I

It'sKae

  • Begonias, Rocket Ships and a Boy Named Billy

    A short series of glimpses into Neville Longbottom's childhood, and how a very special friend influenced the way he taught his students at Hogwarts nearly twenty years later.

  • The First of September

    Luna's given up a Zoology scholoarship studying Crumple-Horned Snorkacks and other such beasts abroad to care for her aging father. Warning: Very, very, very, very sad fic ahead.

  • Begonias, Rocket Ships and a Boy Named Billy: A Childhood Story

    A short series of glimpses into Neville Longbottom's childhood, and how a very special friend influenced the way he taught his students at Hogwarts nearly twenty years later.

  • 7 Claws, 1 Lion, and Quite Enough Firewhiskey

    When an unlikely - and entirely plastered - gang of eight demand enterance to the Common Room, the eagle knocker (i.e. gatekeeper of Ravenclaw Tower) refuses, only to suffer the consequences.

  • Letters From a House Elf

    A compliation of the letters Dobby sent his dearest friend by owl post, whilst Harry Potter was travelling Europe after the Second Wizarding War. Alternate universe where Bellatrix's blade only pierced skin-deep, and everyone's favorite house elf was spared a gruesome end.

  • In Which Luna's Tranquil Streak is Broken

    "The Draught of Irascibility, when brewed correctly, produces acute and long-lasting anger, irritability, and inexplicable short-temperedness in the drinker, no matter how mild his or her natural temperament may be..." The seemingly ever-placid Luna makes history in the first display of Lovegood rage since 1701, with a little help from her creative antagonists.

  • In Which Luna's Tranquil Streak is Broken

    "The Draught of Irascibility, when brewed correctly, produces acute and long-lasting anger, irritability, and inexplicable short-temperedness in the drinker, no matter how mild his or her natural temperament may be... " The seemingly ever-placid Luna makes history in the first bout of Lovegood rage since 1701, thanks to her unrelenting — but certainly creative — antagonists.