04-15-2014, 11:32 PM
April 6
"He's only very little," She explained to Cash as resisted the urge her to hike up her skirts as they headed towards the groundskeepers hunt. It was normally something she would not have bothered about but she was trying to be on her best behaviour for the pup, his very existance depended on her good behaviour and, more then that, she was being watched.
She sent a surreptitious glance towards the Professor who walked, a basket under her arm and a book in her hand. She wished she lived in a world where the Professor wasn't needed but as she'd been told, quite firmly by Professor Ruteledge the first time she tried to sneak down to his new living quarters that if she intended to visit she would require the chaperonage of a female Professor because she was a girl of respectable class and that she should not be unaccompanied by a man and the groundskeeper was one. It was a neccessity that annoyed Judy but had been explained as a way to save both their reputations.
She'd glowered all the while because she did not like the idea of all of being considered a girl of respectable class or marriagable age or even as virtuous as she indeed was. She couldn't wait until she was old enough for it not to be a necessity. Or she could just become one of those women who didn't have chaperones. Or she could get married for the simple fact that she then wouldn't need a chaperone.
The last thought was terrifying because Judy had no intention of marrying, or of giving herself so completely to another person like her parents had, of giving themselves to each other that nobody else, not even their children mattered in their lives. She supposed she could possibly settle for a loveless marriage if the idea of what lay beneath a mans clothes wasn't just so very, very gross.
Maybe she should just kidnap somebody and polyjuice herself to look like them daily. It would be simpler.
She looked sideways at Cash.
She wouldn't even need to kidnap Cash. He'd probably willingly give her some of his hair.... except then... well, then she'd have to learn what was under those clothes and. Nope.
She approached her puppy, whose heads were happily gnawing on the thick rope that tied him to his picket. She smiled upwards at Cash, a gigantic grin on her face as out of the side of eye she saw the Professor sit down and get out her book.
The Professor had said she was happy to accompany Judy because it meant time outside the castle to read in quiet and Judy was fine if she kept to her devices and stayed within eyesight. She'd been slightly displeased when Judy had asked if she could bring Cash to see the pup, because she suspected that goings on would happen. Judy was told, rather strictly that if such goings on occurred, or if they strayed too far then it would not happen again and Judy would find her visitation rights denied. It was amazingly how quickly word of leverage against Judith Hatchitt got around.
Though, such threats in this particular circumstance were unnecessary. Judy had never found a boy more then passingly attractive and those boys were few; of which only William Pendergast (now married to a baby), and Cassius Lestrange had actually gained that particular distinction. And while it Cash had numbered among those boys she had never pictured any of it going any further then that.... because seriously, No.
Ew.
She whistled, and the puppy stopped chewing its rope and unsteadily tried to gallop towards her, falling sideways and picking itself up. It was a lot healthier then when she'd first found him, a trip to both the library and the nurse as well as the groundskeepers knowledge had assisted her greatly in that regard but he was still quite young.
"Isn't he adorable?" She said as the puppy made it to the end of his rope and almost fell over against the strain he was putting against the rope. She made her way over to him and fondled its three heads.
"He's only very little," She explained to Cash as resisted the urge her to hike up her skirts as they headed towards the groundskeepers hunt. It was normally something she would not have bothered about but she was trying to be on her best behaviour for the pup, his very existance depended on her good behaviour and, more then that, she was being watched.
She sent a surreptitious glance towards the Professor who walked, a basket under her arm and a book in her hand. She wished she lived in a world where the Professor wasn't needed but as she'd been told, quite firmly by Professor Ruteledge the first time she tried to sneak down to his new living quarters that if she intended to visit she would require the chaperonage of a female Professor because she was a girl of respectable class and that she should not be unaccompanied by a man and the groundskeeper was one. It was a neccessity that annoyed Judy but had been explained as a way to save both their reputations.
She'd glowered all the while because she did not like the idea of all of being considered a girl of respectable class or marriagable age or even as virtuous as she indeed was. She couldn't wait until she was old enough for it not to be a necessity. Or she could just become one of those women who didn't have chaperones. Or she could get married for the simple fact that she then wouldn't need a chaperone.
The last thought was terrifying because Judy had no intention of marrying, or of giving herself so completely to another person like her parents had, of giving themselves to each other that nobody else, not even their children mattered in their lives. She supposed she could possibly settle for a loveless marriage if the idea of what lay beneath a mans clothes wasn't just so very, very gross.
Maybe she should just kidnap somebody and polyjuice herself to look like them daily. It would be simpler.
She looked sideways at Cash.
She wouldn't even need to kidnap Cash. He'd probably willingly give her some of his hair.... except then... well, then she'd have to learn what was under those clothes and. Nope.
She approached her puppy, whose heads were happily gnawing on the thick rope that tied him to his picket. She smiled upwards at Cash, a gigantic grin on her face as out of the side of eye she saw the Professor sit down and get out her book.
The Professor had said she was happy to accompany Judy because it meant time outside the castle to read in quiet and Judy was fine if she kept to her devices and stayed within eyesight. She'd been slightly displeased when Judy had asked if she could bring Cash to see the pup, because she suspected that goings on would happen. Judy was told, rather strictly that if such goings on occurred, or if they strayed too far then it would not happen again and Judy would find her visitation rights denied. It was amazingly how quickly word of leverage against Judith Hatchitt got around.
Though, such threats in this particular circumstance were unnecessary. Judy had never found a boy more then passingly attractive and those boys were few; of which only William Pendergast (now married to a baby), and Cassius Lestrange had actually gained that particular distinction. And while it Cash had numbered among those boys she had never pictured any of it going any further then that.... because seriously, No.
Ew.
She whistled, and the puppy stopped chewing its rope and unsteadily tried to gallop towards her, falling sideways and picking itself up. It was a lot healthier then when she'd first found him, a trip to both the library and the nurse as well as the groundskeepers knowledge had assisted her greatly in that regard but he was still quite young.
"Isn't he adorable?" She said as the puppy made it to the end of his rope and almost fell over against the strain he was putting against the rope. She made her way over to him and fondled its three heads.




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