else any more enemies.

They think Kingsley was killed by Voldemort himself. It was professional work, at the least, and Kingsley was good. Harry didn't think that anyone else could have brought him down. He had been wearing, of all things, a baseball cap from some American baseball team. The hat was sitting on a table in their - in Harry's, the house, by rights, had passed to him by inheritance and by law - front hall. Mundungus had disappeared, but Dumbledore wasn't worried as yet, because Dung tended to do that. Barbara, Arthur Weasley, Dedalus Diggle, all taken out by Death Eaters. Arthur managed to fend them off long enough for the rest of the family to escape the Burrow. McGonagall and Moody, out of the running, possibly for good.

Ever since Cedric died, a kind of cold dread had suffused Harry's entire being. It started when Cedric died, and coalesced into something much more specific when Moody first pulled out that picture, the night they found out Ron was prefect. Each step that he took ever since then brought him closer to realizing that fear, to knowing that some day in the not too distant future, he was almost assuredly going to be pointing at a picture and telling someone that he used to know all these people, and now all of them were dead.

And there, right there, is what Harry is afraid of - I really think so. His horror at seeing Moody pull that picture out, it really stuck with me. I love that scene in OotP, it's so tragic and stark and telling. Just, so good. I really like this line that I wrote. it stuck with me.

--

Aurors were a practical bunch. They all nodded, murmuring condolences, but the first real thing Dawlish, unofficially heading the Auror task force ever since Shacklebolt died, asked was, "did they get--"

Ginny spoke up. "They got what we needed."

"All right, then."

first: looking up the canon for this series on the Lexicon was an education in Ministry officials and death eater histories. I was constantly looking things up. Dawlish isn't made up, though.

second: I love this idea, too, that yes, the Aurors were saddened, yes, they were sorry for the loss - but did the job get done is what they really want to know. It always seemed to me to be just a completely emotionless job. If you look at Moody, even though he's a good man, he always thinks of the job. It's the job, nothing else. He has absolutely no social skills, he's gruff, he doesn't care. It's all about what he can do to get things done. And Ginny and Harry, being the Aurors of the group - not counting the dead Ron - they're fundamentally isolated from the rest of the Order, some of which still cry occasionally.

--

Ginny followed Harry home just long enough to say goodbye to her mother. Harry was to leave in the morning, and they worried about both Molly and Neville, considering that so many people had to be gone for so long. He was on the trail of Macnair, and didn't plan to give up until he caught him this time. Ginny was still searching for Tonks. When Harry heard her talk about her efforts, he almost believed Ginny could bring her back alive.

"Hang on," and she jumped off the Tube, glancing every which way before hopping up the steps. Ginny had taken to Muggle life like she was born for it. She loved the Underground, she loved the turnstiles. More than that, unlike her Muggle crazy father, she could blend in naturally, not even letting the barrier hit her hip as she shoved her way through.

I also love the idea of Ginny being able to blend in so easily. --the first time I tried to comment on this scene, I found myself reading it, rather than finding something useful to say. I'm on my second read-through, and I still can't think of anything.

They snuck into the little wizarding market without an incident, Harry only slightly nervous. The thing was hidden from Muggle view, and not patroned as often as Diagon Alley, because this was really just a place to do your daily shopping. Ginny went straight to the post office, pulling a parchment out of her ever-present bag. "I forgot to send Neville's letter earlier," she explained.

"What were you doing out?"

Ginny pulled out a few Knuts, and handed them to the old, nearly-napping postman, who fastened the letter onto an owl's leg. It hooted sleepily, and took off. "I had to send the orders for their headstones."

Harry looked through the stuff lining the next stall. A lot of it was wards to protect yourself and do-it-yourself tea reading kits. People got superstitious in dark times, Dumbledore once told him. "I would have thought, well. Hermione might have."

"She couldn't handle it," Ginny answered. "Here, get some more cleaning potion. Mum won't touch that Muggle wood polish I bought her, even if it does a wonder on the floors."

Ginny doesn't pull any of her punches. She out and out says that Hermione couldn't handle it.

They stepped into an abandoned phone booth and donned their invisibility cloaks before walking the last ten blocks to home, crossing the street whenever another person came by. This part of London had once been quite heavily populated with wizard families, and there were still a number of them left. What was left of the Bones family lived just two Tube stations - one junction on the Floo Network - away.

They used the front door, and Harry regretted it right away. The damned toilet seat was already up, along with Ron's old, reliable broom. Ginny stopped suddenly, whooshing the cloak off, and stood stock-still, staring at the broom. She didn't breathe for a moment or two, and then forced herself around. "I've just had a thought. Do you think--" and she swallowed. "Do you think Hermione will want, well, Pig?"

Harry took her elbow. "She doesn't want an owl."

But, she's not made of stone. Neither of them are. They're only mostly shut down, emotionally, but faced with Ron's old broom, she has a moment of grief.

--

Molly cried when Ginny left, and again when Harry did the next day. Remus had disappeared in the middle of the night, right after a midnight visit from Dumbledore. Harry was planning to Apparate across the ocean, all the way to Morocco, and then started the long, tedious broom flight back again to southern Spain. It was just Molly and Neville, alone again, unless you counted Hermione and Fred upstairs. Harry would bet that by the time he got back, they'd be gone too. Perhaps they were already packing. They just needed a few days to remember that of anywhere they could pick to mourn, Grimmauld Place was not it. There were just too many memories of the departed there to properly focus on one set, one face.

The whole, trying to come up with missions they'd have to go on, was really hard. Morocco, why not, you know? Austria, whatever. Anyway. Also: the idea that you couldn't grieve at Grimmauld Place because it was already so full of sadness, that really gets me.

Harry fastened his travel sack - a grubby but durable, and quite impervious, canvas backpack that had been significantly enlarged on the inside - to the underside of his broom. He stared at the back gate for a moment, and didn't look up at the windows or anything, knowing someone would be watching him leave, to make sure the gate was secure. He'd have to go through the gate to actually Apparate, and lock it behind him.

Even while writing this - I won't say it again, I promise - I was amazed how well this fic came together, at the end. like, I hadn't planned *any* of this and then, the ending was so obvious, the "lock up behind me" so blindingly there. Of course it was how Percy died. I'm still not sure I worded this ending as well as I could have - I fiddled with these next two lines more than the rest of the story, I swear.

Percy died because of a stupid, tragic mistake. He was stupid and tragic. They found him at home, face up in his bed, a perplexed look on his face, as if he, like everyone else, couldn't quite believe what had happened. The Dark Mark was hovering.

Ginny was the last one to see him alive; they'd gone to the pub the night before, and back to see his apartment. Ginny was also the one that found him the next morning. She should have noticed Percy hadn't even locked the door when she left, but Percy didn't yet know he should. People kind of suspected that it was the mistake that pushed Ginny into the place she was. When she started saying "don't forget to lock the door behind me," they did it. Like everything picked up in death, the saying spread through their family until everyone now used it.

Okay, so that's "antigone, falling". It was something I stumbled over by accident, and I just wish the rest of the stories in the series were as good, but I don't think they are. I have an incredible fondness for this universe, despite it's sadness - I think because, having studied greek tragedy, I know that the sadness isn't the kind you cry over. It's the kind that sinks into your bones. it's formulaeic. That's how greek tragedy works. and I won't talk like a Classics prof anymore.

 

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