After escaping from Merope in London and fleeing back to Little Hangleton, Tom Riddle had thought he was free of witches. He wasn't expecting yet another witch to turn up on his doorstep. This one seems different, but she too smells of Amortentia. Can he trust her when she tells him that she has brought him his baby from a London orphanage?
When a human is captured by werewolves, escape is impossible, but she might be able to accomplish one thing: kill Remus Lupin. He's the most evil werewolf in the pack because he's the best at pretending to be human.
I participated in a rare pair challenge and was assigned these two characters at random. This story is very silly, but at least it's short.
Since Ron got a new owl, it's only fair that Ginny gets her own pet. She adopts a big black dog.
Tonks knows all about werewolves, thanks to her Auror training, so now she can humansplain lycanthropy to this intriguing man she just met named Remus Lupin. That'll impress him, right?
Remus Lupin is an anti-werewolf bigot like his father, but Hermione and her time-turner can fix that. J.K. Rowling still owns these characters even in my alternate universe.
Fred and George Weasley are used to pulling pranks with the help of a hairpin and pocketknife, but in their first year at Hogwarts, they find some extra help locked in a drawer in Filch's office. These characters are the property of J.K. Rowling of course, but they're worthy of more stories than she has time to write.
History would be different if Tom Riddle had been adopted by a loving parent. Wouldn't it? JK Rowling owns these characters, even the time travelers in my alternate universe.
In a Marauder-era Valentine's Day party in the Gryffindor Common Room, who spiked a snack with Amortentia, and why?
Complete! The Christmas of 1981, just after the end of the First Wizarding War, wasn't so merry for all the characters. Who is this guy running from his past, trying to make it in the muggle world? What does he mean by the word "muggle," anyway? Warning: it contains some disturbing stuff. The wizarding world belongs to J.K. Rowling.