- Rating:
- PG
- House:
- Schnoogle
- Genres:
- Action Humor
- Era:
- Multiple Eras
- Spoilers:
- Philosopher's Stone Chamber of Secrets Prizoner of Azkaban Goblet of Fire Order of the Phoenix Quidditch Through the Ages Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
- Stats:
-
Published: 02/26/2004Updated: 02/26/2004Words: 3,350Chapters: 1Hits: 523
Bethany Beddarthin’s Better than You! The First Year
TastesFishy
- Story Summary:
- Bratty, snobbish, and spoilt Bethany Beddarthin is determined to take the wizarding world by storm! But can she, when her rich Muggle parents are already living in fear and loathing of her uncle Thomas, a expatriate of the wizarding world? And is Thomas really a criminal like she’s been told, or in fact something much more sinister? Hogwarts may be the only place she’ll find the answers - if she can survive her first year! Includes the offspring of the Weasleys and the Malfoys, vampires, extremely odd house mates, and a new Dark Lord rising...
Chapter 01
- Posted:
- 02/26/2004
- Hits:
- 523
- Author's Note:
- Hopefully not everyone hates OCs. ::tips gillywater:: Cheers.
The Beddarthin Estate was a large
house made exclusively of marble, and sat on a lone, lordly hill
over the other less fortunate, which the Beddarthin Family always
sent charities and fruit baskets to and were of course
kept far away from by their extensive Beddarthin Grounds. The
Beddarthin Estate was comprised of eight parlours, three halls,
nine dining rooms, six play rooms, twelve bathrooms, two laundry
rooms, nine breakfast rooms, four drawing rooms, two kitchens,
three libraries, four ballrooms, and many others besides, including
an attic room, where who should live but the Beddarthin Family's
foul, wretched, good-for-nothing uncle.
Uncle, that is, to Miss Bethany
Beddarthin, the wee only child of the Beddarthins, only just ten-years-old,
and about to become only just eleven-years-old. In three days,
in fact, was her birthday, and that meant a lot of excitement
and hullabaloo was being centered around Miss Bethany - just like
it always was. At this moment, no one could really help it.
"I WANT IT, I WANT IT, I
WANT IT!" screamed Bethany, standing on her mother's make-up
box.
Mrs. Beddarthin - and her on-hand
staff of hair dressers, make-up artists, maids, cooks and professional
shoppers - didn't know what to do.
"Darling, darling, darling,"
Mrs. Beddarthin crooned. "We can't get you one of
those, they don't exist!"
"YES THEY DO!" screeched
Bethany. "IT SAYS RIGHT HERE!"
Bethany shoved her picture book
so close to her mother's face she almost got the sickly green
cream on it. Mrs. Beddarthin pulled back to get a better look;
a smile flashed onto her face.
"Darling," said Mrs.
Beddarthin. "Dinosaurs are extinct."
"I don't want a dinosaur!"
said Bethany, great angry tears spilling down her face. Her nose
was beginning to dribble too, and she sniffed. "I want -"
she checked the book again "- I want a pterodactyl!"
All of Mrs. Beddarthin's women
twittered and cooed to each other, which was the worst thing they
could have done.
"STOP THAT! STOP LAUGHING
AT ME!" Bethany shrieked, and the women immediately quelled,
looking stricken. Bethany gave a dramatic sniff, "I'm telling
Daddy on you," and pranced snottily out of the room, followed
stiffly by her valet.
You may have gotten the idea that
Bethany is a spoiled brat by now, which is perfectly true. After
all, her parents were very well-to-do - her mother was the heiress
to an extremely popular fashion line, and her father was in command
of a large corporation that sold construction equipment - and
it had never crossed their minds to deny her anything she had
wanted. Bethany was hoping this included long-extinct pterodactyls.
Her father was in one of the parlours,
it transpired, but Bethany had a satisfactory time in trying to
find him, which involved a lot of yelling and slamming doors so
hard the valet had to stop and make sure they hadn't been knocked
off their hinges.
Mr. Beddarthin was a very large
man, with a large mustache, a large voice, and a large character,
with very little hair in contrast. At the moment he looked twice
as large as normal, as he complained very loudly to a trio of
men. They were all overseeing a huge mountain of presents being
stacked carefully into the corner of the parlour by a long assembly
line of servants. Mr. Beddarthin and his trio were drinking brandy
and scotch on the couches.
"I can't believe how the
economy is going on these days! Can't get a blasted thing for
my little Bethany's birthday at all! Forty-two presents! Forty-two
presents? What kind of father gives only forty-two presents on
their only child's eleventh birthday? A bad father I tell you
that, last year I got her eighty-two!" He took a gulp
of his brandy to fuel his next spleen. The trio nodded sympathetically.
A timid servant paused in the
assembly line and said, "Sir -"
"And the difficulty of getting
them all! Why, some had to be shipped from all around the world!
America, Japan, South Africa, you name it. I think I've even got
something in that stack straight from Grenada! Because you know
that's where the best kind of stuff comes from, where it's naturally
made, and only the best for my little Bethany!" He ended
this with a proud smile.
"Sir -" the servant
started again.
"Oh, yes, sir," said
one of the trio, cutting across the hapless servant.
"Most assuredly, sir,"
said the second.
"We couldn't agree more,
sir," finished the third.
"Sir -"
Mr. Beddarthin gave a foul frown
to his empty brandy glass. "What kind of father am I?"
he muttered. "Forty-two presents! It makes me ill, it does."
"But, sir!" sputtered
the servant.
His absence in the assembly line
had made passing the presents over more difficult, if not more
enjoyable, and soon one of his fellows were tossing the presents
over his gap to the other. The progress of one, sailing through
the air with its ostentatious ribbons flying, finally caught Mr.
Beddarthin's eye, which was in turn levied on the empty spot and
then upon the servant that wasn't occupying it.
"So!" barked Mr. Beddarthin,
jumping up and causing the tower of presents in the corner to
shudder. "What say you!"
"Sir," said the servant
nervously. The progress of the assembly stopped completely to
watch. Mr. Beddarthin was slowly turning purple and seemed to
be swelling twice his size.
"Sir," said the servant,
a bit more strongly, as one would do when faced with mortal peril
and was thinking, Bollocks, I might as well get in one shot. "You
see, sir, you didn't give your daughter forty-two presents this
year."
Time seemed to slow down.
"I didn't, did I?" said
Mr. Beddarthin coldly.
"No, sir," said the
servant emphatically. "You gave her one hundred and
forty-two."
The universe held its breath.
Mr. Beddarthin's beady piggish eyes swung to the tower, to the
assembly line, to the servant, to the tower, and back to the servant
again.
"Well," he said. "That's
all right then."
And he sat back down again, as
if nothing had happened and poured himself another brandy. The
universe went back to what it had been doing, and time hurried
on a bit faster, to make up for what it had lost. The trio of
men waited patiently for Mr. Beddarthin to start again, with no
visible sign they thought worse of him. Of course, there had never
been any sign they thought at all. Respectfully, they were Mr.
Beddarthin's 'Yes-man,' 'Assuredly-man,' and 'Couldn't-agree-more-man'
at the company. Consequently, their vocabulary suffered, but if
the conversation did, Mr. Beddarthin didn't notice.
However, Mr. Beddarthin was allowed
to save a rant on motorcycles for another day, as his little Bethany
had just flung the doors of the parlour open, stomped in and -
- Stopped with the sound of eyes
popping.
Her valet followed in after, and
began to arrange her curls to a less frightful mess.
"Ah, my dear Bethany -" her father began.
"PRESENTS!" squealed Bethany, and flung her arms in
the air, walloping her valet a good one.
"One hundred and forty-two,"
said Mr. Beddarthin pompously, as though he had known all along.
The trio of men all nodded approvingly, like seagulls bobbing
on ocean waves.
Bethany stared at the tower in
pure glee; then her spoiled disposition noticed a grave mistake.
Her gaping mouth shut with a snap, and her glazed eyes turned
fiery.
"PINK!" she howled,
and the nearest servant was frightened so badly he tossed the
present he had been holding into the air. It landed with an unpleasant
shattering sound at Bethany's feet, and she looked down at it
in fury.
"PINK!" she shrieked
again, snatching up the present. "THEY'RE ALL WRAPPED IN
PINK!"
She fell into a tantrum, ripping
the wrapping paper off fiercely, despite her father's weak protests.
The box revealed the inside gift to be a glass and crystal musical
carousel, but Bethany did not notice; once removing the offending
pink, she stomped the poor box and its fragile carousel into little,
wretched bits.
"I - HATE - THE - COLOUR
- PINK!" she screamed. No one stepped forward to stop
her; even Mr. Beddarthin stared in abject horror. Mrs. Beddarthin
had just skidded in on her stiletto heels, her brigade of servants
right on them.
"Bethany!" gasped
her mother.
Only then did Bethany stop, looking
wide-eyed at her mother. Every gear in her brain clicked exceptionally
fast, and she was soon bawling very loudly. Her mother scooped
her pitifully up into her arms.
"Dearest!" she
snapped at her husband.
"I - er, that is - one hundred
and forty-two!" squawked Mr. Beddarthin.
But Mrs. Beddarthin wasn't listening.
"Hush, hush," she said, bouncing Bethany on her shoulder
as well she could and patting her back with recently manicured
hands. "Don't worry, darling, we'll get you a pterodactyl...
there's bound to be one for sale somewhere..."
But Bethany had quite forgotten
about her pterodactyl, and shook her head. "My presents,"
she sobbed dramatically.
Mrs. Beddarthin, who was getting
quite worried about getting snot down all her clothes, glanced
at the crushed heap on the floor distractedly. "Oh, don't
mind that, popkin. Daddy'll just get you a new one... won't
you, Dudley?"
Mr. Beddarthin nodded vigorously.
"It's not that," sniffed
Bethany. "They're pink. They're all wrapped in pink.
I hate pink, I want them wrapped in red."
"And it's your birthday,
and you should get what you want," said Mrs. Beddarthin,
putting Bethany down, grateful for this easily solved problem.
She waved a hand imperiously. "Rewrap them."
"But - but red's a kind of
pink..." stammered Mr. Beddarthin.
"Rewrap them,"
said Mrs. Beddarthin again, her eyes flashing. "I want our
daughter's birthday to be absolutely perfect, don't you,
Dearest? I thought so. Now, darling," she said,
leaning down over Bethany lovingly. "Why don't you stay here
and make sure that do everything just so? I'll be my bedroom,
if you need anything," she had already backed halfway out
the door, shadowed by her court. "And Dudley," she said,
with an edge to her voice. "We'll be talking to your worthless
brother tonight about the party. Don't forget."
And the doors closed. Everything
stayed still for a moment.
"You heard what my wife said!"
barked Mr. Beddarthin at the servants. "Rewrap them! And
do it right this time, damn it!"
The assembly line changed, and
someone went and got red paper, and in a flurry began to rewrap
the one hundred and forty-one gifts. Bethany watched the proceedings
from a pouf in the corner, sipping raspberry iced tea that her
stiff and bruising valet mechanically brought her. She sat there
thoughtfully for awhile, and just as the tower began to grow in
the corner again, she yelled:
"NOT THERE! PUT IT IN THE
MIDDLE OF THE ROOM! I WANT IT IN THE MIDDLE! NOW NOW NOW!"
Miss Bethany Beddarthin always
got what she wanted.
"Spoiled brat."
It was much later in the evening
now, and Bethany had been put in bed long ago. In fact, not a
creature was stirring in the house, except in that one parlour,
where the firelight made the red-wrapped presents gleam, but seldom
lit the figure slumped in one of the chairs. Mr. and Mrs. Beddarthin
sat across it, stiff-backed with grim frowns.
"Be quiet, dear brother,"
growled Mr. Beddarthin.
"Really," said Mrs.
Beddarthin. "One of the very few reasons we allow your sorry
hide in our home, Uncle Thomas, is that Bethany enjoys your company
so very much. Why, I wouldn't know. I could never stand such a
foul -"
"You mean," said Uncle
Thomas, cutting across her rising voice cleanly. "She enjoys
torturing me so very much."
Mr. Beddarthin grinned nastily
in the dim light. "Oh, yes. And what name is she on now?"
"I believe it was Uncle Gertrude
two days ago," said Thomas without much interest. "Her
past favorites, however, have been unique, fascinating racial
slurs." He gave them a mock salute. "You've raised that
brat well, Beddarthins. Hats off to you."
"You watch your mouth, Thomas."
"Aw, that's cute, Dudders.
Just like old times with Mum and Dad. I'm getting weepy."
Mr. Beddarthin's fist tightened
and his teeth gritted; Mrs. Beddarthin whispered urgently, "The
party. We're here about the party."
Mr. Beddarthin relaxed very slowly.
"Yes," he said, and did not seem to be able to go on.
Mrs. Beddarthin felt nervous;
with everyone else - at home or work, what little she did of either
- she never had the difficulty of a person quite like Thomas.
The man scared her. His disposition was usually rudely
intelligent, but there was something just under those eerily green
eyes of his, like a blade in the shadow of his dark, rough fringe.
Mrs. Beddarthin always imagined a slash of a knife when they flashed
angrily - she shuddered. Thomas was dangerous, an outlaw in -
his world. Her husband never talked about it, but Mrs.
Beddarthin was certain he knew just why Thomas had come to them
in the first place. It was times like these she was glad that
her husband was there, and could not draw up any strength to be
rude to him as she usually was. Mr. Beddarthin was her one and
only protector in situations like these. Of course, she disliked
to show it.
"So," said Thomas. "This
party... Bethany's eleventh birthday, isn't it?"
"Yes," said Mrs. Beddarthin
slowly. She glanced nervously at her husband; his face was in
deep shadow.
"I don't suppose I'm invited?"
asked Thomas, with a small smile. "Not that I ever am."
"You can come," said
Mr. Beddarthin suddenly.
Mrs. Beddarthin stared at him.
"What?"
"What?" Thomas echoed
hoarsely.
Mr. Beddarthin suddenly did not
seem so comically balding, nor familiarly obese. The lighting
seemed to make his face grimmer, more steadfast, when he locked
eyes with Thomas. He smirked unpleasantly. "Eleventh birthday.
You remember your eleventh birthday, Thomas?"
Thomas looked at him coldly. "What
you're undoubtedly referring to," he said, "did not
happen on my eleventh birthday, but before. And why should I care
if your little snot-nosed brat turns out to be a -"
"You'll care," said
Mr. Beddarthin loudly, "because if she doesn't, we're kicking
you out!"
Thomas was on his feet in seconds.
"What?"
Mrs. Beddarthin blanched, and
even Mr. Beddarthin looked a bit scared, but he held his ground.
"You heard me, Thomas.
Did you really think I was going to just let you live off of us
forever? I knew you were on of the strongest of your - kind
before you ran away -"
"I didn't run away
-"
"- And I've lived too long
wondering whether or not some of your old friends may show
up on my doorstep to threaten my family!" bellowed Mr. Beddarthin,
now on his feet and nose to nose with Thomas. "I planned
this from the moment you put your disgusting, freakish feet in
my house - if I didn't find a use for you, I wasn't going to let
you stay here!"
"So you've been planning
this," said Thomas through gritted teeth, "all along?
We had an agreement, Beddarthin!"
Mr. Beddarthin only smirked. His
wife stared at him, feeling uneasy, yet in slight awe. It had
never occurred to her that - but, no, it was completely
unlikely. They'd be getting rid of Thomas in, at most, four days.
How wonderful.
Thomas did not say anything for
a moment, then he chuckled, rather sinisterly to Mrs. Beddarthin's
mind. "Very well, brother. If you don't mind a Dark wizard
training your precious little Bethany when and if she becomes
a witch, I have no objections. Good night."
He left the room briskly, and
courteously shut the door with a small snap. Mrs. Beddarthin was
on her feet in seconds.
"Are you positively mad?"
she seethed. "That - that madman around our daughter,
teaching her m - magic! Who knows what kind of danger he
could put her in!"
"My dear Patricia,"
said Mr. Beddarthin, "do you really think that it will come
to that? We'll be good and done with him in less than a week."
"But you dare to take
the risk?" snarled Mrs. Beddarthin. "What if he does
stay on? What if she really is a - a witch?"
"Calm yourself, my dear,"
said Mr. Beddarthin, as he calmed himself with a glass of brandy;
his hands shook slightly as he poured. "It'll never happen.
And if it does - Well!" He took a great gulp. "It won't!"
Thomas walked up silently to his
attic room, seething. So. Beddarthin thinks he can rid of me,
does he? Well, he's gravely mistaken, I'm not leaving this house
even if his brat doesn't have the magical ambiance of a toad!
I've worked too long, too hard, to make this house my hideout...
If I left -
Just kill them, thought a little voice in his head. Murder
them in their beds. Who's going to miss a few Muggles anyway?
Especially Muggles like them.
No.
Coward.
I've played this part too long, thought Thomas. It's rubbing off on
me. I'm not some crazed murderer. He stopped, and looked at
one of the mirrors hanging on the wall. Am I?
Some part of you is.
He frowned grimly at his reflection.
And that part of me is the one thing I don't want to be.
He went on, dimly aware of his
surroundings. He rarely wandered the estate, but his feet always
seemed to find just where he was supposed to be, up in his attic
room.
Alone.
When he had left the Wizarding
World, he hadn't known where to go. But when he had heard of Dudley's
fortune... well. It was a perfect opportunity. And everything
had seemingly worked out just as perfectly, up to this point.
Dudley had been lying. He didn't
think up this plan when Thomas had first arrived. He simply wasn't
smart enough, and he had been too frightened at the time. The
only thing he was thinking was, "Yes, sir... yes, sir,"
over and over again. Thomas knew this for certain.
So what did that mean? Not much.
Dudley could still force him out; he had been quite serious when
he threatened Thomas, even if he was afraid. And leaving meant
finding a new hideout, spending years putting up the proper wards...
and potentially running into Dumbledore, something he could not
risk...
So it all depended on whether
or not Bethany turned out to be a witch. Well, was it likely?
Thomas racked his brains. Had she ever shown any beginning signs
of magic? It was not as though he spent much of his time with
her, if he could help it. There was that one time Thomas had heard
about, that she had bit her Math tutor and had left two inch deep
bite marks. Could one, in a fit of anger, grow out their teeth
like that magically? Possibly. Thomas had never been interested
in this sort of thing. Of course, there was that one time Bethany
had fallen - well, jumped, really, and quite dramatically - from
a third story window, but was found unharmed, sitting neatly on
the grass. Her parents had rattled it off as her dress billowing
out and lessening her speed, a bit like Alice in Wonderland. It
had always struck Thomas as improbable...
Was there anything he could do?
Perhaps trick the magic that detects a new witch or wizard? No.
He remembered that magical children were detected and written
in a big book at the school just when they were born - Thomas
was too late to change that.
But he could have faith in those
two... magical occurrences. No Muggle kid bit that hard.
Yes, it was pretty likely that Bethany was a witch...
"Good Lord," muttered Thomas aloud, just as he got to his attic room. Even if he had forsaken the wizarding world long ago, he could not help but feel sorry for it, when Bethany Beddarthin graced its ground.
Author notes: It seems the most likeliest of outcomes is that Bethany is a witch. But how will her parents take this dreadful news? Bethany's birthday is next chapter, An Unfortunate Accident Involving Cake, and includes an unexpected present from Thomas, an Important Lesson, owl punch and grasshopper ice cream, and a blatant reference to Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.