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| | A Legacy for Her Enlightenment (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19) |
 | | Tonks stood in the background and turned her face to the plainest, most unassuming mask she could and schooled it, carefully, not to give anything away. |
 | | Tonks had been taken for a Weasley, which she supposed was a good thing; but it was also disturbing, in a way. |
 | | Sometimes, though, Tonks thought of Sirius mounting the stairs to Buckbeak’s room, angry with the world, his face twisted into a mask of unhappiness; then she imagined the doors on either side of the hall shutting one by one, the nursery the last, and realised that he felt the discomfort too. |
| remembrall.slashcity.net /fiction/hillhouse.html (6045 words) |
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