Author: Mistral
Story: A Place Just Right
Rating: Young Teens
Setting: Pre-OotP
Status: Completed
Reviews: 5
Words: 1,086
Usual disclaimer: This wonderful world, and all the characters that inhabit it, are J.K. Rowling's. I just like to play.
Author's Note: This is what happens with I listen to Copland's Appalachian Spring too many times at work. Many thanks to Arabella, who beta-read even though she was really busy, and to CrimsonHippogriff, who alpha-read. Oh, and this has nothing to do with Just Plain Harry or Ginny Weasley, In Her Own Words - different Harry, different Ginny.
"'Tis a gift to be simple, ‘tis a gift to be free, ‘tis a gift to come down - argh!" Ginny Weasley threw down her pencil in disgust. "Why can't I get this song out of my head?"
"Well, it's a haunting tune, isn't it?" a voice said behind her, causing her to give an undignified shriek. She looked around the tree she was leaning against, to see Harry Potter sitting up and rubbing his eyes.
"Harry! How long have you been there?" she asked.
He put his glasses back on and grinned at her sheepishly. "I don't know. Ron and Hermione went for a walk, and I came here. I suppose I fell asleep, and when I woke up, you were singing."
"Oh," Ginny said, turning back around and staring at her sketch without really seeing it. I should really stop trying, she thought. Even when I try desperately not to, I embarrass myself in front of Harry. It never fails. She blinked away the tears that sprang to her eyes, since she heard Harry moving behind her. He came around and sat with his back against the tree, forcing her to control her breathing as his shoulder brushed hers.
"I think your singing got into my dream," Harry said. She could see out of the corner of her eye that he wasn't looking at her; he was staring off into space. "I was in a world where there was no war, and no Voldemort...everything was simple and...right." He still didn't look at her. "Could you sing it again?"
"Um...but, Harry, I don't sing very well," Ginny managed to get out. Is he mad? she thought. Sing for him? All right, he heard me before, but not very well if he was asleep. I couldn't, I just couldn't. "Anyway, Hermione sings it much better than I do - she's the one who taught it to me."
"I doubt that."
Ginny gave a nervous giggle. "But of course she did. How else would I know a Muggle religious song?"
"It's religious?" Harry asked. He did finally turn and look at her. "It doesn't sound religious."
"I know. Hermione said that there was an obscure sect called the Shakers, who advocated communal living, and back to the earth philosophy, and I don't know what else. They had highly ritualized dances, and I suppose this was one of them."
"That's interesting," Harry said. He looked off into the distance again. "But I doubt that Hermione sings it better than you do; she has a much lower voice, and the way yours floats over the music...I can't explain it."
She couldn't think of anything to say to that. Now I know I can't sing, Ginny thought. He'll expect me to float.
Suddenly, Harry turned and looked her straight in the eyes, and Ginny knew she was lost. She could never refuse him anything when he looked at her like that. Not that he ever had before, but she knew it anyway.
"Please, Ginny?"
She still didn't say anything, just nodded, and waited for him to turn away again. Then, she sang.
‘Tis a gift to be simple,
‘Tis a gift to be free,
‘Tis a gift to come down where you want to be.
And when you find yourself in a place just right,
‘Twill be in the valley of love and delight.
When true simplicity is gained,
To bow and to bend we shan't be ashamed.
To turn, turn will be our delight,
When in turning, turning we come out right.
When she finished, Ginny was completely shocked to see tears in Harry's eyes. She was shocked that he was crying, first of all, but even more, she was shocked that he would let her see.
"Harry -"
"Why can't it be that simple? Can life ever really be like that?"
"Oh, Harry, of course it can," Ginny said. She reached her hand towards him, hesitated a moment, and then put it on his arm. "We're living in a horrible time right now, and it's worse for you, of course, but we'll get through this. We have to."
"What if we don't? What if someone..." he trailed off, then suddenly stood up and took a few strides away.
Ginny wasn't sure if she should follow him, but she knew that she needed to. When she was standing beside him, she waved her hand at their view. They were standing on a hill overlooking the Burrow, and she could see her mother weeding in the garden, smoke pouring out of Fred and George's window, and, if she looked hard, Ron and Hermione standing very close to each other beneath Ron's favorite tree.
"That's simplicity," she said. "That's freedom. We were in the middle of another war when Mum and Dad had most of us. They chose to try to find their place, and not be ashamed of living the life they wanted to live, even though there was a war on. Fred and George are certainly coming down where they want to be, and aren't ashamed of it. Look at Ron and Hermione...they're making each other happy. Even if someone...dies, we'll all still have this to look back on, and to know - we did our thing, we lived our lives, and we..." She trailed off, because Harry had turned to stare at her.
"But what if I don't know what I want?" he asked - seriously, as though he really expected her to be able to answer.
"Don't you, Harry? Or are you just not admitting it to yourself?" Ginny couldn't believe she was saying these things, but Harry needed to hear them, and maybe the song had strengthened her resolve, too.
He turned away from her at that, to look back over the Burrow. His eyes were bright, and he seemed to be drinking in every tree, every blade of grass. "I do want that, I do," he said, so softly that Ginny had to strain to hear him.
"Want what, Harry?" she asked, equally softly.
"Life," he replied.