Witch Weekly: Ten Sure-Fire Ways to Cure the Common Cold
by goingbacktosquareone
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Ginny reads an article
and finds the perfect solution for curing Harry's cold. PURE FLUFF!
PG-13 - Comedy, Fluff, General, Humor - Warnings: Sexual Situations - Words: 4501
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Ginny Potter padded into the kitchen with bare feet, poured herself an aromatic
cup of the world’s best coffee and sat in the morning sun at her kitchen table.
Dressed in a cotton tank and comfortable denim shorts, she basked in the light
morning breeze fluttering through the open window. She sneered at the pile of
post accumulated in the centre of the table and decided she’d rather have a
look at the Witch Weekly poking out from the bottom of the stack. She
took another sip of her coffee and flipped open the cover of the magazine,
ready to enjoy some fluff on her morning off from practice.
Ginny’s position as Chaser of the Holyhead Harpies,
She had to admit, she had no clue how her mother handled a husband and seven
children…the husband was enough of a child himself…
Who knew that marriage to the Boy-Who-Lived,
Ginny had been left gaping and open-mouthed, attracting flies. Harry had simply
shuffled back to the loo to resume his morning toilette once he had his answer.
‘So that’s what we’ve become…’ she had chuckled to herself. She’d
married a mirror. As if she didn’t have a wand for those things.
She flipped another page and took another glorious sip of coffee. Looking over
this week’s Witches’ Woes, she noticed yet another batch of pathetic
letters asking for romantic and household advice. What charm worked best for
pressing shirts? Were Aries and Scorpios suitable matches? Ginny laughed at
that one…two fire signs. No! She answered in her head. Fire and fire make more
fire…move on! But then again, if she’d listened to Professor
Trelawney’s advice about her compatibility with Harry… Ginny considered
sending a letter to the editor suggesting they ditch the weekly horoscope – that stuff was as ridiculous as Centaur rambling.
She mused again about the quirks of marriage and laughed out loud, catching the
attention of their new kitten,
She remembered their first anniversary vividly: Harry had acted mental all
morning like he had no idea what day it was, and then quickly abandoned the act
when Ginny’s displeasure with his charade threatened her last nerve. In the end
they’d enjoyed a wonderful dinner in Muggle London and strolled along Diagon
Alley near closing time, hoping the foot-traffic in the street would allow them
some privacy. Their ploy worked: they had come home tipsy from the moonlight
and excellent wine with lopsided grins and a new kitten from the Magical Menagerie
– Ginny had fallen in love with the little black fur-ball with the watery green
eyes nestled in the shop window, naming her
When they arrived home that night, Harry questioned her almost straight away
about the name Sparks; the daft boy had no clue why she’d chosen it. He was
curious why she’d want to name a cat after wand emissions. Ginny had just
impatiently rolled her eyes and pulled her husband into their bedroom to show
him a few sparks of her own. Afterwards, Harry had laughed into the sheets
about the name and how confused he was when she first mentioned it. Ginny
remembered smacking his perfect bum for being so silly and how she had
disciplined him again in a most appropriate manner. Harry, thoroughly delighted
with his abuse, had accepted it eagerly.
The poor kitten, however, had been left mewing in the kitchen. Ginny wasn’t
sure
The anniversary was almost six weeks ago, and yet
Deciding not to press her luck with the cauldron article, considering her
husband was away at work, Ginny turned to the health
section of the magazine and started to flip through the pages. She laughed out
loud when she saw the article — it listed the obvious homeopathic remedies,
vitamins, foods and aromatherapies but tucked right into #10 was a cure she’d
never seen before: sex. Good Merlin, she thought to herself, why would anyone
want to shag when she’s laid up with a cold? The Witch Weekly had
completely outdone itself this time…
Giving the magazine up as a bad business, Ginny rinsed out her coffee mug and
decided she should surprise Hermione – it had been weeks since they’d had a
chance to have a proper conversation. Grabbing some powder from the pot next to
the fireplace, Ginny knelt on the rug and threw the powder into the Floo. She
called out Ron and Hermione’s exchange and plunged her face into the fire. When
she didn’t see anyone in the Weasley kitchen, she called out, “Toodles…anyone?
Hermione are you here?”
Hearing Ginny’s voice from the parlour, Hermione rushed into the kitchen
looking somewhat dishevelled and carrying a large book. She had a self-inking
quill tucked behind her ear and several ink stains on her blouse. “Oh good,”
she gushed in relief, “it’s just you! I must look a fright!”
Ginny chuckled at her friend. Hermione was currently taking advanced courses in
Magical Law to compliment her already bursting knowledge of current Ministry
policies. Ginny wasn’t sure the girl would ever stop studying. “Read much
lately, ‘mione?” she grinned.
Hermione glanced at the massive volume in her hand and dismissed it with a
wave. “Oh, this? This is nothing. I’m just making some
notes for topics I need to pursue later. Why don’t you roll on through and I’ll
brew us a pot of tea?” she offered as she crossed her kitchen to the stove and
began filling the kettle. “Ron owled earlier and said
he may be home early… something about horrendous attendance in the department.
Maybe you’ll catch each other.”
Pleased with Hermione’s invitation, Ginny rolled through expertly and popped up
in the kitchen leaving only the slightest indication she’d just tumbled through
a fireplace. “I hope I’m not interrupting you. I had the day off from practice
and the house just seemed so quiet,” explained Ginny with a warm smile. “I
decided to bother you instead.”
“Lonely, you say?” Hermione said with a cheeky grin. She motioned Ginny to the
table where she took a seat for herself and then sat and contemplated Ginny’s
loneliness with a tap of her forefinger to her chin. “Do I need to have a chat
with Harry about the proper treatment for wives?”
Ginny laughed with obvious glee. “Of course not, Hermione.
I wasn’t lonely this morning when Harry left for the Ministry,” she said,
wagging her eyebrows with a mischievous grin. “I’m just not used to the quiet
in the house.” Ginny took a good look at her friend and noted how well-rested
Hermione appeared. “It seems something is going right here in the Weasley
household — you look well,” she complimented.
Hermione waved her off with a grin as she got up to pull the steaming kettle
from the stove. She looked back to Ginny. “Y’know, somehow the tea always
tastes better when I pour the water myself.” She shrugged as she levitated two
cups, milk and sugar over to her kitchen table.
Ginny laughed. Hermione would always be a Muggle at heart, no matter how many
spells she’d learned. They poured tea and sat stirring the hot liquid as it
steamed, waiting for it to cool a bit before taking a sip. As they waited in
companionable silence, Ginny heard the door of Ron and Hermione’s flat open and
close. What she heard next made her blush fiercely and wish desperately she was
still kneeling on the floor of her own kitchen.
Ron lumbered through the living room, calling, “I’m home early – I sincerely
hope wherever you are, you’re starkers and waiting!”
Hermione covered her face with her hands, groaned in embarrassment and stifled
a nervous laugh. She looked at Ginny apologetically and shrugged her shoulders.
“It’s not like we’ve been married all that much longer than the two of you,
y’know,” she admitted with a wry grin.
Ron strode through the kitchen door and skidded to an abrupt halt at the sight
of his sister, his anticipatory grin sliding from his lips and turning into a
scowl. His face turned an eggplant hue and his ears burned bright red. “Er,
imagine finding you here, Ginny,” he stammered in mortification.
“I just rolled through a few minutes ago,” Ginny apologized. “If I had known I
was going to create such a dent in your plans I would’ve owled
first,” she snickered evilly.
Ron settled into a chair at the table in resignation and summoned a platter of
biscuits from the counter. Hermione brought him a cup for tea and he proceeded
to stuff his mouth with sweets. As he munched he looked at Ginny, “Y’know,” crunch,
crunch, crunch “I wouldn’t be here if not for your husband, anyway,” he
said brushing crumbs from his hands.
“Harry?” Ginny questioned. “What’s this got to do with Harry?”
“Well, apparently you’ve exhausted the poor bloke into a viral stupor,” teased
Ron. “Kingsley sent him to St. Mungo’s earlier with the orders to go home
afterward and get some rest,” he said tongue-in-cheek.
“What’s wrong with Harry?” Ginny asked indignantly. “I’ve never seen Harry sick
– practically dead a few times, but never sick.”
“Oh he’s sick all right,” countered Ron. “The bloke coughed and sneezed all
over our office swearing to Merlin he was fine. Then he sat at his desk looking
pathetic with his head in his hand, honking that nose of his into his
handkerchief until his glasses steamed. He would have got ‘way with it, too –
blowing germs all over us like a ruddy foghorn – until he wasn’t paying
attention and accidentally sneezed a bogey right onto Shacklebolt himself.”
“Oh no!” Ginny gaped in horror. “Is that when Kingsley
sent him to St. Mungo’s?”
“Yep,” Ron confirmed. “He told him if he had the bollocks to blow snot on the
Minister he oughtta have the bollocks to get himself
checked out. Then he Scourgified the bogeys from his robes. The whole thing was
gross.”
Hermione looked at Ron with an irritated expression. “So why are you home?
You’re his partner, shouldn’t you have gone to see the
Healers with him?”
Ron’s face fell as he considered Hermione’s comment. “Well, y’know, the bloke
did blow away Voldemort. I just figured he could handle himself and I could…”
Hermione stood up from the table and glared at her husband. “Figured you could
catch a bit of spare time at home, did you?” she said as she crossed her arms
and tapped her foot. “Ronald Weasley, you call yourself a friend?”
Ron had the good grace to look uncomfortable with his behaviour. “Well, now
that you say it that way…”
Ginny glanced at the two arguing back and forth and cursed herself for sitting
so long to watch the show. “Umm, guys? I’m gonna go back and see if Harry’s
made it home.” She stood up from the table and cleared her tea things away to
the sink. “Thank you for the tea and the wonderful conversation, you two,”
Ginny offered. She gave them both a wave noting Hermione’s dismissive wink and
twirled back through the fireplace and into her own kitchen.
Harry was sitting with his cheek pressed against the kitchen table, arms
hanging down at his sides, looking miserable. He hadn’t bothered to take off
his glasses so the frames were bent at an odd angle about his face from being
pushed against the wood. His eyes were closed and he didn’t appear to care much
that his head was lying in the middle of two weeks worth of owl post.
“Harry!” Ginny called when she saw her husband languishing over the table.
“Love, what did the Healers say? I was just with Hermione when Ron barged in
saying something about you and St. Mungo’s,” she rambled as she rushed to Harry
and began to fuss over him, feeling his forehead and removing his glasses.
“I’m fine, Gin,” Harry argued, “it’s just a cold.”
“A cold?” Ginny asked incredulously. “Are you telling
me you were sent home because you have a cold?”
Harry popped up from the table with bleary eyes and a vacant expression. “Well
it’s a ruddy bad one!”
“Why didn’t you say anything to me, dearest?” Ginny asked tenderly. “I could
have made you a Pepper-Up Potion or something.”
Harry waved her off. “I thought I’d be okay. I was fine until I exploded all
over Kingsley. What a mess,” he said with irritation. “Shacklebolt sent me to
the Healers and told me not to show up in my office until I had a clean bill of
health. I can’t just walk away from the Auror Department because I have a
bloody stuffy nose!”
Ginny tried to hide her smile. Harry was being serious, but he was also laying
the melodrama on pretty thick. Ginny couldn’t ever remember a time when having
a cold was such a big deal. In fact, she had never tried to beg out of a
practice because of a cold – Gwenog would chew her up and spit her out like bad
meat. Gwenog felt there were only two reasons to miss practice or a match:
childbirth or death, providing it was your own. Anything else was unacceptable.
And here lay Harry at the kitchen table, sent home like a sick schoolboy by the
Minister for Magic himself. Ginny couldn’t help but shake her head at the irony
of the situation.
Accepting her role as caring wife, Ginny pulled Harry away from the table and
toward their bedroom. “You’re not going to get any rest snoring on the table,”
she fussed as she pushed him through the doorway of the master suite.
“It’s not that big a deal,” Harry grumbled.
Ginny raised her eyebrows at him. She couldn’t remember a time when Harry had
ever skived off sick, yet she did feel a bit sorry for the mess standing in
front of her. With an impish grin, she remembered the article she’d read in Witch
Weekly. “Why don’t you change out of your robes and into something more
comfortable? I’m going to pop over to Diagon Alley to pick up a few things from
the Apothecary. I’ll have you up and going in no time at all!” Ginny said
cheerfully.
“Well, I suppose,” agreed Harry reluctantly. “I could use a potion or two…”
“I’ll be back in a tic,” Ginny assured him. “You won’t even know I was gone.
Now have a kip and I’ll come back and make you some of Mum’s famous chicken
soup.”
Harry nodded blandly and sulked over to the wardrobe to change his clothes,
coughing as he walked. Ginny grinned and rushed back into the kitchen, grabbing
her cloak, wand and satchel. She took a quick glance at her pocket money to be
sure she had enough without making a trip to Gringotts necessary and then
Flooed to the Apothecary. She picked up replenishments for their potion
supplies as well as a small aromatherapy kit and thanked the shopkeeper with a
wave.
She strolled down to the Magical Menagerie, where she picked up the catnip and
treats for
Merlin help her if her Mum ever found her in a shop
like this…
But the curious temptation was too much for Ginny; she’d overheard a
conversation about a beautiful silk negligee the team’s Seeker had found there
that she had used to drive her husband wild with…well, Ginny had conveniently
closed her ears when the story progressed past the point of propriety, even for
a locker room. Convinced she could find just what she needed to help cure
Harry’s horrible cold, she walked confidently into the shop praying she could
keep a straight face long enough to find what she wanted.
Ginny closed the shop door behind her and turned around only to find herself stunned into an open-mouthed stupor; this was no
ordinary lingerie shop!
She found herself choking on her tongue as she thought of the haughty witches
over at Twilfit & Tattings — the old bags who minded their knickers and
gowns would probably keel over in cardiac arrest at the sight of this… wonderland.
Composing herself, Ginny smiled as a beautiful Indian woman dressed in a
brilliant blue sari made her way over and graciously introduced herself as
Ankha, saying she would gladly escort Ginny through the shop to help explain
their unique line of relationship-enhancement products. Ginny nodded her thanks
to the woman, still too shocked to make intelligent conversation. Ankha smiled
like she’d seen Ginny’s expression a thousand times and gracefully plied Ginny
with questions about her visit and what she hoped to find there.
Ginny mentioned the silk gown and dumbly added that Harry was home with a cold.
Ankha nodded in acknowledgement and led Ginny to a section of the store where
many jars, bottles, phials and flasks of all shapes and sizes adorned the wall.
Ankha took a small phial from the shelf and held it up for Ginny to examine.
“This,” she stated easily, “when dusted on your husband’s pulse points, will
make him burn. Hot blood is very good for a cold.” She smiled as she handed the
bottle to Ginny. She directed Ginny to use a feather to lightly dust the gold
powder in several areas she was aware of, and many she didn’t know existed.
Ginny wondered if Padma and Parvati Patil knew this stuff, and if they did, why
they didn’t dish up the goods while they were still at Hogwarts. Then she
remembered the Yule Ball during her third year when Harry had competed in the
Tri-Wizard Tournament and changed her mind. She was glad the Patil twins had
kept their secrets.
Ankha crossed the shop and began pulling fresh herbs and roots from small
baskets along a side counter. She bustled along the baskets, choosing carefully
among them as she added small quantities to a paper bag. When she finished, she
directed Ginny to steep the contents into a tea. “Once brewed, this tea will
last several days. Administer it as necessary to heighten awareness and
sensation,” directed Ankha.
They finished their tour by stopping in a dizzying array of the most gorgeous,
sumptuous intimates Ginny had ever laid her eyes on. Beautiful, vivid colours in silks and satins swam before her; she was amazed
by the quantity and selection of saris, gowns and bras, garters and knickers.
Ankha smiled. “I think a witch of your fiery beauty would prefer the jewel
tones, yes?” she said as she held up an emerald green silk chemise and dressing
gown. Ginny noticed the set also included a matching thong. Nodding her head at
the perfect colour – a dead match for Harry’s eyes – she added the set to her
accumulation.
“This set magically alters itself to your measurements. This is an excellent
choice, Mrs. Potter,” affirmed the saleswoman.
“But…” Ginny stammered.
“How did I know your name?” Ankha smiled again. “One does not miss the beauty
of a couple such as the two of you. You’re both quite stunning together. He’s
very handsome.”
Ginny blushed. “Well, I guess we are both pretty recognizable. I forget that
sometimes. Just don’t tell my mum I was here, eh?” she joked.
“Of course,” Ankha promised. “We, the staff of Kama Moksha, pride ourselves on
discretion. However, I must tell you I’ve sold several interesting dusting
powders to another red-haired witch,” she mused. “You may be surprised at the
scope of our clientele, Mrs. Potter.”
Ginny gaped at the woman in astonishment. She wasn’t even going to go there.
She glanced at the items in her hands and realized the cost of her choices was
far less than she expected. Ankha bundled her purchases and handed them,
wishing her good luck with Harry’s cold. Ginny smiled and waved, promising
herself she’d be back to check out the rest of the store later.
Satisfied with her shopping, Ginny Flooed home and set her parcels aside. She
called for
Ginny went to work in the kitchen, using her wand to charm utensils to peel and
chop vegetables while she set a chicken on to boil. She added herbs and spices
and vegetables in with the chicken and left the pot to simmer while she steeped
the tea Ankha had given her. When she finished brewing the beverage, she peeled
several fresh oranges and set them on a tray. Returning her attention to her
parcels, Ginny opened the aromatherapy kit she’d purchased at the Apothecary
and pulled out essence of peppermint: a scent for invigoration.
Ginny returned to the soup, ladled out a large bowl and set it on the tray with
the fresh citrus and a glass of the freshly-brewed tea. She gathered the tray
and walked to her room to find Harry sprawled upon their pillows, snoring
lightly. He was wearing an old Hogwarts Quidditch t-shirt and a pair of boxers,
which Ginny noted gaily, was gaping in just the right spot. She carried the
tray to the bed and set it on the side table, then stooped to kiss Harry on the
forehead. He was burning with fever.
Harry rolled his eyes open and noticed his wife as well as the tantalizing
smells of the food she’d carried into their room. He smiled gratefully,
thanking her for all her work. Ginny uncorked the peppermint essence, letting
an odour of fresh mint waft through the room. Harry
glanced at her quizzically, but continued to eat his soup, commenting on the
unique flavour of the tea.
Ginny smiled. She had covered items one through nine on the Witch Weekly
list of sure-fire ways to cure the common cold. Leaving Harry with his tray she
returned to the kitchen to prepare number ten.
* * *
“Say, Harry,” Ron sniffed petulantly, “what did Ginny get at the Apothecary to
bust that cold so quickly?”
Ron had been snuffling around the office for the past two days since Harry
returned back to work miraculously healed the morning after his debacle with
the Minister.
Harry chuckled. “Just tell ‘mione to give you Number Ten. One through nine
won’t be necessary.”