Still Young
For Zoe, for your birthday, for everything
Thereâs a party to mark the end of the summer before Seventh Year, and itâs the first time he has seen Lily Evans in two months.
The heat has been extreme this August, hanging in the air with an unrelenting presence, and what was intended as a house party has wandered outdoors, craving fresh air. Fortunately, Jeremy Booth â the host, a Ravenclaw â lives in the country, released from the prying eyes of any muggles, and the youth of wizarding Britain lark about in the minimal breeze without restraint. Teenagers sit in clusters on a sprawling green lawn, cooling charms cast overhead, and someone has started a game of twilight Quidditch. The atmosphere is lazy: itâs too hot to be excited about the coming year, their last year. Time will come for that the day after tomorrow, when they board the Hogwarts Express for the last time. For now, James Potter lies alone in someone elseâs garden, enjoying the sensation of cool grass pressed against his back, and tilting his glasses just so, so that he can track the movements of his Head Girl as she makes her way towards him.
She sits beside him with a flump and presses something that is made of glass and is astonishingly cold to his cheek. He shudders, a gasping oh escaping his mouth.
âBlimey, what was that?â
âA beer,â replies Lily, knocking it against his hand now. Condensation clings to his skin, and James sits up quickly, grasping the bottle neck.
âIs this -?â
âThe muggle stuff? Yes.â
âBrilliant.â
She laughs, tossing him her purse. âOpen it.â
He does so and peers inside, and a rush of cold air fogs up his glasses. An annoyed sound emerges from the back of his throat, and Lily laughs again. She takes her purse back and shakes it, and the unmistakeable clink of bottles comes from within.
âUndedectable Extension Charm,â she says, âand then a weakened Freezing Charm. I figured youâd want a good cold beer more than Butterbeer or Firewhisky tonight. Itâs too damn hot for anything above room temperature.â
âNot me,â James shakes his head. âGot any Gillywater in there?â
âDonât be cheeky,â she says, but a smile dances around her mouth.
--
Lily takes out a bottle for herself and taps the cap with her wand to remove it. Beside her James mirrors the action, and they look at each other and with smiles that hold a degree of secrecy. Theyâve been seventeen for a while now, they all have, but using magic outside of school still feels like a novelty, a small act of rebellion.
âSo,â she angles her bottle towards his, âto us?â
âTo us,â he reciprocates, and their beers clink together with a fraction of awkwardness. There have been letters passed between them these holidays, long ones, rolls of parchment crammed with handwriting on both sides - his remarkably neat, hers in an inky shambles. Theyâve been separated by distance â him in France for weeks, her mother harping on about family obligations and refusing to leave her to her own thoughts for more than a few hours. Still, Lily has told James almost everything thatâs happened to her this summer, went into frighteningly personal detail about Petuniaâs disaster of an engagement party actually, but theyâve rushed through this, the Big Thing. They skirted around the mutual announcement like a weather report, remarking on it in postscripts and with joking punctuation. âA muggleborn as Head Girl? Voldemort will storm the school by October.â âMe Head Boy? Itâs the criminals leading the criminals, and I want nothing less than anarchy.â
But now she looks at him reclining beside her, and he straightens as though he feels her eyes on him. His face turns, and James looks at her with an intensity that chips away at her breath. âCongratulations,â he says, and he says it in such earnest, his face so serious, that she wants to press a thumb between his brows and smooth out the crease that has suddenly appeared there.
âAnd to you, Jamesâ Lily replies.
--
Sheâs matched his serious tone, her eyes holding his levelly, and he kicks himself inwardly for so quickly turning this into a solemn conversation. Thereâs things he wants to say, of course, but heâs always been uncomfortable when discussion turns heavy, and though heâs infinitely more sensible than he was a year ago he still strives to keep things light hearted. For now he just wants to actually live the banter thatâs passed between them in written form for weeks. He has found that when things happen, sheâs the one he wants to tell, hoping the words that hurry out of his quill will make her smile, make her laugh, twist her stomach in the same way his jumps whenever her owl appears at his window. Heâs worried that heâll have lost the ability to do that now. The reality of their positions and situation looms so much more real when sheâs sitting right next to him.
 He forces his voice to adopt an airy quality.
ââCourse, it was completely expected-â
âJames.â
âWhat?â
âDonât do this.â
âDo what?â
âSlip into the old act.â Something about her voice hints at disappointment, and James picks at the grass.
âYeah. Sorry.â He pauses, weighing his next words. Her opinion (of him) matters more than heâs ever known how to express, and he wants a verbal confirmation of what he suspects.
âI am better now, though, arenât I?â
--
 âOf course you are, you dolt.â
He grins, sheepish. âI have grown up a bit.â
âJames, Animagi undergo smaller transformations than you have.â
An interesting smile plays around his lips at this, and she pokes his hip. âAnyway, you havenât actually changed that much.â
âNo?â
âNo. Youâre just ⊠nice more of the time.â
--
âNice, am I?â James wonders why that adjective, coming from her, makes him feel so warm. âEvans, you sure know how to compliment a bloke. Youâll be calling me pretty next.â
âWell, you are a bit.â
His neck practically cracks as he turns to look at her. Lily has averted her eyes, and she takes a swig of her beer. Her shoulders, hunched away from him, shake a little. Sheâs laughing. Heâs appalled.
âPretty?â
âYes, just like now, with the moonlight shining on your hairâŠâ
âRubbish, the sunâs barely gone down.â
âBut youâre breathtaking nonetheless.â
âOh, shut up.â
âDonât get ahead of yourself. Youâre still a tosser.â
âBut a nice tosser, Iâve just been informed.â
Lily turns now, her eyes smiling into his. âYouâve always been nice. You just used to pretend you werenât sometimes. I think you thought you were cooler that way.â
He sighs, remembering a day by the lake when too many choices turned into mistakes that took months to forgive and which neither of them will forget. âIâm not proud of it.â
Soft fingertips brush against his. âI know,â says Lily.
--
She watches him as he frowns, then picks up her hand and examines it. She doesnât ignore the zaps of energy that flow wherever his skin meets hers â she absorbs them, sure that each one radiates from her in turn. His calloused fingers run the length of hers, folding them over and inspecting the ring on her right index finger.
âA garnet,â she tells him. âItâs my-â
âBirthstone.â He looks up, meets her eyes a moment, and god, something inside her just tumbles. âI know.â His thumb brushes over the red jewel embedded in the thin gold band. âYou were always meant for Gryffindor, then,â he says softly. She can see the corner of his mouth upturned, smiling, and all of her is smiling too.
Sheâs felt this coming, itâs been creeping on her, and she finds herself glad. It would have been so ... disappointing, for them to have come so far over the last year and especially the last months, for it to have dissipated into something that didnât mean all that much. Thereâs never been an in-between with her and James. In the early years they were either getting on famously or were at each otherâs throats, something which didnât really change as they approached fourteen, fifteen. She would find herself admiring him only for him to dash it all against a rock by doing something stupid, and she was pretty sure that sheâd had the same effect on him.
The effect is different now. Lily canât pinpoint when it changed or why, but she knows that right now she doesnât want to be anywhere but in this garden with this boy, knowing that the whole year is theirs for the taking.
Garnet. Gryffindor. Brave.
She turns her hand in his, his palm warm and flush against her own. More zaps. More of this bizarre alive feeling.
Grinning at their two hands, James links their fingers. âWell,â he observes, âthis certainly isnât the old act.â
--
He probably looks like a fool, but James doesnât care. He just wants to keep looking at and holding Lily Evansâ hand because it is a marvel. Her fingers are thinner than heâd realised and heâd be worried that heâll break them except they feel strong, emanating life. Even in the twilight he can see small freckles dotting her knuckles and he wonders
Where else? Where else has she got freckles that Iâve never seen?
He feels like heâs on a precipice, heâs filled with a palpable thrill that sheâs standing there beside him.
--
Lily wants to laugh at the happiness radiating from James. Heâs matured so much, his best qualities now almost always on the surface, almost a gentleman, but still such a boy.
And, she thinks, sheâs such a girl, giddy herself to be sitting in the midst of a party holding hands with the boy to whom sheâs been writing letters all summer. She wonders why theyâre undisturbed when almost everyone in their year is somewhere in this yard, but then thinks that James must have given his mates as strict instructions to be left alone as she had given hers. For whatever reason, theyâre by themselves on this patch of grass, and sheâs grateful.
She nudges him. âLetâs talk business. Whatâs the game plan for the year?â
âWell,â he emphasises the word, looking up from her hand, drawing his eyebrows halfway up his forehead and peering at her in an alarmingly accurate impression of Dumbledore. âObviously weâre commissioning golden statues of ourselves.â
âObviously.â
âFor the Great Hall, I was thinking. They can stand behind the staff table and observe all the goings on of the school.â
âAnd weâll demolish the house system?â
His eyes dance. âWhat are you proposing?â
âGet rid of the old houses. Two new ones: Evans and Potter. The Founders of a new era.â
James chuckles. âSo long as Potter gets the Hufflepuff common room.â Lily is confused, and her face must show it, because he adds quickly, âTheyâre near the kitchens.â
--
âTypical,â Lily snorts, and he doesnât think heâll ever get tired of making her laugh. They fall silent a few minutes, drinking now and then in peace, and James decides to voice the thought thatâs been maturing in his mind since that badge had fallen out of his letter and scared him witless.
âWhy us, dâyou reckon?â
Lilyâs breathing is contemplative. She bites her lip, a thoughtful quirk, and he can see her mind working. Eventually, a smile blooms across her face and she nods towards their joined hands.
âI think Dumbledore could tell weâd put up a united front.â
Absently, he runs his thumb along her palm. Weâre united, his mind affirms, and he feels ready. For this role, for the life that is coming, for the path he realises heâd chosen long ago. He hadnât thought he ever would be, but now he is. He thinks, knows, that sheâs ready to, and he thinks Kiss her. Lean over and kiss her.
He doesnât.
Thereâs a thrumming promise of soon, of one day, but he doesnât think he can handle that just yet.
--
One step at a time, theyâre moving forward. Moving together.
There are whoops from above, and a blurred figure streaks past them on a broom, t-shirt pulled over his head and bare toes skimming the lawn. âLooks like someone won Quidditch,â Lily muses.
James laughs, squeezes her hand, and when she looks at him his eyes beam at her. Â âWeâre a team now, you and I,â he says proudly. âIsnât that a terrifying concept?â
















