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atdelphi ([info]atdelphi) wrote in [info]hp_beholder,
@ 2013-04-15 07:08:00

Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:antonin dolohov, antonin dolohov/filius flitwick, beholder 2013, fic, filius flitwick, rating:pg, slash

FIC: "Red Dreams" for wwmrsweasleydo
Recipient: wwmrsweasleydo
Author/Artist: ???
Title: Red Dreams
Rating: PG
Pairings: Antonin Dolohov/Filius Flitwick
Word Count:6,850
Warnings/Content Information (Highlight to View):  *[Character Death]*.
Summary: “...and with a burning pain in my heart I realized how unnecessary, how petty, and how deceptive all that had hindered us from loving was. I understood that when you love you must either, in your reasonings about that love, start from what is highest, from what is more important than happiness or unhappiness, sin or virtue in their accepted meaning, or you must not reason at all.”
― Anton Chekhov
Author's/Artist's Notes: I hope that this story pleases you, wwmrsweasleydo. When I finally found the right story to tell, it all seemed to fall into place. Thank you to L, my invaluable beta and dear friend, who never fails to improve anything she touches.


He knew no one here. He barely spoke the language. He held tightly to his mother’s hand as he watched the chaos on Platform 9 3/4. He would never fit in here. Why his mother had brought them here, of all places, after his father’s death, he did not understand. All he knew was that his father’s family had made it clear that they were no longer welcome in the family home. He knew, too, that Babka believed that Mama had murdered her son, but then she had always hated Mama. It was true that Kazimir Grigorjivich Dolohov had been a hard and difficult man, but Mama had been the only one to whom he had been kind - he certainly had not been kind to his only son. If anyone had had reason to murder his father, it was he. He wished he had. In spite of it being the cause of his exile to this strange place, Antonin was glad his father was gone.

“Antosha.”

His mother was tugging on her hand, gently removing it from his.

“It is time to go. We will not see one another again until the school year ends, so it is time for you to learn self-reliance, my son. You may kiss me, then you must bid me farewell and board the train.”

Dutifully, he stretched up on his toes to kiss the cheek she offered, picked up his small overnight bag, and boarded the car nearest to where they stood. He did not look back.

Every compartment he looked in was full of children chattering and laughing. They all seemed to know one another, and regarded his alien face through the glass with suspicion, if not active hostility. He moved on until he found one that contained only one other boy, who was deeply engrossed in reading.

He did not look up from his book as Antonin slid open the door, put his case on the shelf and took the seat opposite. In fact, until the train lurched forward as it began to move, the boy seemed unaware of the existence of anything outside his book. Antonin very nearly scooped up the spider he’d seen in the corner of the compartment and dropped it on the book’s pages, just to see if he’d notice it. But the spider didn’t deserve him taking chances with her life. He liked spiders. They were clever and patient and solitary, like him.

Instead, he took advantage of the boy’s absorption to stare at him in a way that would have earned him a rebuke from his mother and much worse from his father. His stares often unnerved people, or so he had been told. But his intent was not to perturb, but to study, as this boy was interesting because he was so very strange.

For one thing, he was quite small. He hardly looked old enough to be going to school at all. Antonin thought he was about the same size as his four year old cousin Oksana, though he must certainly be at least his own age. The boy’s face was angular and his hair so blond as to be nearly white. He wore small, round-lensed glasses through which he peered in perfect concentration at the book, mere inches from his tiny nose. Periodically, the glasses would slide down far enough that he would push them back up again with a stubby forefinger, though Antonin doubted that he even knew that he was doing this.

The boy’s clothing was the oddest he’d ever seen. He did not wear robes, but instead was dressed in trousers of light grey wool, with very fine white lines running the length of them. With these he wore a crisp white shirt and waistcoat, covered by a very strange short, black coat with long sleeves that met in the middle in a single button and had two long tails coming from the back of it, which splayed on either side of him where he sat. The boy wore a tie, too - sky blue and tied around his neck in a large bow as if he’d been gift-wrapped. He looked like a perfect miniature of a picture of a Muggle butler Antonin had seen once. All he would have needed would have been white gloves and a domed tray.

When the train jerked into motion, the boy looked up, startled, and found Antonin staring at him. Bright blue eyes focused on him over the top of the glasses with a quizzical expression, as if to say ‘how did you Apparate into my compartment without a sound?’ Then the boy smiled at him with his whole face and Antonin nearly gaped at him in wonder.

“Oh, hullo,” said the boy. “I’m sorry - I didn’t hear you come in.”

He extended his hand. Antonin’s former tutor had warned about the English custom of shaking hands, so he knew to extend his own in return, rather than bow.

“I’m Flitwick,” said the boy as they shook hands. Flitwick’s grip was strong for such tiny hands.

“I’m Dolohov,” he answered, and the boy’s smile got even wider, though he wouldn’t have thought it possible.

“Delighted to meet you,” replied Flitwick in perfect Russian. This time Antonin did gape openly. “Your accent gave you away,” he said in English, still smiling. “You sound as if you are from somewhere near Moscow, I am thinking, and a firstie.”

“How -, how did you know? And what is this ‘firstie’?” He wanted to make it sound like a demand, but it just came out bewildered.

“You have the same accent as my old tutor, who was from Kolomna. And, a ‘firstie’ is someone in their first year at Hogwarts. I’ve never seen you before, and you look too young to be anything but a firstie.”

“You look younger than me!” he blurted in Russian. Instead of taking offense, the other boy grinned mischievously.

“And that can be very handy sometimes. Even so, I am thirteen and a third year. Did you move to the UK to go to Hogwarts?”

“No, not for that reason,” Antonin said. He didn’t care if he sounded uncivil in the way that he answered. He did not care to talk about this with a stranger.

“All right,” answered Flitwick, and his smile did not falter. “Do you know anything about Hogwarts? Other than that it is a school, I mean. Like what house you hope to be sorted into?”

Antonin shook his head. He knew nothing about where he was going. His mother had not seen fit to tell him anything other than that he was going away to school. He knew that she wanted to get him out of the way so that she could find another husband to support them. He hoped she would choose better than his father this time, now that the choice was hers. When he met Flitwick’s eye he could see the pity and the curiosity there and he turned away.

“Nyet.”

“Then I have something which might be of interest to you,” replied Flitwick softly. He took out his wand and Accio-ed a bag nearly as big as himself down from the shelf onto the seat beside him. He rummaged around in it and brought out a crumpled robe, then hit it with a steam charm that left them both coughing. “Hmm, that one needs perfecting,” he said, waving away the mist. “I should change, I suppose. No sense parading about the grounds in what I wore to the Proms with Granddad. Ah - here it is!”

Flitwick hauled out a large book and laid it reverently in Antonin’s lap. The title read ‘Hogwarts, A History.’

“That should tell you everything you need to know and then some. Do you need a translation charm?”

“No, I can read in English.”

“Well, I’ll just go change then,” said Flitwick as he spelled his valise back up onto the shelf, “and leave you to it. I’ll answer any questions you have, if you want. I know what it’s like,” he continued softly, “feeling as if you’ve been stranded in terra incognita without a map. I’m in Ravenclaw, by the way, so it doesn’t matter in the least what house you get sorted into - we’re equally snobby towards all the rest.” He said this with a grin and sparkling eyes as he exited the compartment, and suddenly, Antonin felt much better. As he opened the book, he wondered just where he had landed and whether or not he’d just made a friend, the first he had ever had.


++++++



He couldn’t remember exactly when he had first felt like kissing Filius. It had probably surfaced originally in a dream. He’d been having some strange ones lately. Mostly, however, his dreams were filled with red. He had always been angry at the world, he now realized. But since the new year, he’d had a real reason to hate the universe. The only good thing had been Filius, and now he had certainly ruined that, too. What had he been thinking?

He threw himself down onto the grass behind the greenhouses, near some ancient oaks that had probably been saplings when they’d built the castle. No one ever came here. The gnarled old trees had an evil feel to them, as if they were trapped souls who’d spent the centuries since their imprisonment yearning for vengeance. He knew how they felt. He laid his head in his hands. He truly was alone, now.

Antonin was no longer the boy he had been the last time he’d seen his mother, when he’d bid her goodbye at the train nearly 3 years ago. He had spent his summers at his Uncle Vadim’s, waiting for her, and slaving on his Uncle’s farm for the privilege of his room and board. She was coming, she always told him in the rare owls she would send. She was coming as soon as she had earned enough. She would take him back with her to Russia And they would have a house in the country, and once again take the places they deserved, the wizarding world paying homage to their bloodline as it should and never acknowledging the so-called family that had turned their backs on them. They would be sorry they had behaved as they had. Soon.

But shortly after the Christmas hols, Professor Dippet had called Antonin into his office, pity and embarrassment written all over his doughy face.

“Have a seat, Dolohov,” he had said, shuffling papers on his desk.

Antonin had sat. He had never been in the Headmaster’s office. He’d kept his nose clean - at least, he’d never been caught - and he knew he’d done nothing out of bounds lately. Dippet cleared his throat.

“Well, my boy, there’s no good way to say this, so I’ll come straight to the point. I am very sorry to have to be the bearer of bad tidings. Your mother has died.”

He heard very little after that.

He was certain that Dippet had rambled on in his usual way, but he’d never been able to recall exactly what it was that he had said. He simply sat there, struck dumb and his brain refusing to take in what he had heard. Then something in his speech caught Antonin’s attention.

“ . . . they’ve agreed to take you over the summers, seeing as how they already have one of our students.”

“What?” he had said sharply, forgetting to whom he had been talking. Dippet reddened.

“The Lambeth House. Our Head Boy Tom Riddle lives there, you know. I’m sure he can tell you more.”

“I don’t understand. What is this about Lambeth House and what does my mother’s death have to do with it and with Riddle?”

“I thought I’d made that clear. Due to the present circumstances, your Uncle doesn’t want you in his house from now on. Perfectly understandable, I suppose, but regrettable. So you will be going to Lambeth House at the end of the term.”

Antonin had stared stupidly at Dippet, who flinched and lowered his eyes.

“You’d best read this.”

He’d stared with uncomprehending eyes at the papers DIppet had handed him, unable to process their contents. His mother had been found, lying half-dressed in a Muggle opium den, where she had apparently lived for the last two years, dead of a botched abortion. There had been abundant evidence that the deceased had been a prostitute and an opium addict, and the coroner’s office had ruled her death accidental. The brother they had discovered referenced among her effects had been contacted and he refused to claim her, so she had been buried in a potter’s field, her grave unmarked.

It had taken him two readings to realize that the woman they referred to had been his mother. His mother. How could this have been? HOW COULD THIS HAVE BEEN? He had no memory of what followed, but apparently every glass item in the Headmaster’s office had exploded. When he again became aware of his surroundings, he was in the school infirmary, the matron tending to his wounds matter-of-factly, and Filius Flitwick was sitting anxiously by his bed, holding his hand. That night was when the dreams of red began.

He burned for vengeance. Vengeance against his father’s family, who had turned them out and started them down this path. Vengeance against his mother’s family, who had forced her to marry into the mudblood Dolohovs in the first place because they were wealthy and her pure blood would command a high bride-price, then refused to lift a finger to help after his father’s death, so that she’d had to get mixed up with those accursed Muggles in the first place; and against his uncle who had treated him as a beast of burden and then as an untouchable, soiled by what his mother had ended up as. Vengeance against the Muggles who had addicted her to their hateful poppies and ruined her life.  And, whenever he could admit it to himself, against the mother who’d abandoned him, who’d fallen in with Muggle scum and sunk so low; who had kept the truth from him when he might have been able to help her. That he could hate her for this scared him, but there was no denying that at times he did, with a fury that burned what little soul he had remaining to ashes.
 
And in the midst of the red dreams which haunted his nights, Filius had been there. It was Filius who had kept him in school, when all he had wanted to do was slaughter, Filius who spoke of a future where he would conquer by intellect, where the wealth and prestige he would garner would be the best revenge against those who had hurt his mother and him.  Filius, whose dueling skills had protected him from the taunts of the other students when he first came here and thought that he might begin laying waste to his tormenters if they had called him ‘Ivan’ and made fun of his accented English one more time.  Filius, with whom he could speak in his mother tongue, who had made him laugh when anger had threatened to swallow him whole, whose touch he had begun to crave and about whom he had begun to have dreams of a most shameful nature.
 
His vision went the color of blood, and without conscious thought, a spell Riddle had taught him was on his lips and a dozen daggers flew from his wand and embedded themselves in the side of the potting shed a hundred yards away, with such force that they splintered the wall.
 
There was no way to pretend that he hadn’t done what he had done, no way for Filius to brush it off as merely the act of a friend.  He had revealed himself, shown his unnatural feelings and now he would be the object of the same disgust and scorn as his mother. Why had he been born into this world if it was only to live out this cursed life?  Had his father seen this in him when he was just a boy?  Had this been why the man had flogged him so regularly, trying to beat this taint from him?  Could he scourge it from himself before it brought ruin upon him?
 
He must leave the school, that much was clear - but where would he go?  No one would hire him without his at least taking the O.W.L.s, and that was nearly two years away. Antonin would die before he went with Riddle to that Muggle orphanage- he’d made it plain enough what he thought of the place.  He might be only 14, but Antonin knew what would happen if he went there. He had no wish to live out the rest of his days on that gods-forsaken rock in the middle of the North Sea where the British sent their wizard murderers, but if he was forced to spend his days in the company of such filth as Riddle had described, filth like the ones who had killed his mother, he knew that this would be his fate. But how could he stay and brave Filius again, to see disgust with Antonin on that beloved face?  That, too, he would rather die than see happen.  Maybe that’s what he should do and spare himself and everyone else the continued pain of his existence.
 
Suddenly, the potting shed wall began to repair itself.  The daggers vanished, the wall was as it was before he’d had his fit of rage and despair.  He turned and saw Filius standing there and wanted the earth to open and swallow him in his shame.
 
“Tonechka,” said Filius softly, calling him by his pet name for him. “Here you are.”
 
“Don’t call me that,” he protested, hugging his knees and hiding his face against them.  “I don’t deserve your endearments.” He did not look up as he felt the familiar presence settle beside him.
 
“Why?”
 
“I don’t know why,” he answered, his voice hoarse with misery. “I cannot explain myself.  I apologize.  It will not happen again.”
 
“Well, that’s not what I meant, but that would be a shame. What I meant was, ‘why don’t you deserve them?’  You are dear to me.”  He laid his small hand on Antonin’s shoulder and gave it a brief squeeze.  Why could he still feel it after Filius’ hand lifted away?  There was a pause.
 
“You didn’t mean that kiss, then?  You wish you could take it back?”
 
“Yes.  No.  What -?”  He lifted his head in shock as what Filius had said sank in.  “Are you mad?”
 
“Perhaps.  Perhaps we both are.  But I would be a liar if I told you that I didn’t like it.  Or that I haven’t been thinking about doing the same to you.”  Filius’ cheeks went pink as he looked away.  “Because I have.  Constantly.”
 
The power of speech suddenly failed Antonin.  Could this be true?  Could Filius possibly feel these same feelings for him?
 
“Would you kiss me again?” Filius asked, still looking away.
 
Shaking, he put his arm around the smaller boy and drew him close, both of them with their eyes wide open as if they couldn’t bear to not see this moment.  Gently, slowly, he brought his lips against Filius’ plump pink ones, his head swimming with the unreality of it even as his senses told him that this was no dream.  Filius’ lips were slightly rough - he’d been licking them again- but it didn’t matter.  As they kissed, and then kissed again and again, Antonin felt that there could be no greater happiness than this, and that a world in which he belonged to Filius and Filius to him might well turn out to be one in which he could live after all.


++++++



“Antonin Kazmirivich Dolohov, I accept your service. Come and take your place among your new family, and receive the Mark which binds us all together in a glorious future.”

The words echoed in Antonin’s head as he lay in his bed, and he was still drunk on the power that had flowed to him through Riddle - oh, right, he was Voldemort now, but it wouldn’t do to call him either thing, would it? Now He was his Lord, and Antonin was happy to call him that. He had been so empty, so lonely, and his Lord had found him and given him purpose. He had picked Antonin up from his despair and restored those dreams of vengeance he’d tried so hard to forget over these last five years, the years he’d tried to make it work with Filius. He had given Antonin tasks to prove his worth, tasks that had filled him with joy to complete, starting with his pig of an Uncle. Oh yes - the expression on old Vadim’s face as Antonin had made him suffer until he begged for death, to suffer as Antonin’s mother had been left to suffer, while the life drained from him slowly - that had been worth everything to him. For this gift, he would follow his Lord until the end of his days. Too bad, really, that the crowning achievement, the tracking down and his slow destruction of the filth who had corrupted his mother, the deed which had earned him his place among the Elect, would be the death knell of any hope of fixing what had gone wrong between him and the only other person who had mattered to him. Filius would never have understood.

But what did he care anymore what Filius would think? It had been a year since that horrible day, the day the house of cards they’d built had come crashing down around their ears and he had walked away for good. Where was Fili now? Was he still living that lie that had cost them everything? Antonin knew he should be over this by now, that this was weakness in him that his Lord would not tolerate, but he couldn’t seem to move on. He couldn’t stop that last afternoon from playing over and over in his head.

Maybe it would have been different if they had been in the same year, if they had left Hogwarts at the same time. His 4th and 5th years had been the best of his life - how pathetic was that? But after Filius and he had come together, it was as if everything that had cursed his miserable existence had turned to blessings instead. Even though it had to be kept a secret, it would be different when they could settle in Russia, where the wizarding community turned a blind eye to men who loved other men, tolerating it, even if they did not embrace it. In Britain it was not only not tolerated, it was illegal and viewed with disgust. But Hogwarts herself seemed sympathetic to them, and they were already known to be close friends, so it was easy to find time and convenient, out-of-the-way corners of the castle where they could be alone together. Even thinking back on the things they had discovered with one another sent an ache of desire through him and made him long to feel Fili’s body against his, to touch him and to be touched. He pulled his pillow over his head and held it with both hands to keep from retracing those remembered paths of pleasure on his own.

How easy it had all seemed! They made plans that had appeared so reasonable then - Fili would go chase his dreams and make his name on the International Dueling circuit, taking that World Championship that he had trained so hard for. And then Antonin would join him as soon as his 7th year was done, and travel with him as he defended his title for another year or two, and then it would be Antonin’s turn. He was beginning to think at the time, that he might be interested in working in the Department of Mysteries, or perhaps he’d be an independent curse-breaker. It didn’t really matter then what it was, as they lay together, skin against skin, building their castles in the air. All that mattered was that they would be together and that they would retire, young and wealthy, to their Dacha and live out the the rest of their lives in bliss.

It had seemed not only so possible, but probable that this would be what their future would hold, that even the summers spent apart between his 3rd and 4th year and his 4th and 5th made no dent in their happiness. That had been the first of the favors his Lord had done for him, hadn’t it?

“You cannot go there, Antonin,” He had said firmly when Antonin had told him about being sent to the orphanage. “I will arrange it so that you won’t have to spend a single minute with those wretched vermin.” And so He had. Antonin had spent the summer between his 3rd and 4th year with Terrence Flint and his sister Isabel, who had taken a fancy to him for some reason, and the summer between his 4th and 5th year under the wing of the Rookwoods.

But then it was Fili’s last year and Antonin would not see him again but for the occasional brief holiday for another two years, and in the meantime, the Filius he had thought he would run to when he was finally finished with Hogwarts, vanished.

It hadn’t been so easy, as it turned out, to become the International Senior Men’s Champion. By the time Antonin had finished his schooling, Filius was still only ranked 19th and had been there for the last year. He had become frustrated, his focus only on winning the World Championship, with little left to devote to Antonin.

Oh, their reunion had been joyous enough, and he had moved into Fili’s flat in Diagon Alley that first night. And for a while he had been content enough to be sparring partner and general dogsbody, and to watch his beloved doing what he had certainly been made to do. Watching Fili in competition was like watching a piece of chamber music become human flesh. It was beauty and precision and devastating surprise attacks that left Antonin awestruck. His small stature had been a huge help to him in the beginning, as his opponents nearly always made the mistake of underestimating him. But as he gained notoriety, he lost this advantage, and he couldn’t seem to beat anyone in the tier above him.

He fired his coaches and hired new ones, and worked harder than ever, and Antonin began to see less and less of him. When he wasn’t training, he was traveling to competitions, hoping to move his stagnant ranking with every win. It had been a bit lonely, but it was survivable, and, he told himself, only temporary. With such persistence and effort, Fili would have his world title eventually, he was certain, and then they would be back on track. Antonin rejoiced with Filius as his ranking slowly improved, but when he finally made it into the top 10, two things happened which changed their lives and sealed their fate: Fili took on an agent and the Marchbanks scandal happened.

Without his quite realizing it, Fili had become an international superstar. The Daily Prophet and other papers hounded him for interviews, his every move was dogged by photographers and worse, he’d acquired a number of hangers-on, who seemed to pop up wherever he went. He was so very recognizable, and as his career began to ascend, he couldn’t so much as cross the street without being mobbed. The fan mail began pouring in. With every headline that screamed Diminutive Duelist Devastates Deutschland!, Bitty Brit is Brill! and Great Things Expected From This Small Package!, it just got worse. Going to the corner Chippy for a quick bite was now a thing of the past.

So Filius hired an agent, hoping that if he had someone to manage his public image, schedule appearances and the like, that private life might return to some sense of normalcy. It was almost amusing to think of how naive they had been.

They had not realized that it is the business of an agent to put his client before the public at every opportunity. So the growing number of public appearances was added to the list of reasons why Antonin was beginning to think that he was going to have to start scheduling himself onto Filius’s daily agenda. And then Simon Marchbanks had been caught in a loo in Lausanne with a cock down his throat and all hell broke loose.

Marchbanks had been ranked number 3 in the world - tall, fit, handsome and very popular with the ladies, even though anyone with half a brain could clearly see that he was bent. As the only other high-ranking Brit on the circuit, he was even more popular than Fili with the press, and he always had something witty to say. Every competition was breathlessly covered, every party he attended, usually with some pureblood socialite on his arm, was headline news. Now the headlines were of a different sort all together.

The idiot had been dallying with Muggles in an effort to hide the truth about himself from his own world and ended up caught by the Muggle police. Lie down with dogs, get up with fleas, as the saying goes, thought Antonin with a sneer. Pictures of Marchbanks in leg irons and manacles wearing Muggle prison garb as he was sentenced to a year at hard labor in a Muggle prison for his ‘crime’ were splashed over every wizarding paper in Europe. Then, all mention of him vanished as if he had never been, even after he had been released, and no one spoke his name now except with revulsion. The chilling effect on homosexuals all over the world was immense, even those not inclined to engage in sex in public loos. The effect on the relations between Filius and him had been devastating and immediate.

Fili’s agent deemed it no longer appropriate for Filius to be seen as an ascetic, caring only about the glory of competition. He began to arrange for Filius to be seen publicly paying court to some of the more beautiful of the women who had drifted into his orbit since Marchbanks’ fall from grace. And as public opinion began to matter more and more, what he, Antonin, had to think began to matter less and less.

Even in private, what little privacy remained to them, Filius was reluctant to show any affection toward him. They no longer slept in the same bed, and sex was reduced to short, furtive sessions at infrequent intervals that left them both unsatisfied. But Filius was unwilling to risk anything more. His fear of exposure now ruled their lives.

At Filius’s request, he took a job in the Ministry, in the Department of Magical Games and Sports, so that he would, in the words of Filius’ agent, ‘look more like a flatmate and less like a kept man’. He too, was required to begin being publicly seen with women, so he chose Millie Bagnold to keep company with. She was hiding her own homosexual relationship, so the two of them came to a mutually beneficial arrangement. He had assumed that Filius would choose similarly. How wrong he had been.

He still remembered exactly where he had been, what he had been wearing, the time, the weather, every little detail, the day the press release announcing Filius’ engagement to Belinda Davies had landed on his desk and the bottom had dropped from his world.

Looking at it objectively, he could see that it had been brilliant strategy on Filius’ part. She was a lovely pureblood witch, famous for her beauty, her fortune and for the dazzling parties she threw. She was among the most desirable women of their acquaintance, and moved in social circles well above the ones that either Filius or he could hope to frequent on their own merits. This would elevate him in their world, bring him prestige, fortune, and confirmation of his manhood, that this little man could woo and win so impressive a catch. Too bad it was all a lie.

He had risen from his desk, put on his hat, bid farewell to the office secretary and headed for home at 2 that afternoon, intending to speak to Filius the moment he returned from training, to confirm that this was some sort of joke or merely a wild rumor. He had not been expecting, when he Apparated into their flat, to find Filius already there, surrounded by packing cases.

He stood there, gazing at the love of his life, in much the same way he must have at Dippet after the Headmaster had informed him that his mother was dead. It was the same sort of feeling, as if he had separated from his body and was viewing it all from some distance. It was the only reason that he could have spoken to Filius so calmly.

“I never took you for such a coward, Flitwick.”

“Let me explain -,” Filius began, but it was more than he could bear.

“NO!” he had shouted, and the huge crystal trophy on the sideboard that Filius had won in his last regional championship burst into a thousand pieces. The shards fell harmlessly around them both. The cuts were deep, fatal and entirely inside. “No. I do not wish to hear it. When were you going to tell me, Filius? At your wedding? And now you are sneaking out of the flat to avoid having to tell me to my face what is true, that you are too craven to face your own nature and would rather live a lie than risk the world suspecting that you might be a shirt-lifter. This is all that I have meant to you, after all. I put up with being pushed away for your career, turned a blind eye to you cheating on me - oh yes, I knew about the hangers-on, how did you think I could miss them?- and took the photos in the Prophet of you canoodling with every skirt your agent threw at you with as much patience as I could muster. But this? This I will not tolerate. If you had hoped to have me as your bit on the side while you live out your fantasy, you can forget that. It’s over. Keep your flat. Keep everything. Much good may it do you. I wish never to see you again.”

With that, he had Apparated blindly from the flat, landing in an tube tunnel somewhere in central London, only what little luck he had remaining preventing him from splinching himself to death. And to think that he had, for a time, wished that he had!

He spent that night on Millie’s sofa, crying on her shoulder as she tried to soothe him by telling him that he deserved better. Yes, he did. Antonin definitely deserved better than being used and discarded like a spent rag. But he didn’t want better. He wanted his Fili back. And that could never be.

He found a cheap flat in Knockturn Alley, and Millie’s nose had wrinkled in disgust when she came to bring the the few items he still wanted from his old flat. He didn’t care.

“He’s miserable, you know,” Millie had said, handing him his valise full of clothes. “He lost his last two comps and withdrew from a third.”

“Good,” he had answered bitterly. “He deserves to suffer. But you will notice that he is still engaged and has not apologized, nor has he asked me to return. He has made his choice, so now he will pay the price.” Too bad that Antonin would pay right along with him.

Filius’ wedding was the social event of the year. He did not attend, even though Filius’ future wife maliciously sent him an invitation. He wondered if he had it in him to tell the soon-to-be Mrs. Flitwick the truth, in graphic detail, about his former relationship with her fiancé. Disgusted with himself, he decided he could not. He didn’t give a damn about whether the knowledge that he had been Filius’ lover ever became public for his own sake. But Antonin, in spite of everything, could not bring himself to hurt Filius as Filius had hurt him.

He quit his job at the Ministry. He couldn’t bear to be anywhere he could hear anything about what was going on with the dueling circuit or in the society pages. After several weeks of inactivity, he saw the ‘Help Wanted’ sign in Borgin and Burkes and was hired on the spot. It was there that his Lord had found him, had reawakened another set of dreams he had given up on long ago, had set him on this new path to glory. Filius Flitwick could go to the devil for all he cared.

He laid his hand reverently on his Mark, and felt the high of power sing through his veins anew. He had no need of Flitwick now. He closed his eyes and opened his arms to Morpheus and to the beautiful dreams of red that awaited.



+++++




He stood in the middle of the ruins of the place he had gone to school, had found his only love, and prepared to fire another blast at the wretched redhead who was making his way toward his Lord. Oh, he was tired. Azkaban had changed him, and in spite of all the talk by the Dark Lord about how his suffering had tempered his steel into an even finer weapon, Antonin knew that it had not been for the better.

The Dark Lord had changed too. Gone was the brilliant boy of his youth and the bewitching, powerful wizard of his young adulthood. The thing he had become since his resurrection was no longer really human, but some entity unknown - mercurial and unstable and even more cruel than he had been before. There was no longer any talk of a brave new wizarding world among his followers. All that was left was hope of the victory of the power-hungry and the mad.

He could count himself among that second category, he well knew. The times the red dreams did not consume him now were few and far between. What an irony that they should desert him at this moment, when he needed them most.

He sent a Reducto toward the arch where the redhead stood, and had the pleasure of watching it blow the boy against the wall. He was preparing to send his favorite Sectum Internalus curse at a tall, thin man he did not recognize, when he caught a movement out of the corner of his eye. He turned and his heart stopped.

The curse left Filius’ wand and pain seared along every nerve ending. He, who had been fed a steady diet of the Cruciatus at the wand of his master, should have felt nothing with this weak cousin of that curse. But somehow it hurt more than every Crucio he had ever endured combined. He cried out and fell, unable to find the strength to rise and fight. He had nothing left.

Suddenly, that beloved face, tears streaming, was beside his own, and everything around him faded into insignificance.

“This is my fault,” sobbed Fili in broken Russian, “all my fault. Oh, my Tonechka, what did I do to you? I am sorry, so sorry.”

He shook his head and tried to speak, but found that he could not. He wanted Filius to know he had forgiven him long ago, that it was possible that he might have ended up like this anyway, but Fili shushed him, clutching his hand.

“You were right, my dearest. I should have stuck by you. I had it all, if only I had realized it. Instead I was left with nothing but the knowledge that I had set you in the path of that monster. I have lived here in Hogwarts with the memory of your love and what you had been and the horror of what I made you become haunting every stone. Please do not leave me again. Please.”

He shook his head again, and reached his hand up, first to brush the greying hair from his beloved’s face and then to lay it over his heart. He was tired, so tired, but the red dreams were gone. In their place was a realm of green and blue and white, a peace he knew he did not deserve. He walked into it gratefully, and it felt like coming home.


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[info]wwmrsweasleydo
2013-04-15 04:36 pm UTC (link)
Wow! Fantastic story. Thank you so much. I'm going to come back and re-read this and make some hopefully intelligible comments later. I'm too blown away on a first read. Brilliant.

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[info]wwmrsweasleydo
2013-04-16 01:17 pm UTC (link)
I've re-read it and I love it even more now. Antonin's story is so believable. You imbue him with a wonderful, convincing russian-ness, and give him enough tragedy and anger to make his eventual decision to join the Death Eaters almost inevitable. Almost. Because Flitwick gives him hope and other possibilities: a world in which he belonged to Filius and Filius to him might well turn out to be one in which he could live after all. But then Filius takes that hope away again.

I love how complex both of the characters are. Neither is entirely good or bad and -- in the end -- it is Filius (who never stops being as kind and bright as we know him in canon) who puts his career before his love and thus destroys both of their happinesses.

Fred's death is one of the saddest in canon for me. Yet, you had me so invested in Antonin that it became peripheral. Amamzing work!

I love Flitwick and it's great to learn more about him. I didn't know that I needed more on Dolohov until you gave it to me.

I love this story so very, very much! Thank you!

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 05:13 pm UTC (link)
You are very, very welcome - it makes me very happy that it pleases you! Thank you for the opportunity to stretch myself. I have written Flitwick before, but no Death Eaters other than Severus (and I've never tackled that period of his life, either), so this was almost a very different story!

But, as I was looking over your character list, I remembered the almost throw-away aside that it was Flitwick who took down Dolohov. And when I began thinking about all of the other details we know from canon about the two of them, the connection made itself and the story just fell into place.

Yet, you had me so invested in Antonin that it became peripheral. That is about the nicest compliment you could have given me! To know that I had you that emotionally connected to Antonin really makes all the fretting and hand-wringing worthwhile. :-)

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[info]lyras
2013-04-15 06:04 pm UTC (link)
I have to admit, I have had pretty much zero interest in Antonin Dolohov up to this point. But you've created an absolutely fascinating, believable backstory for him here - one that I kind of want to believe in, if that makes sense.

I love your vision of Filius as a young person, exactly as kind (and talented!) as I'd imagine. The idea of him shielding Antonin from incipient bullying is lovely.

The way you show Antonin's gradual conversion to Voldemort's cause, too, is equally plausible - and chilling. Of course Voldemort would help him take revenge on his uncle, and of course that would seal the deal as nothing else would for Antonin.

I saw the ending coming, but you still managed to make it affecting and sad. I like that both characters accepted that they had done wrong in the end. Your portrayal of Antonin in that last scene was very moving, and I say that as a reader who generally has very little time for Death Eaters.

Thank you for making me think about the character, and for creating a very entertaining story!

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 05:53 pm UTC (link)
one that I kind of want to believe in, if that makes sense. Yes, it very much does. :-) I'm not much for Death Eaters, either, except for Severus (who is really a former DE). But it seems to me that most people who do evil aren't born evil, and that Tom Riddle (who may have been one of the rare ones who was born that way) had three types of followers.

The smaller number of them were the pure-blood types who were interested solely in maintaining their primacy in the wizarding world and taking control of the rest of the world and the lesser (in their opinion) beings who inhabit it. These were the 'Nazi' equivalents, the "true believers".

Next were the people who joined up out of calculated ambition, because they thought that they, themselves, would gain power and prestige from ingratiating themselves with a group that was full of the magical elite and had a lot of sort of passive support from average magical society for the idea of witches and wizards as superior, even if that society wasn't interested in the extremes to which that could be taken.

The last, I think, was probably the largest group, the disaffected and the discards. People who were outside of mainstream society for whatever reason, and here found a purpose and a place to belong and someone who valued them. They may or may not have been "true believers" in the cause, but they were loyal to Voldemort because he chose them. It's this last group that most of us have some sympathy for, I think, because it seems that if their lives had had someone in them who was in their corner, had valued and loved them in a steady way most of us take for granted, that their lives might have had a different outcome. These are the characters which are the most interesting to me, too, in the sense that they must have had a tipping point, and there's a story behind that.

Wow - that's lot of verbiage to say that I got where you were coming from! ::facepalm:: Anyway, thank you for reading a pairing I know isn't most people's cuppa, and for taking the time to leave such a thoughtful comment.

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[info]dandru
2013-04-15 06:30 pm UTC (link)
What a sad, compelling story that offers a convincing explanation of how Antonin ended up in the service of the Dark Lord. Dolohov is one of my favorite minor characters to read, and he's tragically beautiful here. His backstory, so full of pain and rejection, is heart-breaking in its credibility. Poor Antonin so consumed with his lust for vengeance that he couldn't see the self-destructive parallel he shared with his mother.

It's exciting that it was Filius' obsessive ambition that drove their relationship to its end and that he was apparently stepping out! I find this flawed manifestation of Filius pleasing, and their complicated, past relationship certainly helps to explain Filius' neutral interest in the war.
Very thought-provoking, I enjoyed this.

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 06:02 pm UTC (link)
Thank you so much! I am glad you enjoyed it and that it made you think. I, too, like my characters flawed - that makes them all the more real, I think. I wasn't interested in Dolohov before, I will confess, until I got the prompt and began to explore the pairings. And, while I am very partial to Flitwick, I knew he must have been as human as the rest. I, too, had noticed Filius's conspicuous absence from the order, and knew that there must have been a story there. :-)

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[info]alley_skywalker
2013-04-15 09:51 pm UTC (link)
Wow omg so many FEELINGS! I loved the hurt/comfort and the high level of emotion in this story which still remains very really and doesn't seem forced or overdone. I've seen certain variations of this backstory for Antonin and it's quite different from my own headcanon and I've never liked it overmuch but it fits very well with the rest of the story and Antonin's desire for revenge may be wrong but it is SO understandable. His romance with Flitwick was heartbreaking and beautiful - I never thought I'd like paring with Flitwick but well this kinda changed my mind lol.

I also love how they were driven apart by something other than the light/dark agenda and that it was FLITWICK who screwed that part of it up and that Antonin just couldn't bring himself to hurt his lover, which to me just screams "this boy could have been ok if he just hadn't been tossed out to feel like no one gave a fuck about him". The ending is wonderful too - how after everything the most important thing, overall, is still each other.

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 06:10 pm UTC (link)
I never thought I'd like paring with Flitwick but well this kinda changed my mind lol. - What a compliment! Thank you so much for that, and for taking the time to comment. :-)

And yes, I really wanted to move the story out of the typical motivation for Death Eater/non-Death Eater love stories and into a more complex realm. Most of the people who joined up with Voldemort weren't pureblood "true believers", so they must have had a different reason for it. Finding those motivations is where the interesting stories lie, imho. And while my Dolohov had issues that might have manifested themselves later, if my Filius had chosen differently, it's hard to imagine Antonin ever joining Voldemort.

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[info]kelly_chambliss
2013-04-15 09:59 pm UTC (link)
I really enjoyed the full, believable backstory you've created for Dolohov and the way you've fleshed him out from a cardboard canon DE to a real person. Young Flitwick is nicely IC, too; I love that first conversation in the train.

A sad, poignant, well-told story.

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[info]kelly_chambliss
2013-04-15 10:01 pm UTC (link)
PS -- And I'm so glad you wrote Flitwick! He's one of my favorite characters, and there's not nearly enough fic about him, let alone good fic like this that shows his complexity.

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 06:11 pm UTC (link)
Thank you so much, my dear! I am especially grateful that you took the time to read and comment on a pairing that can't have been of much interest to you. :-)

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[info]kelly_chambliss
2013-05-26 06:52 pm UTC (link)
Au contraire! Filius is one of my very favorite HP characters; I'm always thrilled to find a story about him, especially one that is this thoughtful and well-told.

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[info]lash_larue
2013-04-15 10:46 pm UTC (link)
Absolutely beautiful.

More than Dolohov deserves, but absolutely beautiful.

I bow.

L

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 06:13 pm UTC (link)
Thank you, dearest Lash, for all of your constructive advice and patience with me as I struggled through one bad story into another that was much less so. I don't know what I'd do without you!

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[info]miss_morland
2013-04-16 08:38 am UTC (link)
This is so sad and lovely! Like others I appreciate that they didn't fall apart because of Voldemort, but rather that Antonin's joining the DEs was something that followed (though it doesn't come out of nowhere -- you've painted a believable picture of his desire for revenge). I love stories that make me think, so thank you for this!

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 06:15 pm UTC (link)
You are very welcome! It pleases me no end that this story was thought-provoking for you, and I appreciate you taking the time to read and leave a comment. :-)

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[info]lookfar
2013-04-16 01:26 pm UTC (link)
Wow, what a fantastically original and moving story. I especially love their "meet cute" story, with its echos of Harry meeting Ron on the train, and of course Filius would know Russian and be dressed like a miniature Eustace Tilley. I love the backstory you've given Dolohov - the wizarding world is crueler than the Muggle one, I think - and the play on Filius' name. And the way the whole story is behind the scenes of canon until the very end. Oh, and it's beautifully written, too.

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 06:26 pm UTC (link)
Thank you!

I had to laugh at your description of young!Filius - Eustace Tilley wasn't who I had in mind, but by, golly, you are right! I was thinking more about traditional English morning dress, which is what people used to wear when going to the Proms concerts (my head-canon for Flitwick is that he comes from a very free-thinking wizarding family), but I had forgotten about the New Yorker "cover-boy". *g*

the wizarding world is crueler than the Muggle one, I think - oh, I think so, too. What passes for 'moral' there I often find troubling. I'm so very glad that you enjoyed the story!

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[info]alisanne
2013-04-16 06:49 pm UTC (link)
Wow! What a captivating, marvelous story!
You write Antonin beautifully, made him into a complex, believable and interesting character who I was ROOTING FOR by the end. The oh so tragic end.
And Filius. *sighs* He was just as he was in canon, bright and kind and yet flawed. It was a brilliant move on your part to have it be Filius' decision that tipped him over the edge, sending him careening into darkness.
Fabulous job! Loved this. :)

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 07:56 pm UTC (link)
Thank you, my dear! It really pleases me that I had you so invested in Antonin, that you were in his corner at the end. :-) Thank you so much for reading and leaving such an enthusiastic comment - you made my day. :-)

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[info]pauraque.dreamwidth.org
2013-04-19 03:59 pm UTC (link)
This backstory for Dolohov makes sense to me. I always felt that Voldemort initially gained his followers by preying on people who were vulnerable and rejected by society. If everyone else seems to hate you for who you are, and then you get someone like Voldemort who is powerful and charismatic offering you acceptance and a feeling of pride in your identity, well, it's not surprising people were willing to join him.

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 08:05 pm UTC (link)
This backstory for Dolohov makes sense to me. - What a lovely compliment! It has always seemed to me that there would have been very little incentive for anyone in that world, other than the pure-blood elite, to have joined up with Voldemort. After all, what could he have offered to them? The idea of someone accepting you and empowering you, especially if you are someone who has had the brand of "outsider" applied to you in such an insular world, seems powerful, indeed.

Thank you for taking the time to read and leave such a thoughtful comment!

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[info]dueltastic.dreamwidth.org
2013-05-04 02:33 pm UTC (link)
Oh, this is splendid. Pairing little baby Flitwick (in and of himself delightful) with little baby Dolohov (ditto) is inspired, and what a lovely story of childhood friendship, which makes the doomed ending all the more sniffly. What a wonderful story.

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 08:21 pm UTC (link)
Thank you, my dear! I am so glad you enjoyed it! Amazingly enough, young!Flitwick was easy to imagine, possibly because he has such a young-at-heart personality as an adult. Young!Dolohov, much less so, but once I left behind his cardboard cut-out DE persona, it was a lot easier to spin a tale for him.

Oh, and while I am at it, I should apologize for having not had enough time to leave a review of Vultures before the reveal. I will tell you that I have read it, and that I count it as one of the highlights of the fest. :-) I will leave a real review of it later tonight, but I did want you to know that I think it's absolutely brilliant.

Also, I have a new MM/SS story I wrote a few weeks ago, for no real reason other than I wanted to. It's short, but I'm hoping you'll like it. It will be up on my page soon.

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[info]songquake
2013-05-11 09:06 pm UTC (link)
Goodness. This story broke my heart with every paragraph. Your description of the haze of shock is fantastic, both times.

He stood there, gazing at the love of his life, in much the same way he must have at Dippet after the Headmaster had informed him that his mother was dead. It was the same sort of feeling, as if he had separated from his body and was viewing it all from some distance.

Exactly so.

I particularly love stories of How Death Eaters Chose Their Paths, and this is a lovely example of the genre. Too, I love how flawed, how human, how utterly a bastard Filius is, and how much he comes to regret it.

And it's so sad to see how in this case, death really is Antonin's only chance at redemption.

Brava! (or Bravo!)

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 08:36 pm UTC (link)
Thank you so much! It makes me happy that the story affected you so, and I am glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for taking the time to read it and to leave such a lovely and thoughtful comment!

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[info]therealsnape
2013-05-26 06:17 pm UTC (link)
I must admit that it was your name as the author that made me click on the link after all - I knew it would be good.

And it was. What a great backstory for Dolohov. Completely believable, and wonderfully atmospheric. As is the developing relationship between the boys, from that first conversation in the train to the wonderful dreams they have of their future.

Poignant, sad, and beautifully-told.

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[info]albalark
2013-05-26 08:33 pm UTC (link)
I must admit that it was your name as the author that made me click on the link after all - I knew it would be good. No worries - I'm guessing this pairing kept a lot of people away. I'm hoping that, like you, a few more who wouldn't have considered it might give it a go when they see it's me. :-)

So, thank you for paying me the compliment of trusting that it wouldn't be awful. :-) I'm glad you came and glad you enjoyed it.

I'm not a big fan of Death Eaters (except for our dear Severus, of course, who really is a former DE, after all), but it seems to me that there is very little incentive for anyone outside of the pure-blood elite to have thrown in their lot with him. Since we know that Dolohov was not part of the upper echelon, and since we are given the aside in the final battle of Flitwick being the one who takes down Dolohov, plus the fact that Filius is conspicuously absent from the ranks of the Order, made me see a story between them.

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[info]magnetic_pole
2013-05-29 10:47 pm UTC (link)
Still catching up!

I'd expected to enjoy this fic for Flitwick--a character for whom I've got a soft spot--but Dolohov just grew and grew on me as the story progressed. Like Songquake above, I love hearing about how Death Eaters became Death Eaters (presuming that only a few are as genuinely bloodthirsty as Voldemort), and this fic really delivered on that front. Dolohov is out of sync with British wizarding society in so many ways--not just the queerness, but his particular family history and his ethnic heritage--and perhaps hampered further by mental health issues...this fic doesn't seek to redeem him, but it certainly does show how the path to Voldemort's side might have begun somewhere completely different.

I also really appreciate the fact that Flitwick was the one in a sham marriage. I've always wondered if his absence from the Order said anything about his own opportunism.

Thoroughly enjoyed! M.

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