Part Twenty-Four: Four Final Days, Some Socks, One Photograph, Sneezing, a Note

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Part Twenty-Four:
Four Final Days, Some Socks, One Photograph, Sneezing, a Note and a Map.

Part Twenty-Four:Four Final Days, Some Socks, One Photograph, Sneezing, a Note and a Map

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Thursday Afternoon.

It is like slugs. It is like slugs in his nose. Or perhaps only one slug, and it alternates nostrils. That is the worst
part, the alternation of the slug-nostril. Remus has taken to writing his paper with his head leaning all the way
to one side. It has, not surprisingly, given him a truly awful crick, but the slug-nostril is on the verge of shifting
to the other side. He can feel it. At present it is about to slosh into a position that will allow him at last to
gingerly lean his head to the other side, and begin the entire process once more. The whole procedure tempts
him sorely to switch paper topics and write instead a convincing and impassioned screed as to why in hell
wizards can turn people into ferrets or make them dance like spiders with a single swish and flick but cannot, it
seems, actually develop something to cure the bloody common cold. Someone had his priorities on backwards and the tag was showing.

Of course, none of this would be troublesome had Remus written his seven inches of parchment (his final seven inches! The last inches of his academic career!) as he was wont to write it: seven days early. That left him time to get sick and still edit the ridiculous thing, make sure all the sentences followed one another sensibly and didn't trail off into a morass of odd punctuation or, horror of all the horrors, become a fragment or a run-on.

Normally Remus would have gotten this over with, not to mention with days and days to spare. But he hasn't.
There is a reason why, a solid reason. It smells like dog and it has a name. That name is, also not surprisingly, Sirius Black.

It isn't that they spend any more time together than usual; it is just that somehow the time they spend together is less conducive to writing essays than it was before. There are fewer exchanges of the "Sirius, please stop putting jam in my hair and let me write this," variety, and more of the "Sirius, please stop..." and then a sort of vague trailing-off and loss of all motivation.

The whole thing is stupid. It is so very, very stupid that Remus has to consciously force himself not to think
about it, which is hard, since apparently some part of him -- a part of which he firmly does not approve -- wants
to think about it all the time. He can be sitting in class, genuinely fascinated by a lecture on techniques for the
production of sentient publications, and then all of a sudden the professor will use some randomly unfortunate
word, something like "hedgerow" and for no reason Remus goes all lightheaded and is completely unable to
focus until he has somehow got Sirius into a stairwell and kissed him for a while, at which point he is able to
get on with his day. It is utterly illogical. Kissing! Alien tongues! Spit and undignified noises and dog-smell!
Diseases! What about these things can possibly be appealing? Spending so much time so close to Sirius's face
makes him uncomfortably aware of Sirius's pores and smacky saliva noises and the spots on his chin, not to
mention terrifyingly conscious of his own spots and noises and unwanted hairs. And yet they continue to have
at it. They should both be arrested for gross corporeality.

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