《Promised - Tom Riddle x reader》Part 13 - Pranks and Proper Paybacks
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The quill in your hand scratched lightly over the parchment as you were taking notes for Astronomy in the library. It was quiet, as usual, except for the occasional questions and thereof resulting explanations between Ben and Camille. She helped him study for his upcoming Herbology exam, for which he clearly hadn't revised enough yet. Silly boy.
Tom was there too and sat next to you, completing the quartet round the table. He tried his best not to hiss at them every time Ben asked something. You noticed from the corner of your eye, how he gulped down every thought that built up in his head when another word poured from Ben's mouth. It was amusing, to say the least, seeing Tom battling with himself to keep his cool. He still didn't like Ben very much and would much rather study with you alone. But the fact that he had voluntarily sat down with the three of you, tried to behave and didn't yell at Ben whenever he opened his mouth, told you that he probably didn't hate him as much as he pretended to.
"So, about the Fluxweed again," Ben whispered, browsing through his book. "How many days does it have to grow?"
Camille was about to answer when Tom pressed his palm against his forehead and exhaled dramatically. "Sixteen, Ben. It's sixteen. She's told you that three times at least."
Ben took a quick look at Tom, while still fumbling through the book. "I know, mate. I just can't memorise it. Why do I even need to know that?"
Tom flung a piece of parchment toward him, pointing at the empty sheet. "Write it down, then. There are some things you must know. Get over it."
"Alright, alright," Ben grinned and didn't seem to care about Tom's tone at all. "I'll write it down, see? Fluxweed takes thirteen days to grow. Happy now?"
"Sixteen," Camille, Tom and you sighed in unison.
"Oh." He crossed out the number and sloppily wrote the correct one above it. "Sixteen then."
Camille and you chuckled to yourselves while Tom only shook his head slightly, his eyes back inside his own book. Ben certainly was careless, or to be more precise, a lot more careless than Camille, Tom and you when it came to grades. The way he talked about homework and even exams was astonishing. He hadn't even studied for his O.W.L. in Care for Magical Creatures in his fifth year, and he still got an 'Exceeds Expectations'. Or so he had told you. He had always found a way to talk his way out of things, which was reasonable. Teachers really seemed to like him. Or rather do anything to stop him from talking once in a while.
"Oh, wait," Ben said again.
"Just read your book," Tom grunted.
"No, hang on."
Ben stood up and stretched his arm out quickly, reaching and grasping for something to your left. You all turned your heads and saw him catching something that had been flying right at you.
"I might be bad at Herbology. But you're lucky I'm a bloody good Seeker," he said and twisted the thin thing between his fingers.
"What is it?" Camille asked. "Let me see."
Ben put the thing down onto the desk, still pressing his index finger on top of it. "It's a quill. But it appears to be jinxed. It was flying on its own and headed right for your face," he said and looked at you. "Still wants to, I can feel it moving."
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The grey quill twitched eagerly beneath Ben's hand, trying to escape and pointed its sharp tip right at you, ready to pierce into your skin.
"Not again," you mumbled.
"Again?"
Things, odd things, had been happening during the week. Someone had definitely played some pranks and antics on you. You hadn't found out who it was yet, but it certainly had become pesky. On Monday, someone had left you a note that said Professor Merrythought wanted a word with you. Once you had arrived at the Defence Against the Dark Arts classroom however, you were met with a confused teacher and had a hard time explaining yourself. Tuesday, someone had poured Rash Powder over your dinner. You had almost taken a bite but thankfully had noticed the unfamiliar smell in time. Wednesday was more subtle. There had been puddles and slippery spots everywhere you stepped. Avoiding them had been a tedious task. And now, on Thursday, this. The quill didn't look like it could badly injure you, but its vivid nature was a sign for a hex, rather than a jinx.
No matter who it was, all those things did tear on your nerves. Not only because the pranks got to you, but because there was a possibility someone had been following you without you noticing. Every time you had gone to the Come and Go Room you had turned around and checked if someone was behind you, just in case. That was the exhausting part.
"Just some pranks," you explained. "I don't know who or why, but it's getting fairly ridiculous."
"Could someone," Ben puffed. "Stop this thing? It's trying to escape."
Tom pointed his wand directly at the quill and rolled his wrist. It lit up for a fraction of a second and crumbled to dust right after.
"Ouch," Ben hissed and fanned his hand through the air hastily before putting his index inside his mouth. "Thanks, mate."
Tom smirked complacently, partly for the spell he had just cast and partly for burning Ben's fingertip. "Anytime, mate."
Camille dragged her finger through the ashes, took a good look at them and rubbed it off between her index and her thumb. "Who would do that?"
"I don't know," you answered.
"Avery and Lestrange again, perhaps?" she asked.
"Unlikely," Tom said. "I checked on them some days ago. They're still with Carpe most of the time, scrubbing the floors and polishing trophies. And besides, they wouldn't dare."
"Who else could it be then?" Camille asked as she blew the remaining ashes off the desk with a quick cleaning spell.
The four of you exchanged looks around the table. "To be honest," Tom began. "I was suspecting you for a while, Ben."
"Me?" Ben asked wide-eyed. "Why would I do that? I just stopped that quill."
"'I'm aware, I've seen that now."
Camille hummed, deep in thought. "Wait," she said. "What about Freda? Freda Morris."
"The head girl?" Ben asked.
"Yes," she said. "She was so jealous at Slughorn's party, wasn't she?"
Tom looked at you, biting on the inside of his lower lip, then nodded. "That doesn't sound too far fetched."
"I wouldn't have thought she'd be so creative," you said while picking up your books. "Well, I'll keep an eye on her then."
Once you had gathered all your things, you got up and waited for Tom to do the same.
"Where are you going?" Camille asked. "It's not even seven yet."
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"I have to," you stopped yourself. You had to tend to the potion in the Come and Go Room again. Needless to say, you couldn't tell them that. "I have to go and look after Nagini. The snake. She's shedding at the moment. Talk to you soon."
"Let us know if something else happens," Camille said and waved you goodbye.
Tom followed you silently. Of course, they didn't ask him why he had to come and check on Nagini as well. The perks of being intimidating. Apart from this, Camille and Ben surely didn't mind studying without him nagging all the time.
On your way out, right when you left the library and headed toward the grand staircase, Tom and you were halted by another student. Platinum blonde and blue-eyed, Abraxas Malfoy, who was one of Tom's ever so devious sycophants, locked eyes with him.
"Tom," he greeted and stopped right in his tracks.
"Abraxas," Tom replied.
Oh, what did he want now? There wasn't a lot of time until the potion had to be stirred, so you hoped Malfoy wouldn't keep you from going any longer.
"So," Abraxas began. "I've seen, you like to keep new company these days."
Tom frowned and looked over his shoulder. Clearly, Abraxas didn't mean you. "What are you implying?"
"I'm not implying anything," he said and chortled a sour laugh. "I'm just observing. You're dealing with mudbloods now?"
He was talking about Ben. Malfoy and Tom's other 'friends' had probably seen you in the library together. Or in the Three Broomsticks, some weeks ago. Abraxas must have felt really brave to talk to the head boy in this way. His chest was swollen with pride and the glint in his gaze spoke more than he could have ever said. He was out to get something from this conversation.
Tom only exhaled sharply and stared back at Malfoy, completely unconcerned about his reproach. "And how come that's any of your business, exactly?"
"Oh, it isn't of course," Abraxas answered. "I was just surprised. Shocked even."
"I do apologize," Tom sneered, clicking his tongue in fake sympathy. "That the gathering of other people, who don't concern you in the slightest, has ruined your precious day."
Abraxas stared back at him, obviously trying hard to keep calm. His smile still sat neatly on his face; it was his eyes that betrayed him. "No need to worry about me. I merely started thinking, daydreaming, that your Grandfather might not appreciate that."
Now he had gone too far. Tom took a step closer, his nostrils flared for a moment and a vein on his neck stood out. "Abraxas," he whispered so spitefully, it almost sounded like he was talking in Parseltongue, words spilling out of him like pure venom. "I'd advise you to worry about your own life. Because if you don't, wouldn't it be tragic if your Mother found out what happened last year at your house? When the maid left and never came back? What was the reason again? If only I remembered. Oh, I do."
Malfoy's expression changed momentarily, his head sunk and his eyes darted across the floor, trying hard to think of what to answer.
"Do we understand each other?" Tom asked.
Abraxas nodded, lips thin and full of fury. He instinctively retracted and took a step back, keeping his head low and looked up at Tom through knitted brows.
"Good," Tom said and left Malfoy standing there.
Continuing to walk to the grand staircase with you, he appeared like nothing but a casual chat between two friends had just happened.
"Well," you said after Abraxas was out of earshot. "That was interesting."
"They're all so stupid, sometimes I wonder how they've lived this long," Tom replied. "I have dirt on every single one of them. And they try to blackmail me. Ridiculous."
"Idiots indeed," you shook your head. "Do I want to know what happened to the maid?"
"I guess not. It's a long, repulsive story."
No doubt it was. Abraxas was known for his dreadful ways and how he had tormented younger students ever since. He wasn't like Avery or Lestrange, a dumb follower, who had Hippogriff crap for brains. No, he was mindful, awfully aware of his surroundings and constantly seemed to brood about his next step. He reminded you of Marvolo, they both had the same aura, cold and demeaning, always looking for ways to take advantage of other people's misery.
It was no surprise that he had tried to intimidate Tom, maybe even pass him in their hierarchy by threatening to tell everyone about his association with a muggle-born. But he hadn't thought it through. Tom Riddle wasn't one to mess with and he had just made that crystal clear. Ben might have not been his friend, but still, he hadn't let Abraxas speak ill of him.
"I wouldn't have thought you liked Ben," you said once you turned another corner.
Tom opened his mouth and looked at you in disbelief for a moment, as if you had just insulted him, before he started talking. "What do you mean?"
"Oh, it just seemed like it. You came to his defence so quickly. That's why I assumed."
"This wasn't about Hilt. It was about me, Marvolo and that bootlicker Malfoy."
"Whatever you say," you replied teasingly while Tom rolled his eyes.
Friday evolved to be the worst day of the week. Not only had you almost gotten detention for falling victim to a Knockback jinx during Defence Against the Dark Arts if Camille hadn't come to your rescue. Professor Merrythought still hadn't forgotten about your visit on Monday and thought you were trying to disturb her lesson again.
In addition to that, your curriculum almost hindered you from tending to your potion completely. It had become nearly impossible to handle everything at once. Your classes, homework, studying for the N.E.W.T.s, taking care of the antidote and on top of all that, those stupid pranks. It had been draining and your body ached for a bit of rest.
On your way to Tom's dorm, when the sun had already set and you were finally done with everything for the day, you heard the clink of a door handle turning behind you. It almost had gone overheard, the only thing you wanted to do was sit down for a moment and unwind, even if only for an hour.
You had already reached the door to Tom's room and could have just entered to forget about the world for a while. But there was this unsettling feeling inside of you and Camille's words from the library ran through your head again. You turned around. And thank Merlin you did.
Freda Morris stood in her own door frame, smirking maliciously, with her wand pointed right at you. She must have been taken by surprise, it didn't seem like she had expected you to look at her. Her wand sank in an instant before she hid it behind her back.
"You," you muttered, taking some steps her way. "It was you all week, wasn't it?"
"I don't know what you're talking about," she said smiling, trying to take the high ground, but you wouldn't let her.
"Just admit it at least. Coward. You know exactly what I'm talking about and you were just trying to do it again, weren't you?"
Freda shook her head and put a strand of hair behind her ear with her skinny fingers. "I'm head girl, dear. I would never do anything to harm another student if that is what you're implying. I don't know what could have given you the idea."
"Oh shut up," you spat. "Head girl, yes. An awful excuse for one at best."
The door behind you opened and Tom appeared from inside. He looked out into the hallway frowning. "What's all that noise about?"
"Your fiancée's throwing a fit."
"Camille was right," you said, still not taking your eyes off Freda. "It was her. The note, the quill and everything else. I just caught her right in the act."
Freda heaved one single, shrill laugh at your words and straightened her posture. "I just told you, I would never do such things."
"What were you doing then? Pointing your wand at me, when I have my back turned on you."
She pondered, taken aback, while she looked at Tom beside you until her grin appeared back on her face. "You're imagining things. I was just leaving my room to go and talk to Professor Dippet. That's when you started to yell at me for no reason."
"Liar!"
She didn't lower herself to even look at you anymore. Instead, she looked at Tom. "Is this really what you look for in a woman? Hysterical and hostile? I would have thought you had better taste."
The need to go up to her and slap her across the face seemed almost unbearable. Your hands were balled into fists and it took all your might not to take out your own wand and pay her back everything she had done to you, times ten. Tom on the other hand stayed calm and smiled weakly while looking back at her.
"Don't worry about my taste, Freda," he said. "I'd rather worry about your memory. Maybe you haven't been informed, which would be very unfortunate seeing that you are head girl, but Professor Dippet isn't in Hogwarts today. He's been called in by the Wizengamot. How could you have been on your way to him then?"
Freda's smile faltered, her eyes darting back and forth between Tom and you. "I must have not gotten his owl then."
"Certainly," Tom said. "I want a word. Now."
"No," you intervened and he stopped his movements to look at you. "I can do this myself."
Tom stepped back with a small smirk on his face. Freda was in for a treat. You walked up to her until there was only a hand's breadth of space between your faces.
"Listen now," you said, your heart pumping strongly inside your chest. "I don't know what you were thinking. If you were thinking. But I swear, if you ever play another of your pranks on me again, I-"
"You what?" she asked and shoved you by the shoulder. "Do you think I'm scared of you?"
The moment she had touched you, you felt something moving by your feet. Nagini had slithered out through Tom's open door and hissed louder than you had ever heard before. Freda gasped and took several steps backwards, startled by the snake. Nagini placed herself between the two of you and reared up, looking as huge and aggressive as ever. Her hisses were meant for one person only and when you looked back at Tom, you recognised that he wasn't talking to the snake. She had come to your defence on her own.
"Take that thing away," Freda yelled. "Make it stop."
"Or what?" you asked. "You might have not been scared of me yet, but I promise you, give me one more reason and you will be."
She didn't dare answer, still looking down at Nagini in utmost panic and tried to foresee every move the snake was about to make. You savoured on the sight for a moment, fervently enjoying how Freda fumbled for the doorknob behind herself.
"Come Nagini," you then said as you turned around. "Leave her alone. For now."
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