Discimer: I Don't Own Harry Potter or Friday the 13th series
A thin band of orange crept along the horizon over Camp Crystal Phoenix Lake, illuminating the hushed world in pale, tentative light. The date was August 8th, 1990—a day that felt strikingly still after the summer's rush of voices, scuffling footsteps, and ripples of ughter on the water. The st camper's goodbye lingered in the air like an echo in a canyon, fading into the rustle of pine trees and the faint sp of ke water against the docks.
Harry stood on the porch of the main cabin, a heavy sweater drooping around his slender frame. The boards under his feet felt cool against his toes. He stared out at the ke, half expecting to see colorful T-shirts milling about or bright pstic buckets scattered on the shore. Instead, there was only the mild swirl of morning mist drifting in zy coils across the water. He drew in a breath, noticing how the damp air tasted of pine and lingering campfire smoke, but the usual crescendo of children's chatter was gone, repced by the soft hush of branches rubbing together in the breeze.
Behind him, inside the main cabin, Pame clinked dishes in the kitchen. It was already second nature for her to be up, preparing breakfast. Yet the rhythmic sound of pots and pans carried a subdued quality, like a musical piece missing half its orchestra. In the courtyard, Jason worked methodically, plucking the final strands of colored streamers from the poles around the fire pit. A few bright bits of crepe paper clung stubbornly, as though unwilling to let go of the summer's magic.
Harry pulled the sweater's sleeves over his hands, letting out a small sigh. Only yesterday, the pce had been alive with departing parents and counselors, the st lingering children hugging each other farewell. Now, no trace of them remained—just the scattered footprints, the faint ring of the old pine archway, and the newly minted sign overhead prociming: Camp Crystal Phoenix Lake.
He descended the porch steps, heading toward Jason. The dew-slick grass dampened his ankles, but he didn't mind. As he approached, Jason gnced up, meeting Harry's gaze with a small nod of acknowledgment. Gone was the masked menace of urban legend; in its pce stood a gentle, watchful man, who, even amid the quiet of post-summer emptiness, radiated a calm steadiness.
"You okay?" Jason asked softly, his voice deep yet carrying the ghost of warmth.
Harry bobbed his head, swallowing an odd lump in his throat. "Just... quieter than I expected." He bent to pick up a fallen piece of streamer, its once-vivid color now faded. "No more kids running around, no morning calls to breakfast, no pranks... it feels so empty."
Jason's gaze drifted toward the mess hall. "Empty, yes," he agreed, slipping the streamer from Harry's hand and tucking it into a trash bag. "But we had a good summer."
Harry's lips twitched into a smile. "Yeah," he whispered. "The best."
From the cabin's doorway, Pame appeared, hands wiped on her apron. "Breakfast's ready," she called, trying to inject brightness into her tone. Though her face still bore the gentle kindness that had nurtured so many children, a flicker of sadness y behind her eyes. They gathered inside—just the three of them—for the first morning meal of the off-season. The mess hall's long tables, once bustling, now stood eerily neat and vacant, chairs stacked along the walls. Instead of the wide array of cereals, fruits, and toast, only three ptes sat on the smaller side table near the kitchen. Pame had made bacon and eggs, but her usual flourish felt subdued.
They ate in a hush punctuated by the crackle of the fire in the wood-burning stove. Each mouthful tasted good, yet a subtle emptiness gnawed at them, knowing how many times ughter had accompanied these same meals only days before. Harry listened to the scrape of his fork against the pte, recalling the raucous din of excited campers. Jason ate quietly, head bowed. Pame served extra helpings as if out of habit, only to remember there were no campers to feed.
When they finished, she pulled a stack of letters from a nearby drawer. "I almost forgot," she murmured, her tone brightening a fraction. "We got these before the st families left. Reviews, notes, some from parents, others from the counselors. They were so kind."
Jason settled on a stool, leaning forward with interest. Harry drew his chair closer, hugging his knees as Pame unfolded the first letter. In the window's daylight, her eyes glistened with a mix of pride and wistfulness.
She began to read in a gentle, steady voice:
Dear Pame, Jason, and Harry,My daughter was so shy before she arrived at Camp Crystal Phoenix Lake. She never tried new activities, always hiding behind me. But something changed there—something magical. She came home confident and beaming, talking non-stop about Harry in his phoenix costume who showed her there was nothing to fear. She even tried canoeing with Jason's help! I can't thank you enough.
Harry felt a warmth blooming in his chest, picturing the small girl who had gripped his hand every morning at the docks, her eyes wide with both apprehension and curiosity. He remembered offering her the smallest encouragement, guiding her to dip a paddle into the water, while Jason hovered protectively.
Pame moved on to another letter, a wry smile crossing her face:
To the staff,Thank you for teaching me how to swim. Jason, you're the best teacher ever—patient, quiet, but always there when I almost panicked. I can't wait to come back next year and try the deeper section of the ke.(P.S. Harry, your stories by the fire were amazing. Could you do one about dragons next time?)
A soft chuckle escaped Jason at the compliment. He fiddled with the edge of the table, unused to open praise, but his eyes shone. Pame continued, reading short snippets from counselors praising the supportive environment, the strong leadership, the sense of family. She produced a small printed flyer: a ranking from a popur travel magazine listing Camp Crystal Phoenix Lake as the "5th Best Summer Camp in the World." The three of them exchanged astonished looks, Harry breaking into a grin so wide it crinkled his eyes.
When the final note was read, the silence that followed was heavy with emotion. A whirlwind of pride, gratitude, and an underlying twinge of sorrow for the finality of it all. Harry cleared his throat, pcing a hand lightly on Jason's arm. "We did it," he whispered. "We really did."
Pame exhaled, shaking her head in wonder. "We did... but it wasn't just us. The counselors, the kids... it was everyone. Still, we built it. A pce that truly helped people." She set aside the letters, blinking away a few tears.
Jason rose abruptly, as if the weight of the sentiment pressed on him. "I'll... check the cabins," he announced, brushing his palms on his jeans. "Make sure everything's locked." Without waiting for an answer, he stepped outside, boots crunching on gravel.
Pame and Harry exchanged fond smiles. They knew Jason preferred action to words, that his shy nature had guided him outside to gather himself. After a moment, Harry excused himself as well. He slipped into the soft daylight, heading toward the row of cabins that lined the clearing. Late-summer sunbeams filtered through pines, dust motes dancing in the warm glow. Even the wind carried a subtle hush, as though respecting the hush of off-season.
Over the next week, from August 9th to 15th, they settled into a new rhythm. Mornings began with simple tasks like sweeping cabin floors, checking windows for cracks, and inventorying leftover supplies. Harry found the monotony soothing—scrubbing a cabin threshold, remembering the child who squealed with glee each time they crossed it to join a craft session. He visited the ke daily, sometimes stepping onto the docks to watch the ripples fade out. In the afternoons, Pame roamed the camp with a notepad, making lists of repairs or improvements for next year. Jason carted bundles of leftover supplies to a storage shed, working in near silence, content in his own methodical way.
On the third day, a hot wind swept across the camp, rustling the pines and carrying faint hints of drying leaves. Harry found Jason by the boathouse, stacking canoes. The rger man's brow furrowed in concentration as he slotted each canoe onto a wooden rack for winter. Harry approached with a small wave, leaning a shoulder against the boathouse wall. For a while, neither spoke, letting the cicadas' droning fill the space.
Eventually, Jason wiped sweat from his temples, gncing at Harry. "You... need something?"
Harry shook his head. "Just wanted to help." He picked up a stray life vest, folding it neatly. "Also wanted to ask if you could show me more about forging paths in the forest. I'm kind of... bored without the kids."
Jason looked thoughtful, then nodded. "Tomorrow," he said quietly. "We can... do that." And so, it was decided.
Each day that followed, Harry's bond with Jason deepened. In the mornings, they hiked the forest trails, Jason demonstrating how to identify safe mushrooms, or how to gauge a deer's path by bent grass. He rarely used many words, but his instructions were clear, gentle. When Harry stumbled upon a small clearing brightened by wildflowers, Jason paused, letting him sketch the scene in a tattered notebook he carried. One afternoon, they discovered the half-colpsed remains of an old footbridge, a relic from the camp's earliest days. Jason showed Harry how to test each pnk for rot. Together, they improvised repairs, hammering with leftover nails. The sense of building something just for themselves, unhurried and purposeful, made Harry's heart swell.
Sometimes, they spoke in hushed fragments about Jason's childhood, the bits he could remember before tragedy. Harry listened, carefully forging no illusions about the horrors that once shaped his big brother. Yet with every successful project, Jason's haunted look eased. A tiny glimmer of normalcy, of acceptance, repced old shadows. At night, the two of them would sit on the cabin porch, sipping cocoa or chewing on salted nuts that Pame had roasted. Starlight cast silver reflections on the ke, and the soft rush of forest creatures roamed beyond the camp's boundaries.
By te September, the air had cooled noticeably. Leaves shifted color from deep green to gold and russet. The shift to autumn brought a new wave of tasks: raking fallen leaves, sealing cracks in the cabin walls, storing summer fans and retrieving heavier bnkets from storage. One crisp morning, Harry stepped outside to find the boathouse roof glistening with frost. He pressed a fingertip to it, smiling at the delicate pattern of ice crystals. The sunlight hit the frost in such a way that it sparkled like a million tiny diamonds.
That same morning, Pame joined him, a basket of onions banced on her hip. "I'm going to preserve a few more vegetables," she said lightly, her breath visible in the chill air. "Winter might be long, and we'll want variety." She paused, tilting her head. "You look happy."
Harry exhaled a small ugh, tugging the sleeves of his sweater over his hands. "I am, I think. It's quiet... but I like it. Feels safe."
Pame's gaze warmed, and she reached out to smooth a lock of hair that always fell into Harry's eyes. "You know," she said softly, "we can do a holiday celebration this year—whatever you want. Proper decorations, presents, a real dinner."
Harry's heart fluttered with excitement, remembering the meager festivities from st Christmas, overshadowed by chaos at the time. "I'd love that," he admitted, voice trembling. "I've never had... a real one. Not like the pictures I've seen."
Pame kissed his forehead, affectionate as any mother. "We'll make sure you do," she said, and continued on her way, the onions lightly bumping in the basket.
A few weeks ter, the first snowfall arrived—earlier than usual, drifting down in gentle flurries that bnketed the camp in white. Harry woke up that morning, saw the world outside transformed, and darted out wearing only pajamas. He twirled in the yard, mouth open to catch snowfkes on his tongue, bare feet leaving footprints in the fresh powder. Jason, who had been splitting wood near the treeline, hurried over, exasperation written pinly on his face.
"You'll freeze," he admonished, though his tone held a note of fondness. He draped a heavy bnket around Harry's shoulders, steering him back inside. Pame, startled, rushed to warm the boy's hands over the firepce. Harry just grinned, exciming how beautiful the snow was, how the pine branches bowed under the weight of it.
The days that followed brought deeper snowfall, turning the camp into a serene winter ndscape. Harry discovered that forging paths in thigh-high drifts was exhausting but oddly fun. He built small fortifications of snow near the courtyard, imagining a grand winter fortress. Jason and Pame joined in occasionally, each of them packing snowballs, unching them in pyful battles that left them breathless and giggling like children themselves.
Long nights and short days reshaped their daily routine. Pame's cooking became heartier—stews brimming with root vegetables, homemade bread, roasted meat from animals Jason hunted. She taught Harry to knit by mplight, guiding his fumbling fingers until he could produce passable scarves and simple mittens. Meanwhile, Jason's survival lessons took on a winter focus: demonstrating how to track animals in the snow, or how to start a fire in damp conditions. Harry thrived under this hands-on education, each new skill giving him confidence.
It was during one quiet evening in early December, as they all sat by the crackling firepce, that Harry confided in Jason about his ck of real Christmas memories. The wind howled outside, rattling the windows, making the inside feel especially cozy. Jason, seated in the corner with a half-carved wooden trinket in his hands, listened intently. Harry's voice wavered as he recalled how, in his previous life, Christmas at the Dursleys was simply another day locked in a cupboard, or perhaps a few extra chores.
Jason's gaze softened, and in a moment of empathy, he set aside his carving. "This year," he said in his measured way, "we do it right... for you."
Harry's eyes glistened, but the tears never fell. "Thanks, big brother," he whispered.
Pame looked over from where she crocheted in her rocking chair, lips pressed together in an emotional smile. She said nothing, but her posture spoke volumes. A sense of resolution knitted them together that night, each determined to make the holiday season a memory worth cherishing.
They dove headfirst into preparations. After the first significant snowfall, Jason selected a small evergreen on the edge of camp. With careful swings of his axe, he cut it down, Harry helping to drag it back to the main courtyard. Even the simple act of transporting the tree through calf-deep snow was an adventure, leaving them panting and red-cheeked by the time they reached the cabin. Once inside, Pame and Harry found old ribbons, bits of wire, leftover craft materials from the summer, turning them into ornaments. Jason hefted the tree into a wooden stand. The piney scent filled the cabin, mingling with the ever-present aroma of burning logs.
Christmas Eve arrived in a swirl of light snow. After dinner, they gathered around the newly trimmed tree. Harry's eyes shone as he strung up the st of the small ornaments—a few crocheted shapes courtesy of Pame, some wooden carvings from Jason, and a small phoenix figure Harry had painted in bright reds and golds. The glow of nterns reflected off the ornaments, casting dancing specks of light across the cabin walls.
That night, Harry barely slept, heart pounding with excitement. He rose at dawn to find the main cabin lit by the gentle glow of the Christmas tree. Pame greeted him with a hug, pressing a hot mug of cocoa into his hands. Jason, quietly flushed with anticipation, stood by a modest pile of gifts. They exchanged presents in a hush that rivaled the summer's calm but in a much warmer way.
Pame presented Harry with a scarf embroidered with tiny phoenix silhouettes. Each stitch was so neat, so lovingly done, that Harry's voice caught in his throat as he thanked her. Jason, somewhat shy, offered Harry a wooden flute he had carved himself, the surface etched with faint swirling lines reminiscent of fmes. Harry ran his fingers over the grooves, tears slipping from his eyes despite his attempts to hold them back. He reached out and pulled Jason into a trembling hug. The day rolled on in a snug swirl of ughter, hot cider, and the warmth of a simple feast—roast chicken with root vegetables, freshly baked bread, and a phoenix-shaped cake that Pame had secretly prepared.
Boxing Day brought an unexpected snowball fight that left them all colpsed in the courtyard, breathless from ughter and cold air stinging their cheeks. Harry built a towering snow phoenix, shaping the wings with meticulous care. Jason, amused, contributed sturdy lumps of snow to form the body. Pame snapped a photograph using her old camera—a keepsake from the previous summer's preparations. The photograph captured the phoenix's glistening shape and Harry's radiant smile, Jason's presence tall and steady behind him.
When night fell, they gathered once more around the fire pit, though no crowd of campers sat around them now. The fmes crackled, and the winter sky above glittered with stars. Harry perched on the edge of the old wooden bench, his new scarf draped around his neck, the carved flute in his p. He pyed a soft tune that wove through the crisp air, each note echoing off the silent pines. Jason listened, eyes half-closed, the ghost of a smile etched on his face. Pame quietly stirred hot chocote in a battered tin pot, the steam drifting upward into the starlight.
Finally, on the morning of December 27th, they awoke to a gentle warming trend. The snow had settled in graceful mounds around the camp, the ke a broad swath of reflective ice. Harry wandered onto the porch, gazing at the scene. A sense of peace enveloped him, the kind he used to dream about in his darkest nights under the Dursleys' stairs. He felt taller, stronger, more secure in who he was. The knowledge of upcoming years at the camp—where he would live and grow with Pame and Jason—filled him with hopeful certainty.
Pame joined him on the porch, wearing her heavy coat, a cup of tea in hand. She leaned against the railing. Down by the docks, Jason tossed a log into a pile for splitting. The echo of the wood nding in the snow drifted up to them.
"He's so different now," Harry commented softly, eyes tracking Jason's movements. "And me too, I guess."
Pame's smile reached her eyes. "Yes. This pce... it changed us all." She touched Harry's arm, letting out a quiet sigh. "Sometimes, I think back to when you first arrived. I'd never have believed we'd be here like this, in a real home, a real family."
Harry nodded. His mind flicked to the memory of that day in the ruined camp, lonely and frightened. Now, the broken cabins were restored, the gloom repced by color and warmth. Even in the quiet off-season, it felt alive. "I'm gd," he murmured. "I love it here. I love you both."
Pame set her tea aside, wrapping Harry in a gentle embrace. He closed his eyes, resting his head on her shoulder, inhaling the faint scent of flour and cinnamon from her clothes. "We love you too," she whispered, voice thick with emotion. "And I wouldn't trade this for anything."
Down by the docks, Jason paused, sensing eyes on him. He gnced up, saw the two of them on the porch, and raised a hand in a silent greeting. Harry grinned and waved back, the sense of belonging as tangible as the sturdy wooden boards beneath his feet.
The new year approached, but the day itself felt endless, each moment steeped in the quiet comfort they had forged. They would stay here for winter, caring for the camp and one another, pnning for next summer's improvements and the return of that joyous cmor. For now, they soaked in the hush, hearts full from the knowledge that once children filled these cabins again, life would surge, and they would be ready.
As the pale December sun climbed higher, melting the slightest sheen of frost from the trees, the three of them gathered for a simple midday meal. In the flickering glow of the hearth, Harry listened to Pame outline ideas for next summer's events—maybe an archery range, maybe a bigger garden. Jason nodded, occasionally adding a thought. Harry chimed in with ideas about new crafts or a small library corner for rainy days. Each spoke with quiet excitement, acknowledging that winter might be long, but a bright future y just beyond it.
By the time they rose from the table, the hush no longer felt empty or sad. It felt calm, like a forest clearing waiting patiently for spring. Camp Crystal Phoenix Lake, now silent, was still thrumming with potential. Harry, Pame, and Jason moved about the day's chores, supporting each other in comfortable companionship. Outside, the winter wind lightly brushed the pines, carrying the faint echoes of summer's ughter—and the promise that it would come again.
Thus ended the quiet season's beginning, with December 27th passing in a tranquil glow. Together, they stood at the threshold of a new year, resolved to cherish every moment—whether bustling with campers or wrapped in winter stillness—bound by the love that had sparked amid old ruins and blossomed into a home.
AN:
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