
The Things We Do for Family | Sebastian Sallow x Reader
There are things that Hogwarts students simply know—unchallenged truths, whispered warnings passed down from year to year.
The Forbidden Forest is dangerous. Peeves is a menace. The best snacks at Honeydukes sell out by Saturday afternoon. Don’t trust the staircases to take you where you actually want to go. Never accept Garreth Weasley’s offer to ‘test something out’.
And, under no circumstances, should anyone fuck with your friends.
It isn’t official, of course. There’s no school decree, no printed rule in the Hogwarts handbook, it's not carved into the walls. It’s just… understood.
It’s not like you’re some fearsome monster or anything.
You’re a model student, by all accounts. Brilliant. Sharp. Precise. A skilled duelist, a quick thinker, someone who turns in their assignments on time, answers when called on, and doesn’t cause disruptions in class.
You don’t start fights. You don’t pick pointless arguments. You don’t openly break the rules—not in ways that can be proven.
You play the part well.
Because that’s what you had to do.
You grew up alone. No parents. No siblings. No one to step in when things got hard, no one to defend you when the world was cruel. When you were small, scared, and helpless.
So you learned.
You learned that no one was coming to save you. You learned that fairness was a lie, that justice only existed when you carved it out with your own hands. You learned that people could be awful for no reason other than that they could get away with it.
But now? Now, you have a family. Not by blood, but by choice.
And when someone speaks against them? Bad things happen.
The Ominis Incident
It started, as most things did, with a careless remark.
A fifth-year Ravenclaw—smart but not particularly bright—thought it would be amusing to make a joke at Ominis Gaunt’s expense. A cruel one. Something about how the Gaunts were all inbred lunatics, how it was only a matter of time before Ominis ended up just like the rest of his family.
The words reached your ears in the library, drifting from a table not far from where you sat.
"You know I hear they torture Muggles for fun—it’s practically a family tradition. Gaunts don’t have hobbies, just a long history of inbreeding and Crucio."
Laughter followed, a few snickers from their table, hushed but not nearly enough. Not nearly enough to keep you from hearing.
Your quill stilled mid-word, ink pooling in place. Across from you, Ominis sat straight-backed, his expression unreadable, but you saw the way his fingers tightened around the book he was holding, knuckles whitening from the force of it.
He wouldn’t say anything.
Ominis had spent years perfecting the art of indifference. Of carefully controlled expressions, of blank politeness that masked far too much. He never reacted to comments like these.
But just because he wouldn’t didn’t mean you wouldn’t.
You exhaled slowly, carefully. Then, without a sound, you closed your book and stood.
Not a word. Not a glare in their direction. Just a smooth, effortless departure, as if you had suddenly decided the library was boring and somewhere else required your attention.
The Ravenclaws barely noticed.
But they would. They absolutely would. Because Potions class was a very dangerous place. Especially for people who talked too much.
The next day, you walked to Potions without a care in the world.
Sebastian and Ominis flanked you, deep in conversation about some essay Sharp had assigned, with Sebastian whining dramatically about how unfairly long it was, while Ominis countered that perhaps he should have started it earlier than the night before it was due.
You weren’t really listening, because you already knew what was coming.
And sure enough—just as you reached the dungeon corridor—
BOOM.
The floor trembled slightly beneath your feet. A deep, echoing explosion, the unmistakable sound of a cauldron detonating mid-brew, followed almost immediately by the frantic shouting of students.
Gasps. Choking coughs. Someone let out a screech of absolute horror.
Sebastian and Ominis startled.
Sebastian’s head snapped up, eyes wide as he looked toward the dungeon doors. “What the hell—”
Ominis twitched beside you, tilting his head, as if straining to listen.
You? Didn’t even blink. You just kept walking, calmly, like nothing was amiss, like you hadn’t been expecting it for the last twenty-four hours.
Sebastian noticed. His gaze sharpened, flicking to you with a knowing squint. “That was—”
He hesitated. Then narrowed his eyes further.
“Okay,” he said slowly, “I know that face.”
You raised a brow. “What face?”
“That’s your I-did-something-but-you’ll-never-prove-it face.”
You tilted your head, feigning confusion. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
Sebastian scoffed and Ominis rolled his eyes, deadpan. “Uh-huh.”
Then the dungeon doors burst open.
A thick cloud of green smoke billowed out, sending students stumbling and coughing into the corridor. And in the center of it all, a group of very, very green Ravenclaws.
They clawed at their own skin, staring down at their hands in absolute horror. Their faces were the exact shade of an overripe toadstool, splotchy and uneven, and every time they opened their mouths, their tongues flopped out two inches too long.
Hysteria ensued.
Students gasped, some shrieked, others tried not to laugh. Professor Sharp stormed out after them, looking beyond exhausted, already massaging his temples.
“I told you,” he said, pinching the bridge of his nose, “not to add the peppermint extract.”
“WE DIDN’T!” One Ravenclaw wailed, voice garbled from their too-long tongue. “I—I don’t know what happened! We did everything right!”
Sharp did not look convinced.
Sebastian looked at you, long and slow, a glint of admiration dawning in his eyes.
“Did you—”
“I did nothing.” You walked past him, as if the entire debacle were none of your concern. “I was with you all day, wasn’t I?”
Sebastian’s lips twitched. “Yeah, but—”
“No proof, no crime.” You gave him a cheerful smile before stepping into the classroom.
Sebastian grinned. “Oh, I love you.”
It was offhanded, thoughtless, a casual jest, but it sent a sharp, pleasant warmth down your spine.
You didn’t react, though. Just smirked, settling into your seat. Because the message had been sent.
And Ominis Gaunt would never hear a word against his name again.
The Anne Incident
Rumors at Hogwarts were a force of nature.
They swirled through the halls, slipping between whispered conversations and behind cupped hands, growing more twisted with each retelling.
Some were harmless—who was dating who, which professor had it out for which student, the occasional Did you hear Peeves stole all the ink from the Ravenclaws again? But some? Some were cruel.
And this one... this one was about Anne Sallow.
It started at breakfast, when you overheard a group of Slytherin sixth-years in the Great Hall. You weren’t eavesdropping—not intentionally—but you had a habit of noticing things, of hearing too much when you weren’t meant to.
"Did you hear about Sallow’s sister?"
"Yeah, I heard she went mad."
"Lost it completely. The curse must’ve rotted her brain."
"That’s why she left, isn’t it?"
"Yeah, I heard she tried to hex someone in her sleep—"
Your fork warped in your grasp. A slow, controlled bend beneath your fingers, the metal bending in your grip.
Across from you, Sebastian had gone still.
He didn’t turn. Didn’t react. Didn’t give them the satisfaction.
But you saw the way his jaw clenched. The way his hand curled into a fist against the table. The way his entire body had gone taut, locked in place by sheer force of will.
He wouldn’t do anything.
Not because he didn’t want to. Not because he wasn’t capable of it—because he was.
Sebastian Sallow could be ruthless. You knew that better than anyone. You’d seen it firsthand, the sharp edges of his temper, the way his rage burned hot and all-consuming, leaving nothing but wreckage in its wake. You’d seen what happened when he felt cornered, when he thought he was out of options.
But he wasn’t that boy anymore. Because you and Ominis had dragged him back from the brink. Because you had looked him in the eye, years ago, when the dust had settled and the worst of it was over, and told him:
"You still have a future. Don’t throw it away."
Against all odds, he had listened. And now, this was his last year at Hogwarts and he was going to be an Auror. He was going to start over. Prove that he wasn’t just some reckless, violent delinquent one step away from Azkaban.
So no—he wouldn’t react. He wouldn’t take the bait. Wouldn't defend Anne, no matter how badly he wanted to. Wouldn’t let himself be dragged down into the same pit he’d barely crawled out of.
Sebastian was playing the long game.
But you? You weren’t.
Your revenge on Anne's behalf started small. Almost imperceptible.
The first Slytherin—the one who had started the conversation in the first place—was walking to class when it happened.
A single misstep.
His foot caught on something—thin air, perhaps—and he staggered forward, arms flailing in a desperate attempt to right himself. It didn’t work. His books went flying, parchment scattered across the stone corridor, and a bottle of ink tumbled from his bag, shattering upon impact and staining his robes in an ugly, irreversible mess of black.
A small accident. An unfortunate case of bad luck.
No one thought anything of it—until the second one fell.
In the exact same spot.
And then the third. And the fourth.
By the time lunch rolled around, all four of them had tripped at least half a dozen times each.
It wasn’t just limited to the corridor, either. They stumbled on staircases, barely catching themselves before they could go tumbling down. They walked straight into walls as if the castle itself had turned against them. One even managed to trip over absolutely nothing in the middle of the Great Hall and landed face-first into his own soup.
The snickers started soon after. The sideways glances. The poorly hidden laughter from classmates who found their sudden clumsiness far too entertaining.
It wasn’t enough to be suspicious.
Not yet.
Not until the moving staircase.
The ringleader of the group had spent too much time lingering in the courtyard after lunch, chatting up a group of girls who barely tolerated his presence. He realized too late that he was running behind and bolted toward Charms, racing up the moving staircases with zero grace and even less caution.
And then his foot caught.
There was nothing there. No loose stone or shift in the staircase, nothing at all to explain why he suddenly lost his footing.
But he did.
He stumbled backward, arms flailing wildly, fingers grasping at empty air as the momentum carried him too far—
And he plummeted.
Three flights.
A blur of robes and limbs, a crash of bone against stone, and then a sickening thud as he landed in a groaning, crumpled heap at the bottom.
A hush fell over the corridor.
Then—
Shrieking.
His friends rushed down to him, voices panicked, eyes wide with horrified realization as they took in his bruised, trembling form.
A girl ran to fetch Madam Blainey.
By the time she arrived, he was whimpering, clutching his arm like it might’ve snapped.
Hospital Wing. Immediate bed rest.
No one could explain what happened. No professor could find a cause. Some students claimed the stairs had shifted unexpectedly. Others swore that they saw nothing—no trick step, no loose stones, just an unseen force pulling him down.
It didn’t matter.
The moment he was carried off, you finally allowed yourself to smile.
Not a smirk. Not a grin. Just the smallest, most satisfied twitch of your lips.
Sebastian caught it. Because of course he did. He had been standing beside you the whole time. Silent. Still. Watching from the moment that asshole Slytherin stumbled earlier that morning to the moment he was carted off for medical attention.
And now? Now, he just exhaled, long and slow, shaking his head as his mouth curved into something unreadable.
“You’re dangerous,” he murmured, voice low.
You hummed, tilting your head in faux curiosity. “Am I?”
Sebastian turned fully then, facing you. His gaze searched your face, for guilt perhaps. For remorse. For something that might suggest you hadn’t meant for it to happen.
But there was nothing.
No trace of hesitation. No flicker of shame.
You were calm, collected, an completely unapologetic. Because nobody talked about Anne Sallow like that without consequence.
Sebastian blinked. Then, to your absolute delight, he grinned. Wide. Slow. A sharp, wicked thing.
“Yeah. You're very dangerous” he said, almost in awe.
Your stomach twisted. You ignored it. Instead, you just shrugged, voice as casual as ever.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
Sebastian’s grin deepened.
The Poppy Incident
Poppy Sweeting was one of the best people you knew.
Kind-hearted, patient, and too good for the world, really. She spent more time in the company of magical creatures than she did with most people, and honestly? You couldn't blame her.
Because people could be cruel.
You first heard it one afternoon in the courtyard. A group of girls whispering amongst themselves, giggling behind their hands. You hadn’t been paying much attention—until you heard her name.
"Honestly, she’s weird."
"I know, right? It’s like she’d rather date a bloody Hippogriff than an actual person."
"Wouldn’t be surprised if she actually has."
Laughter, sharp and mocking. Like Poppy Sweeting was a joke. Like she was less than because she chose kindness over cruelty, creatures over people who didn’t deserve her time in the first place.
You turned your head and watched as one girl—a Hufflepuff, ironically—rolled her eyes, shaking her head in exaggerated exasperation.
"Beast-lover," she muttered, nose wrinkled like the word itself was distasteful. "It's unnatural, really. No wonder she doesn't have any friends outside of her precious Mooncalves."
Something cold and sharp settled in your chest.
You had no doubt Poppy had heard it. She was standing just a few paces away near the fountain, hands clenched tight at her sides.
She didn’t react. Didn’t turn. Didn’t say anything. She just exhaled, slow and quiet, like she was forcing herself to let it go.
You wouldn’t.
The next morning, that very same Hufflepuff woke up covered in fur.
Not all over, just her face.
A thick, fluffy coat of golden-brown fuzz, soft as a Puffskein, sprouting in wild patches across her forehead, cheeks, and chin.
According to Poppy, the screams started immediately, and the entire girls dormitory had woken up to it.
The girl, who turned out to be a fifth-year, had flown into a hysterical panic, shrieking as she bolted for a mirror, hands frantically scrubbing at her face like she could rub the fur away.
She couldn’t.
It was a very specific hex. One that lasted exactly one week.
Professor Ronen was baffled.
Madam Blainey was thoroughly fascinated.
And Professor Howin, bless her, had cooed over her like she was the most adorable thing she’d ever seen. You had a front row seat to the entire thing during Beasts class.
“This is truly fascinating,” she’d said, holding the girl’s chin and turning her face slightly toward the light. “I don’t believe I’ve ever seen transfiguration manifest quite like this! And so soft—feels just like a Kneazle’s coat, doesn’t it?”
The best part? It wasn’t harmful. It wasn’t painful. Just… humiliating.
You considered it a job well done.
When Howin had dismissed you for lunch, Poppy pulled you aside. She didn't say anything at first. Just stared.
You blinked at her, tilting your head. “Everything alright?”
Poppy squinted. Narrowed her eyes slightly. Huffed.
"You did that, didn’t you?"
You blinked again.
Because Poppy—sweet, gentle, pacifist Poppy—did not accuse people of things. Which meant she was completely certain.
You just smiled, giving her your most innocent expression. “I have no idea what you mean.”
Poppy just sighed, shaking her head. But then—just for a moment—she smiled.
Small. Subtle. Grateful.
Like she knew exactly what you’d done. Like she knew there was no use arguing, no point in telling you not to go to such lengths for her.
And then, without a word, she reached out and squeezed your hand.
The Natsai Incident
You had never liked Callum Thorne.
Seventh-year. Gryffindor. Arrogant. Loud-mouthed. The kind of person who had never been told no in his life and walked through Hogwarts like the world owed him something.
You’d tolerated him for years, mostly because you hadn’t needed to interact with him much. But this? This was different.
You were starting the day with Defense Against the Dark Arts. Professor Hecat had yet to arrive, leaving the class unsupervised and giving Thorne the perfect opportunity to make a scene.
Natty was speaking with Poppy near the front of the room, voice calm as she explained something about the Ministry’s policies on magical creatures in Africa compared to Britain. She wasn’t being loud, wasn’t even arguing, just explaining.
That’s when Thorne scoffed.
“Merlin’s sake, Onai, give it a rest,” he sneered from the back of the room, tossing his quill onto his desk with an exaggerated huff. “Do you ever get tired of standing on that bloody soapbox of yours?”
The room went still.
Natty turned, slow and deliberate, her expression unreadable, regarding him with that same poised, unshaken calm that made her such a force to be reckoned with.
“I was simply having a discussion,” she said smoothly. “No one is forcing you to listen, Thorne.”
“Right,” he drawled. “Except you never shut up about it. Always talking about ‘justice’ and ‘change’ like you think you’re going to fix the whole bloody world.” He smirked. “News flash, Onai—no one cares.”
A few of his friends chuckled.
Your fingernails dug into your palm.
Natty didn’t react—not outwardly, anyway. She just exhaled, slow and measured, and turned back to Poppy like his words had been nothing more than an inconvenience.
You? You were already plotting his downfall, and luckily, Callum Thorne was a creature of habit.
He always stayed out after curfew to flirt with whatever unfortunate girl he had chosen that week, and he always went up to the Astronomy Tower afterwards with his friends to play cards and drink whatever contraband alcohol they’d smuggled into the castle.
Which made him the perfect target.
That night, as the seventh-year tidied up the cards, stretching and yawning, likely already thinking about his warm bed waiting for him—
His legs froze in place. Not a Full Body-Bind. No, this was different.
A soft, subtle hex. A slow, creeping sensation, his feet adhering to the stone beneath him, then his calves, then his thighs.
By the time he realized something was wrong, it was too late.
He tried to step forward—failed. Tried to yank himself free—failed.
And then—with agonizing slowness—his entire body began to lift off the ground. No warning. No control.
He drifted upward, weightless, helpless, arms flailing as the stone ceiling came closer and closer—
And then, with a soft thump, he was stuck. Face-down, body pressed flat against the Astronomy Tower ceiling.
His screaming started immediately.
Loud. Panicked. A complete meltdown.
His friends, who had started their walk down the tower came bolting back up the stairs at the sound of his shouting.
“What the—?” one of them started, eyes wide as they gawked at the ceiling.
“Thorne?” another asked, dumbfounded.
You bit the inside of your cheek, holding back laughter as you hid beneath your disillusionment charm.
“GET ME DOWN!” Thorne bellowed, arms and legs flailing uselessly against the stone. “WHAT THE BLOODY HELL IS THIS?”
His friends stared, uselessly waving their wands, muttering counterspells that only resulted in Thorne spinning in slow circles, howling in distress.
When they realized they were utterly helpless, panic completely set in.
“What do we do?” one of them asked, looking between the others with wild eyes. “Should we get a professor?”
Thorne snarled. “NO! DO NOT—”
But it was too late. Because at that very moment, the Astronomy Tower door swung open once again, and a very tired, very unimpressed Professor Shah stepped inside.
There was a long, painful beat of silence.
Shah took in the scene.
The stack of contraband firewhiskey bottles on the table. The panicked seventh-years, wands still drawn, looking entirely too guilty. And Callum Thorne, still face-down, circling against the ceiling, hissing every curse word known to wizardkind.
She sighed, long and slow, as if she had simply had enough of this entire generation of students. Then, with an effortless flick of her wand, she cast a single spell.
And gravity returned. All at once. Thorne plummeted like a sack of bricks.
The landing was spectacular. A glorious, sprawling heap, limbs tangled, robes askew, one shoe missing entirely. His friends didn’t even try to catch him.
For a moment, there was only silence. Then—
“Hospital Wing,” Shah said simply, rubbing her temples. “Now.”
Thorne was half-carried, half-dragged down the tower steps, groaning the entire way.
And you?
You slept soundly that night.
By morning, half the school had heard the story.
"Did you hear about Thorne? Got stuck to the Astronomy Tower ceiling last night."
"He was crying by the time they got him down."
"Serves him right—bloke’s a complete asshole."
And you? You sat perfectly composed at breakfast, casually stirring your tea, listening as his friends panicked about who could have done it.
Sebastian, of course, knew.
He sat beside you, arms folded, lips pressed together, shaking with the effort not to laugh.
Finally, he exhaled, tilting his head toward you.
“You are actually unhinged,” he murmured, utterly delighted.
You simply sipped your tea. “I have no idea what you mean.”
Across the hall, Natty smiled.
Soft. Knowing.
The Sebastian Incident
You had been careful.
For years, you had woven your revenge into the shadows, never once leaving a trace of your involvement in the strange misfortunes that befell those who dared to insult your friends. You were precise, patient, undetectable.
But everyone has a breaking point. And yours? Yours was Sebastian Sallow.
It happened in the Great Hall when Scorpius Malfoy decided to idiotically open his big fucking mouth.
You hadn’t been paying attention to him at first. Why would you? People like Malfoy had never mattered to you. He was just another spoiled pureblood, another self-important waste of a surname who thought his words carried weight simply because he could afford to say them.
But then his voice cut through the din, and he said Sebastian’s name.
"No family name worth a damn, no money, no influence. Honestly, I don’t even know why the professors still put up with Sallow. And he’s an orphan, isn’t he?"
One of his friends nodded, grinning like this was some kind of joke. Like Sebastian Sallow’s entire life was nothing more than a punchline.
Malfoy snorted. "So he's got dead parents, a dead uncle, and a crippled sister who’ll probably never set foot in the wizarding world again. Wouldn’t be surprised if he ends up rotting in the same gutter he came from."
The words landed like a curse.
Sebastian had been mid-conversation with you, fork in hand, a faint smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth as he teased you about something inconsequential—some throwaway joke that would have normally earned him an eye roll and a shove.
But now? Now, he wasn’t moving. Not speaking. Not breathing. Just silent.
Rigid.
Like the weight of those words had turned him into stone.
And something inside you snapped.
It was almost funny, in retrospect, how much effort you had spent perfecting the art of subtlety.
Every step you had taken over the years had been measured, every spell carefully woven into the fabric of coincidence, every act of vengeance so meticulously placed that no one had ever been able to definitively trace it back to you. You had built a flawless reputation, balancing on the razor’s edge between brilliance and menace, justice and mystery.
But now? Now, as you rose from your seat, you weren’t careful at all.
You didn’t move like a shadow, didn’t cloak yourself in misdirection or the comfort of silence. No. This time, you wanted them to see you.
And the moment you stood, the Great Hall stilled.
Students stopped eating, stopped talking, stopped moving altogether. The clatter of plates and goblets faded into a thick, suffocating silence, as if even the walls of Hogwarts itself were holding their breath.
Your voice came out low. Cold.
"Say that one more time, Malfoy."
Scorpius turned lazily, like he hadn’t a care in the world. Like he hadn’t just spat on Sebastian’s entire existence for no other reason than because he could.
And he smirked. Merlin, he smirked. Like you were some insignificant thing, an insect buzzing too close to his ear.
“Oh?” he drawled, tilting his head. “Touched a nerve, have I? Which part got to you, I wonder? The fact that Sallow’s got no family? Or the part where I pointed out that he’s got no future either?”
You took a step forward. You could hear Ominis hissing at you to stop, to think about what you were doing before you got yourself deep into shit, gut you couldn't. Not when it came to your friends.
Not when it came to Sebastian.
Especially when he still hadn't moved. Hadn’t reacted. Hadn’t so much as breathed.
Your hand tightened around your wand, the weight of it comforting, grounding, an extension of the fury curling in your chest.
"You should tread carefully, Scorpius," you murmured, your voice smooth, edged with something lethal. "I know you think you're clever—that you can say whatever you like without consequence, just because you were born into the right family."
Your head tilted slightly, gaze sharp, cutting straight through him.
"But you should know something about me by now."
Malfoy’s smirk faltered just slightly. And then, before he could open his mouth again—
You flicked your wand.
Hard. Fast.
Malfoy's goblet exploded.
A concussive blast of magic sent shards flying, the remnants of his beverage splattering across his pristine uniform like spilled blood. A jagged edge of glass sliced across his hand, thin but deep, and he flinched, eyes snapping down to it with genuine shock.
"If you're going to run your mouth about my friends," you said coolly, watching him clutch his bleeding hand, "then you should be prepared to suffer for it."
Your next spell came before he could react. Before anyone could stop you.
A sharp twist of your wrist, and his mouth was gone.
Not silenced. Not muffled. Just… gone. Smooth, unbroken skin where lips should be, like his voice had simply been erased from existence.
The realization hit him immediately.
His hands shot to his face, clawing at his skin, a muffled scream—horrified, panicked—rising in his throat. He lurched backward, knocking into one of his friends, fingers digging at face like he could carve his lips back into place.
But you weren’t done. Not yet.
You needed something that would etch itself into the bones of this castle, into the minds of every single person watching in stunned silence. Something that told the whole goddamn school that if they so much as breathed wrong about Sebastian again, you would ruin them.
A simple hex would be too merciful. A standard jinx—something temporary, something easily countered—wouldn’t send the right message.
No, you needed something else. Something only you could undo.
Your wand rose, fingers tightening around the handle.
A familiar thrumming sensation curled through your bones, crackling at your fingertips, humming beneath your skin like a storm about to break. Ancient magic—the power that had followed you since the day you first stepped foot in Hogwarts, the magic that had made you different. You had never used it publicly. Never allowed yourself to tap into it in a room full of hundreds of witnesses.
Until now.
Malfoy’s body lurched.
Not by his own will, but by yours, by the ancient, crackling force curling through your veins.
The entire room gasped as he was wrenched upward, his robes twisting violently around him as though an invisible hand had grabbed him by the throat and hauled him into the sky.
He thrashed, or tried to, but the moment he moved, the spell struck.
A jolt of electricity tore through his body.
Not enough to kill. Not enough to cause permanent harm, but enough to make him scream. Or at least, he would have screamed—if he still had a mouth.
Instead, a choked, garbled sound tore from his throat, half agony, half suffocated panic, his limbs seizing as the current snapped down his spine, through his arms and legs.
And you let them watch, let the entire Great Hall bear witness as he hung there, suspended like some grotesque marionette.
And the moment he tried to move again, tried to scratch at where his mouth should be or flail his limbs, another arc of lightning danced across his body, snapping against his skin like a promise that any attempt to fight this would only make it worse.
And he knew. They all knew. He wasn’t getting down until you allowed it. But your arm didn’t waver, you held your wand high, like an executioner delivering final judgment.
Because this? This was a declaration. A statement. A message carved into the very bones of Hogwarts itself.
You do not speak against Sebastian Sallow.
You wondered if he realized that you would have done this a thousand times over. That you would have burned the entire goddamn world for him if he asked.
But before you could do anything more—before you could decide how far you were willing to take this—
A thunderous voice shattered the moment.
"THAT IS ENOUGH!"
The spell snapped. Malfoy dropped. His body crashed onto the table below, sending plates and goblets scattering, silverware clattering to the stone floor. He lay there, twitching, gasping, pathetically small as the last of the magic flickered out of his limbs.
And then—
"You."
Phineas Nigellus Black’s voice was pure ice.
You turned to face him—not a shred of regret, not a flicker of guilt in your expression.
But the Headmaster was raging. His hands were clenched at his sides, his teeth bared in fury.
The entire room was still. Waiting. Holding its breath.
"My office." His voice was low, lethal, like the words themselves were a curse. "Now."
A sharp inhale from someone at the Ravenclaw table. A hushed whisper from a terrified first-year.
No detention. No points docked. Just a direct order from the highest authority in the school.
But it was worth it, because now they knew. Every single person in this room knew.
And as you turned on your heel, heart still pounding with the remnants of power buzzing in your veins—
You caught Sebastian’s eyes one last time.
Still watching, still frozen in place, yet looking at you like you were the most devastating, impossible, extraordinary thing he had ever seen.
And then? The slightest smirk. The most faint, devastatingly admiring grin.
Like he had never, ever wanted anyone more.