Harry Potter - Series Fan Fiction ❯ First Time In Hogwarts history. ❯ Five Years earlier ( Prologue )

[ Y - Young Adult: Not suitable for readers under 16 ]

Five years earlier
 
Alexandra Michelle Sylis laughed as she jumped off the stool and ran past her sister to the currently roaring table. The sorting hat had just rang out, “Gryffindor!”
 
“Sylis, Amalia,” the professor called.
The girl stepped forward, her blonde curls swinging over her shoulder.
At the table closes to the wall, the Slytherin table, two-second year-boys took notice to the new girl walking to the hat. They looked at each other. The extreme blond mouthed `mine' and the Italian next to him nodded watching her closely. She nervously sat on the wooden stool. The large hat falling over her eleven-year-old face.
 
At the same time a group of first year boys, who had met on the train and already had been sorted into Gryffindor, waited anxiously for the other twin of the set to join them. They had already taken a liking to the Sylis girl called Alex. They were sure they'd love the other too.
 
“SLYTHERIN!” The hat yelled and echoed through the huge hall. The hall echoed with gasps of confusion from both students and teachers, for the first time in Hogwart's history had Twins been separated into two houses. However, the previous said table sprang alive with claps and yells. Amalia slowly slide off the stool and walked toward the green table. Watching with great resentment, the little group of Gryffindors, including Alex and two other girls, looked sorrowful that the twin sister of what would be a brilliant witch and kin of hundreds of Gryffindors before her, was placed with the snakes.
 
Amalia's face was masked with a smirk but panicked eyes search for her sister's face. As she sat next to the same blond boy from before, she watched her sister laugh and joke around with a red haired girl. Sighing she turned and continued to watch the sorting.
 
Amalia's mind raced taking in her surrounding. Questions flooded into her head as the sorting hat was taken away and the blond boy flirted heavily with her. But one question stood out as food flourished her plate on its own accord- `Why wasn't she in the same house as her twin sister?'
 
 
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