Destined for Difference
Disclaimer: I do not own any of the original Harry Potter characters, objects, or plots. I give full credit to J.K. Rowling herself.
Summary: Cassidy and Seth are sixteen year old twins and have a troubled past. Their mother has kept it a secret from them and they are soon to find out when they enroll in Hogwarts.
Chapter 1: A Fiery Situation
The mother stood at the bedroom door, horrified at what she was looking at. She had come running from her bedroom just down the hall because she had heard the smoke alarm in her children’s room go off, screeching like a human being, threatened with death.
The bedroom was engulfed in red-orange flame. The flames danced as though music were being played for it. It lit up the room with a terrifying glow. The pictures on the walls drawn by her children shown brighter than ever.
Seth was sitting in the middle of the flames, bouncing up and down clapping his hands and laughing. In his left hand, he was holding a box of matches.
Cassidy was still sound asleep. The fire moved around her bed, but the bed didn’t catch fire. She was lying there delicately, unaware of the smoke alarm or the flames. There was a small, but conspicuous smile on her face, showing signs of dreams of ponies and rainbows that would not be interrupted.
The woman dashed to the center of the room and grabbed Seth up off the floor. Next, she dodged the flames and gently threw Cassidy over her shoulder. Normally, the growing three year-olds’ weight would have slowed her down, but in this situation, she didn’t notice it.
She sprinted out of the large bedroom and slammed the door, in hope of keeping the flames enclosed in one room. As she slammed the door, one of Seth’s drawings fell off the wall, but the woman did not see. The drawing gently floated to the ground. The scribbles of dark color made it undecipherable. Most of it was done in black and gray. Long black clumps of color surrounded three smaller, pink ones. The picture slowly charred and burned.
The mother telephoned the fire department in a panic. Before getting out of the house, she whispered something to a black cat curled up on the sofa. The cat looked up and jumped down from its slumber spot before slinking out of the house with the mother and her children behind it.
The woman looked up at the house. Instead of the fire in the children’s bedroom, it had grown and taken over two more the visible rooms in the upstairs. She was too frightened to cry.
She placed her children on the soft grass and became aware of the coolness and darkness of the night. She shivered and looked at Seth. She noticed he was still holding the box of matches tightly in his grip. She pried them out of his soft hand. The box had been full only yesterday, but now, half of the matches were missing.
She began to cry. She could hear the wailing fire engines drawing nearer. She looked up at the sky. The moon shone brightly and the stars twinkled around it. She glanced at Cassidy, who was cooing gently at the spectacular light show.
She then looked at Seth once more. He, too, was watching the flames through the windows. Then she saw it, burning brightly on the back of her little boy’s neck. A sign that branded him from the rest of little wizard boys his age. It was glowing red. She began to sob as the fire engines pulled up in front of her house.
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