The broomstick shop did not look how Minerva Golding had expected when she had heard the phrase. She had expected something dusty and musty and maybe with a woman in the back with a broad brimmed hat and lots of black cats - but instead, she and Harry stepped into what, for all the world, looked like a car dealership. There was a large space set out for the broomsticks, and they were fenced off to keep people from touching, with their names and their prices stenciled out on placards, and a smiling man in a fine suit was checking his wrist watch as they entered. He lifted his head, then beamed. "Ah, Mr. Arthur-Perry!" he said, giving Harry a little nod - which made Harry look faintly miserable. "And..." His eyes swept to Minerva, and he clearly tried to place her.
"Minerva Golding," she said, holding her hand out to him. He hesitated long enough for her to recognize the faint expression of distaste on his face - which he quickly hid behind a false sheen of servility and good cheer.
"Well, Miss Golding, Mr. Arthur-Perry," he said, nodding. "Welcome to Bronwick's Broomsticks, I am Mr. Sneedley. We've got the finest and newest models from BC Broomsticks, all for reasonable prices, with the newest innovations. Slowfall spells, heating spells for high altitude flying, obscurity spells to avoid mundane attention." He gestured. "Would you like to take a look at our stock?"
"Mine is already ordered," Harry said, a little sheepishly.
"Yes, yes, the Allafyre '32!" Mr. Sneedley said, his lips quirking slightly. "She's actually in back, if you wish to take her right now."
"The Allafyre?" Minerva asked, arching an eyebrow at Harry.
"Just a, uh, a little birthday present from my uncle," Harry said, tugging at his collar.
"It's the finest sports broom on the market," Mr. Sneedley said.
"Of course," Minerva said, her lips growing thin. "I'm looking for something a touch more economical." She glanced at Harry. "Assuming, of course, a broom is absolutely required..."
"She's enrolled at Hexgramatica," Harry said, quickly.
Mr. Sneedly arched an eyebrow. "Well, it seems they will let just about anyone into Hexgramatica these days," he said, his voice growing just a touch prim. "But yes, you will require a broom - no student has graduated Hexgramatica without it."
Minerva thought back to how her invitation to this damn school had said the tuition would be paid by the Church of England of all things. Lovely, of course. They hadn't paid for the books or the wand or the alchemical supplies or the
broomstick
- which, as she looked at the prices, looked like they'd run up against a model-T from America. A
new
one. And those were just the cheap broomsticks, the more expensive ones looked to be priced quite a bit higher. As she felt her stomach sinking more and more, Harry said: "Might I, uh, see about paying for one of them? Maybe a Zwellers?"
"Harry!" Minerva exclaimed.
"The up front would be two hundred and twenty pounds," Mr. Sneedly said - and Harry's face showed a flash of pain. Minerva took his arm, even as Mr. Sneedly smoothly added. "Of course, you could pay for it in monthly increments-"
"Harry, absolutely not!" Minerva hissed in his ear.
"It's the least I can do, Minerva," he said, quietly.
"You've been far too generous already," Minerva said. "And your allowance cannot stretch to cover a
broomstick
." At his mulish expression, she reached for and used the most logical point she had. "And what would Mr. Vilimont say if you had to explain this expenditure?"
Harry looked as if she had taken a knife and jabbed it into his ribs. He sighed. "W-Well...I..." He let it drop as Minerva smiled, slightly.
"I can figure it out," she said. "I'll find a way to pay for it." She shot a look right at Mr. Sneedly, who was looking quite bland. Masklike, even. "That I assure you."
Mr. Sneedly, his voice polite as could be, inclined his head to her. "Your kind always does."
Minerva thought about breaking one of his fancy broomsticks over his head.
***
Hours later, Minerva stood before the door to Petunia's bedsit and lifted her hand, to knock.
She lowered it.
You can't tell her.
The words rang in her head and she bit her lower lip.
Harry had been quite clear about that, when he had walked her back home and then bade her goodbye. The new school year was starting on the 3
rd
- in a months time, give or take a few days - and she had to find
some
way of paying for her broom before then. But he had whispered to her, fierce and intent.
You can't tell her.
Petunia had come off in an offhand way - she had mentioned wanting to tell her. But Harry had explained it all. She could see him, looking...almost sad. Like he was breaking the news that there was no Father Christmas.
The mundane world and the magic world cannot ever, truly, be one. If it was, then the mundane world would swallow us and not even notice. We have survived by secrecy and by quiet manipulation because there has always been
more
of them than there are of us. And it has only gotten worse. Machine guns? Poison gas? Tanks? Airplanes? Those are all mundane tools that make the worst curses look like pinpricks. If the mundanes knew of us, they would envy us, then they would fear us, then they would kill us. You...
He had actually seem rather taken aback.
You know that better than I do, huh?
She lowered her hand, not knocking on Petunia's door. She looked away. Her eyes blurred.
She had asked him, on the way to the station, out of the impossible architecture: What could be healed with magic?
Anything.
Anything at all.
So long as the damage was visible to the spellcaster and so long as 'penumbra' of the person was not what was damaged. The explanation had seemed faintly confusing to her - there was another level of reality beneath this one, where one's 'true' self was reflected, and if that other self was destroyed or damaged, then the effect rippled to this world, but the inverse was not entirely reciprocal. If damage was wrought here, it might remain untouched in this other world...it was all so complicated and technical and beyond what she knew at this point.
But that didn't matter.
It was a
hope
.
You'd know that better than I do, huh?
Her grandfather had fled Russia when the Tzar's raiders and pillagers had burned out his home and his family. They had been after Jews. She tried to imagine that happening to someone like Harry Arthur-Perry. The image refused to form. He was too well bred, too genteel, too...British. But she imagined what might happen to
her
. That picture formed all to horribly quickly. She slid her hands along her shoulders - and felt more confused and uncertain than she ever had in her entire life. She turned away from Petunia's door...
And almost jumped out of her skin when the door opened behind her and Petunia stepped out, crutch under one arm. "Minerva!" she exclaimed as Minerva spun around, almost knocking her friend over. "Where have you been all day?" She asked.
"About!" Minerva said, hurriedly. "I...what are you doing up so late?"
She hadn't gotten home from shopping until later than she had expected. Petunia gave her a quizzical look. "I need to refresh myself, Minerva," she said, her voice a bit dry. Minerva's cheeks heated and she stepped back, gesturing to the side.
"Of course!" she said. When Petunia started down the corridor towards the loo, Minerva steeled herself. She stepped into the bedsit and sat down on Petunia's bed. The warmth of her body radiated from the blankets, and feeling it made Minerva's heart thunder quickly. She was so frightened. What if she said the wrong thing? What if...
Petunia returned. She gave Minerva a dry little smile. "Want to talk?" she asked, stepping gingerly into the room. She winced as she took the crutch from her side, her leg trembling as she let herself fall into the bed beside Minerva. Minerva watched her look so...damn brave and steady. She was focused. She was going to make more of those shoeboxes, she was going to brutalize herself and her leg and she was going to sell each one of those shoeboxes. Petunia was going to throw herself into the gears of the world with a chipper smile, again and again and again, until she was...
Until...
Minerva felt the words coming up her mouth.
She couldn't stop them.
She didn't even try.
"Petunia, I need you to keep a secret," she said. "Swear to me."
Petunia looked faintly shocked. "I...of course," she said. "I swear to keep anything you tell me in confidence, Minerva." She bit her lip. Then, playfully, she leaned in. Her eyes sparkled. "Is it a boy?" she whispered, sounding scandalized and delighted all at once.
"Ugh! No!" Minerva exclaimed. "No!"
She had a thousand ways to say this.