Story: It's Still a Fairy Tale
Author: Teaspensieve
Rating: everyone
Length: 1,416
Pairing: None
Setting: Post-war (HBP Spoilers)
Characters: Hermione
Summary: Hermione goes home for the first time after the war.
“Mum, Dad, I’m back.”
It’s strange being home again, after all this time. It almost makes me feel as though it was all some horrible nightmare. Everything seems so ordinary here, as if the war never touched it. I suppose it didn’t. It’s so odd, this feeling. It’s odd not having my hand tightly gripping my wand. It’s odd sitting here without worrying. I can’t help but be a little sad that relaxing on my own couch is something so… foreign to me now. It’s hard not to think about what I could have had if I hadn’t been fighting a war. I shouldn’t complain though. I have a fresh start. Not everyone was so lucky.
“The war is over.”
How do you come home after all this time and explain to your muggle parents why you left? How am I supposed to tell them? I love them, of course I do, but they haven’t understood me since I was eleven. I shouldn’t expect them to understand. I guess part of me just wants to be six years old again, listening to a fairy tale on mum’s lap, when magic was the stuff of dreams. The reality is different. The heroes don’t always come home.
“Voldemort’s dead.”
I’m not saying that I didn’t love it. Merlin, even knowing what was coming, what it would mean, I would have gone to Hogwarts. Sometimes I just wish that Mum and Dad could have come with me. Ever since I left for school there’s been this wall between us that I can’t scale. It happens with everyone, I suppose; kids grow up. But eleven is so very young…
“Well that’s all right then, isn’t it? Hermione?”
All I want is for things to go back to normal. But there is no normal, not for me. Not for Harry, or Ron or Ginny or anyone who had to fight this war. The war was our normal. Now it’s over. What are we supposed to do now? It’s been life or death since I was eleven. I don’t remember how to live any other way. How can my parents possibly understand that?
“It’s… It’s not easy.”
Harry’s at Grimmauld Place. He’s been hiding there since after the battle. I can’t say I blame him. We’ve got no right to blame him, anyway. Ginny says he needs some time… to adjust. Don’t we all? We never had time to grieve, during the war. There was always something else to be done, more lives to save than lives to mourn. Now we have all the time in the world, and the grief hits. We can’t run forever. Harry… Harry’s too tired to run anymore. He just needs some time, to grieve.
“Was it that bad, honey? Are you alright?”
You know, it’s odd, but I almost miss it. Is that wrong? I was used to it, you know? And I had my friends. Ron, Harry, Ginny, Neville, Luna, we were all so young and… happy. Yes, I think we were happy. Harry had the most trouble; he had the most right to be bitter, and even Harry had his happy moments. It was a war, yes, but we were still just kids; there was no changing that. And we were so determined. So utterly foolish. To think of a band of teenagers going after the most feared wizard in a century! That idealism, that fire, I miss that. I think I’ve lost it. It’s not good to have time to sit and think about the war.
“It was bad. Did I tell you, last summer, that Dumbledore died?”
I always used to wonder how Dumbledore could stand it. He fought a war before ours. Grindelwald, Dumbledore defeated him before anyone had even heard of Voldemort. I used to wonder how he could just keep fighting, when it seemed like every time you won, there was a new battle to be fought. I don’t wonder anymore. It’s easier to fight than to sit and think about the ones who didn’t make it. It’s easier to keep fighting that to think about who could have been saved if you had done it differently!
“Snape killed him. Harry saw it happen.”
Is this what it’s like to be Harry? Is this what he lives with? In between battles, the sitting, the waiting, the wondering… Does he blame himself for everyone who didn’t make it? Does he still see their faces, in his nightmares? I can’t sleep anymore. There’s no reason to sleep anymore. I don’t have to keep my strength up anymore. I can let myself go.
“But then… the school… Who ran the school?”
I thought it would have been so hard, to give up that head girl badge. I thought that that was the thing I wanted most in the world. But when I held it in my hands that day, I didn’t even really see it. Nothing more than a piece of metal. I knew what was important, and it wasn’t that.
“I didn’t go to school last year.”
McGonagall’s offered the three of us a place at Hogwarts this year. She says that she won't let the famous trio turn into a bunch of dropouts. I don’t know if I want to go. It won’t be the same, will it? It’ll never be the same. It’s not just Hogwarts that has changed.
“There were more important things I had to do.”
Dumbledore said that everyone has to choose between what is right and what is easy. I think it was all easy. We never looked back, until now. At least, I didn’t. I think Harry did, and that’s what upset him so. I never understood that. I do now. It was hard for Harry because he wanted to save everybody. The rest of us were too busy being terrified for our own lives.
“But it’s over now. I’ve… I’ve come home for a little while.”
I guess I’ll stay home and rest now. I don’t know what else to do. I feel so odd here, with Mum looking at me as though I’m eight years old again and I’ve woken up after a nightmare. But she can’t make these ghosts go away. I’m not sure I would even want her to. Which one is the nightmare, really? I feel like I’ve wandered back into my former self. I could almost be a muggle again. That would be normal, wouldn’t it? That’s what I want, things to be normal. But they were never normal… They were never normal.
“I’m safe now.”
It’s funny how awful I was at Defense Against the Dark Arts when we were in class. It’s so very different when you’re fighting for your life. Harry used to say that all the time. He said we didn’t understand. He was right. He looks so sad, now, when he sees the understanding in my eyes. He didn’t want us to understand. It was good though, the DA I mean. He taught us as much as we could learn without… without seeing it. He was right; when we were fighting Death Eaters, it wasn’t like class. In class, I had time to think, to worry. That’s not good for me.
“Did you know what was happening, all this time?”
I wonder if they knew how close they were to being killed. I wonder if they didn’t shiver every time another “hurricane” was reported. When I left last summer, all I said was that there was a war and that I had to stay somewhere safer. I didn’t give them time to ask questions. But they’re not thick. I used to hate myself for leaving them like that, to worry about me, to wonder whether I was alive or dead. But I think it was still a fairy tale to them, really. How could it not be? Voldemort was just a story to them. A villain to haunt their dreams, but nothing more. I’m the one who walked into the dream. It wasn’t a nightmare; it was a dream. Isn’t it every little girl’s dream to be in an exciting adventure? I lived it. We all did. But now the dream is over and what are we supposed to do? I can’t just wake up and go back to normal life as if it never happened! We gave up everything for the war. What’s left for us now?
A/N: This is Jo's world. I'm just playing in it.
A betaed version of this story is now posted at
Phoenixsong