Glass shattered in every which way as Hermione felt her legs give out from under her, knees colliding unpleasantly with the ground while she managed to instinctively cover the back of her neck. Even as the pain shot through her body, some remaining with a dull ache that dug too deep in her bones, her immediate thought was that she was free to
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Enough that by the time she noticed Draco Malfoy standing in front of her, he was a mere arm's length away, startling her as she took a staggered step back, eyes wide and brows tightly knit. There was too much levity in his voice, she immediately thought, for him to have just come from Malfoy Manor. His clothes weren't right. How long had she been unconscious? It had felt like an instant, but most things did anymore, life passing in flashes too quick for much to sear into one's memory at all.
"Malfoy," she replied with hardly a quaver in her voice, keeping her knees bent enough in case she needed to make a break for it, hands held tentatively in front of her, feeling naked without her wand. "Did you bring me here?"
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The fact that he couldn't decipher his feelings on the issue was a bit of a problem.
"Whatever brought you here, did the same to me." Crouching, he plucked a crumpled brassiere up from the sand, letting it dangle from the end of his pinkie with that same blank, but oddly amused expression. "You certainly didn't pack light, I see."
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"Give that back," she demanded, half-tempted to sock him in the jaw as she closed the distance between the two of them and reached to try and swipe the brassiere away. "'Whatever' brought me here? Are you honestly telling me that you have no idea what or who it was that pulled us to this place? Perhaps it was a Portkey, or- there's a war going on, Malfoy, why are you standing about in Muggle clothes like you've gone into hiding?"
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"The war is over, Granger. You won. The Dark Lord was defeated and everyone lived happily ever after. Luna's here, if you'd rather hear it from her, but apart from her usual flair, her story won't be that different from mine," he said with only a hint of frustration. He realized, belatedly, that he never would've called her anything but Lovegood before, but her first name slipped out easily now, with more familiarity than he'd intended.
"I've been stuck here for three bloody years, and I've got not more clue as to why than I did the day I turned up on this miserable rock."
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"The war can't be over," Hermione blurted out, expression more bewildered than it was scared, the witch more concerned with the logic of it all than the fact that she was still alone on the beach with Draco Malfoy. "I don't know what kind of... joke or ploy this is, but- and when have you ever been so familiar with Luna?"
She threaded her hands into her hair, worrying it subconsciously, before heaving a slow, deep exhale and raising a hand to press at her lips in thought. "Three years. I don't understand how that's possible," she muttered under her breath, still casting Draco a wary look.
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"Lovegood's been here over a year. The eldest Weasley's been here longer than all of us, and Lupin and Black are here, too, but they're no more than a handful of years older than you and I are now. I hate to threaten your delicate sensibilities, Granger, but there is no making sense of this. I've got a box of wands I'll bloody hand over to you. They mean absolutely nothing."
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She blinked up toward the sky at the thought. If someone knew how to deposit people at will in a place such as this one, then they were in deep trouble. Such a power, if abused, Hermione could imagine leading to any number of things, her heart beating in her ears again as she turned her attention back to Draco, trying to catch every last word. Quickly, as his back was turned, she tried to gather some of her belongings, only to find that her strength was sapped. Fear usually brought adrenaline about more quickly than anything else, but what Hermione felt right then was the creeping sense of futility.
"Wait," she called out, her knees damp from where they rested in the sand. "Ron and- and Harry, they aren't here? Voldemort... isn't here?"
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Turning to face her and pushing a hand through his hair in an uncharacteristic display of frustration, he said, "I know the odds. There's magic here, but it's not the kind that any of us seem to be able to control, and whatever sneaky bastard is controlling it, must be a world-class coward, because they've yet to show their face."
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"Bested by a little girl," Hermione repeated in bewilderment with a wrinkled nose, still shivering at the thought of Voldemort, at Nagini slithering from the body of Bathilda Bagshot. She sniffed lightly, her nose running after the chill of the dark halls, her lap already heavily laden with her texts as she reached out for a Nosebleed Nougat, wiping the sand off with her thumb before taking an experimental nibble. Nothing. Staring down at the colorful wrapper, she listened to Draco's remark. "Yes, well, controlling bastards do tend to be cowards at the heart of it, don't they?"
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"You're not going to be able to carry all that on your own," he pointed out, and though it wasn't an offer to help, the thought had crossed his mind. Which, in itself, horrified him. He could remember being eleven years old, sitting in class and glaring at her bushy head, hating her for what she was and the fact that she still managed top marks in absolutely everything. He remembered growing to hate her more and more, hating her for her loyalty to Potter, for her friendship with Weasley, for the fact that through it all, she'd always been able to see right through him.
Now, it all seemed rather pointless.
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As her head dipped under the guise of concentration, Hermione breathed to stave off the emotions which washed over her, as she still felt quite lost, and rather alone. She'd have to find Remus and Sirius soon, she told herself, even if they were young. And thank Merlin, she added, that Luna and Bill were present to offer familiar and friendly faces. Blinking rapidly, she bit her lower lip and quickly brushed at the corner of an eye with the back of a hand, pulling herself to her feet through sheer willpower. Whatever couldn't fit in the rucksacks went into the cauldrons, with the brief hope that anyone who saw them wouldn't go taking the belongings for themselves.
Although she'd half expected Draco to run off while she was so occupied, Hermione looked up at last once done, having hastened enough that all of the packing took all of five minutes, messy though the outcome was. Slinging the heavier rucksack over her shoulder, she walked over, keeping her footing as sure as she could manage. Wordlessly, with an inquisitive tilt of her head and questioning raise of her brow, she held the other sack out. She didn't want to beg. Somehow, Hermione wondered if voicing it would have been worse, making whatever kind of truce that stood between them obvious to the point where it would crumble. But she also didn't want to let him walk away without a word, without paying back for all of the trouble somehow.
"No, I'm not," she replied quietly, making it obvious that she wasn't forcing him into anything. Not sure she'd ever had that power.
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"I can take you to Luna, but I haven't got a bloody clue where the rest of them are. Otherwise, I suppose the dormitories are a good place to start." All of this come out heavy with exasperation, but compared to how he'd held himself at Hogwarts, he was being downright amiable.
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"I'd like to see Luna, and the rest of them," she admitted with a hesitant nod, wondering how she was supposed to feel at this turn of luck, stomach making a few somersaults at the thought of seeing Sirius, wishing Harry was there with her. "But you've been here for three years, Malfoy. Supposedly. Surely there's more you can tell me than where the dormitories are?"
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Stepping into a battered pair of green flip flops and pointing her in the direction of the path, he said, "I could spout off a list of uninteresting facts about this retched place, but I'm growing bored already, just thinking about it."
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And at the bottom of it, all logic aside, Hermione could not bring herself to trust just anyone right then, still doing her best to hide the fact that she wanted nothing more than a quiet space under the sun to curl up. To be invisible. What use was there in being extraordinary, a small voice in the back of her head asked, what use was there in being strong, in Harry and Ron being the bravest souls she'd ever met? It only brought them trouble.
She didn't trust Draco, but there was a part of her that dearly wanted to, although she let the sentiment go unspoken, fairly certain that the last thing Draco wanted was what could be construed as some form of pity. (Which it wasn't, but certain lines were thin.)
"A pack mule doesn't choose to accept its burdens," Hermione pointed out with the barest trace of a smile passing over her expression, one that melted away quickly enough. "If this place bores you so, you could always tell me how you know the outcome of the war. What... happens. That isn't about to bore either of us, is it?"
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"You're still there, now. Doing whatever it is you do keep Potter and Weasley in line. The island... whoever or whatever controls it, seems to be able to pop us in and out without any time seeming to have passed at all." He thought, suddenly, of returning to the manor. Of breaking Luna out of the basement and helping Potter and his friends escape. When he'd returned to the island, hours of time back in Wiltshire seemed to have passed within the blink of an eye.
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