The Conspiracy of Moonflowers
When Draco Malfoy notices his father's hidden longing for Severus Snape, he orchestrates a quiet conspiracy to bring them together. But some secrets, once unearthed, refuse to stay buried—and love, like magic, carves its own unexpected path.
The autumn rain tapped against the dark windows of Malfoy Manor, steady as Lucius Malfoy’s heartbeat. He stood in the drawing-room doorway, watching Severus Snape take off his cloak with that slow, deliberate way of his, and felt heat creep up his neck. He couldn’t help smoothing a strand of hair he knew damn well wasn’t out of place.
Draco, draped over an armchair by the fire, noticed. The way his father’s fingers twitched, the slight stumble in his voice when Severus offered a clipped hello. Draco said nothing, but his eyes narrowed.
After Severus left and the Manor went back to its usual oppressive quiet, Draco cornered his father in the library.
“You’re in love with him.”
Lucius went still. “Don’t be ridiculous.”
“I’ve never seen you blush. Not once. Not even when the Dark Lord—” Draco held up a hand, his voice unexpectedly soft. “You’ve spent your whole life doing what you were supposed to. Marrying Mother for the bloodline. Playing the pureblood puppet. But I see the way you look at him. And he looks at you, when you’re not watching.”
Lucius’s throat tightened. “It’s impossible.”
“Nothing’s impossible,” Draco said, and for a second he sounded older than his years. “Let me help.”
So a quiet conspiracy began. Draco invited Severus for tea, for chess, for “consultations on potions research.” Severus, ever suspicious, came anyway. He found Lucius in the conservatory among wilting moonflowers, reading a Muggle book of sonnets. He found him in the study, playing the piano with a melancholy that didn’t match the music. Slowly, the ice between them started to crack.
One evening, under a sickle moon, they sat on the terrace. The air smelled like wet earth and dying roses. Lucius’s hands shook around his firewhisky.
“I have to tell you something,” he whispered. “Something I’ve never told anyone. Not even Draco.”
Severus turned, his dark eyes unreadable. “You can trust me.”
Lucius laughed, brittle. “Can I? When I’m not even what I seem?” He set down the goblet. “I wasn’t born male, Severus. I’m female. And Narcissa… she was born male. We married to protect the Malfoy name, to hide what we are from a world that would destroy us.”
Silence stretched like a thread about to snap. Lucius braced for disgust, for cold rejection, for the dismissal he deserved.
Instead, Severus caught his chin with cool fingers and tilted his face up. “I’ve loved you since we were children,” he said, voice rough. “Before the masks, before the war. I thought I’d lost you to the world’s expectations. I know what it means to hide.”
They kissed—slow, tentative, then desperate. Lucius tasted salt and hope.
Weeks passed. Draco kept meddling, and Severus became a near-daily fixture. Narcissa—now living freely as Marcus Black—visited often, smiling at the new warmth in the Manor. And Lucius felt something he never dared name: happiness.
Until the morning he woke dizzy, with a strange flutter in his belly. A midwife’s diagnostic charm confirmed what his heart already knew.
He was pregnant.
Impossible. He’d taken precautions, followed every warding potion. But magic, like love, sometimes carves its own path.
Lucius found Severus in the library, bent over a Potions journal. He stood in the doorway, trembling.
“I’m pregnant,” he said flatly. “With your child.”
Severus looked up. The journal slipped from his fingers and hit the floor. For a long moment, nothing. Then he rose, crossed the room in three long strides, and cupped Lucius’s face in his hands.
“Ours,” he breathed, and the word was a vow.
“You’re not disgusted?”
“I’m terrified,” Severus admitted. “But not disgusted. Never that. I’ll stay, Lucius. I’ll raise this child with you. I’ll love you both until my last breath.”
He leaned in, pressing his brow to Lucius’s. And for the first time in forty years, Lucius wept.
When house arrest ended, Severus moved his few belongings into the Manor. Draco smirked but said nothing. Narcissa—now Marcus—clapped Severus on the shoulder and welcomed him to the family. The child, a dark-haired girl with her father’s sharp eyes and her mother’s stubborn chin, was born on a spring morning, screaming bloody murder.
Lucius laughed, holding her close, while Severus watched with a softness that would have shocked the Order.
“She has your temper,” Lucius said.
“She has your beauty,” Severus replied.
From the doorway, Draco rolled his eyes. “You’re both insufferable.”
But he was smiling.
故事詳情
更多來自 Harry Potter
查看全部 →The Art of Accidental Meetings
After the war, Lucius Malfoy's carefully controlled world begins to crumble when his son Draco arranges a series of 'coincidental' encounters with the one man he's never been able to forget—Severus Snape. As old masks fall away, Lucius must confront the truth of his heart and the family he never dared to hope for.
Bitter Milk, Sweet Surrender
Draco Malfoy carries a shameful secret that no potion can fix, forcing her to seek help from her former enemy, Harry Potter. But the remedy they find together is far more dangerous than either expected.
Unexpected Grace
Three years after the war, Ron Weasley and Draco Malfoy find unexpected common ground in the Hogwarts greenhouses, leading to a slow-burn romance that challenges their past and blossoms into love.