177- Baron, it’s been a while
The Great Hall had been decorated as it was in previous years, with live bats and enormous Hogwarts-grown pumpkins, filling the castle with a tantalizing aroma.
Rumor had it that Dumbledore had arranged for a skeleton dance troupe to entertain everyone.
In the Slytherin common room, Rhys waited for the Greengrass sisters, who were dressed to the nines.
When the two appeared in the common room, Rhys was visibly stunned.
To attend the deathday party, Daphne and Astoria each wore a long dress robe, both gray in base color and identical in style. The only difference was that Daphne's robe featured green silk accents on the front, while Astoria's was trimd in silver-gray. They also wore matching lace-up boots, distinguished only by the color of the laces.
Rhys noticed that Daphne had prominently displayed the necklace he had given her.
Astoria, who hadn't received a necklace from him, clearly felt slighted, but there wasn't much she could do. She opted to wear an erald necklace in its place.
"You two..." Rhys shook his head, a wry smile appearing on his face. The sisters' formal attire made him look rather underdressed by comparison.
After a mont's thought, Rhys cast a Transfiguration spell on his wizard's robe, transforming it into sothing more like formal evening wear.
"Magic makes everything so convenient. Shall we?"
Daphne didn't rush to leave but first asked a question: "Do you think this outfit looks good?"
"It looks great," Rhys nodded.
It was clear at a glance that Daphne and Astoria's outfits were expensive.
Rhys's response made Daphne visibly happy. Just as the three were about to leave the common room, Astoria asked the exact sa question.
Rhys squinted slightly. His instincts told him that Astoria's question might be leading sowhere tricky.
"Daphne's outfit looks great, so of course yours does too. Is there even any difference between your outfit and your sister's? They're identical," Rhys replied with a sly smile.
He preemptively shut down any potential follow-up question like "Whose outfit looks better, mine or my sister's?"
Dealing with kids trying to outshine each other could be exhausting, so it was best to nip it in the bud early.
"If I were you two, I'd bring so food along," Rhys said as they left the common room, deliberately leading them to the entrance of the Great Hall.
"The dead won't prepare food for the living."
Daphne was sensible. Hearing Rhys's advice, she promptly took out a food container she had prepared earlier and went into the Great Hall to pack so food.
With steaming food in tow, the three made their way down a narrow passage to the underground classroom where the Deathday Party was being held.
Unlike the grandeur of the Great Hall, the walls of the passage were lined with tiny, flickering candles that emitted a faint bluish glow. Perhaps they had been chosen specifically for the eerie Halloween atmosphere.
The closer they got to the underground classroom, the colder the air beca. Strange music could be heard—a sound reminiscent of fingernails scraping against a giant blackboard.
Everything here seed completely out of place in the world of the living.
As the three turned a corner, they saw Nearly Headless Nick standing at the entrance to the underground classroom, draped in black velvet. Harry and Ron had already arrived.
"Good evening," Harry greeted them with a forced, bitter smile, clearly regretting his decision to accept Nick's invitation. Standing next to him, Ron wore the sa constipated expression. They showed no surprise at Rhys and his companions' arrival. It seed Nick had already inford them that Rhys and the others would be attending as well.
Once everyone was present, Nick removed his feathered hat, bowed deeply, and said in a mournful tone, "My dear friends, welco... I'm so delighted you could co."
He stepped aside to allow them to enter.
Inside the underground classroom, hundreds of ghostly, translucent figures milky-white in color crowded the space. Most floated in the center of the room, dancing to the unsettling music. The classroom's temperature was well below freezing, and with every breath the living took, mist would form in front of their faces.
"Take this," Rhys said, summoning five flas that floated over to each person's chest and attached themselves to their robes.
Though the flas burned brightly and provided warmth, they miraculously didn't set the clothing ablaze.
"This is a lifesaver," Ron said gratefully. The warmth made everyone feel much better.
"A small favor," Rhys replied nonchalantly, brushing off Ron's thanks as his eyes swept across the hundreds of ghosts in the room, searching for the Bloody Baron.
It didn't take long to spot his target. The Baron stood out easily—other ghosts seed to fear the blood-soaked figure, giving him a wide berth that left a noticeable empty space around him.
"I have sothing to take care of. You all can explore on your own. Just rember not to touch any of the food here," Rhys instructed the younger wizards before heading straight for the Bloody Baron.
"Wait, I—" Daphne tried to follow, but the fla on her chest suddenly flared up intensely. It was clear Rhys didn't want her eavesdropping on his conversation with the Baron.
Daphne pouted in dissatisfaction at Rhys's arrangent. She instinctively wanted to pursue him, but out of the corner of her eye, she noticed Astoria obediently walking in the opposite direction.
Daphne: !
She was stunned. In this situation, shouldn't they stand united and insist on following Rhys? Why was her little sister retreating instead of pressing forward?
Daphne suddenly ca to a realization: With as the contrast, my sister looks so obedient....
So calculating! Daphne clenched her fists, then imdiately turned around to catch up with Harry and Ron.
I can be a good good too! Astoria, just you wait!
Rhys, oblivious to Daphne's complex inner thoughts, walked up to the Bloody Baron and greeted him.
"Baron, it's been a while."
The Bloody Baron: "?"
Who are you? The Baron was confused. The young wizard before him looked sowhat familiar—probably a Hogwarts student, and one with decent grades at that. But he couldn't recall ever exchanging a single word with this student.
Why did the boy seem so familiar with him?
More unsettlingly, the Baron caught a trace of... affection in Rhys's gaze? It was as if Rhys was looking at a junior or a loved one.
And there was sothing about the boy—a strange yet familiar aura radiating from him.
The Bloody Baron was utterly baffled.
The surrounding ghosts were equally perplexed, unable to discern the relationship between this young wizard and the fearso Baron.
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