A/N: I'm so excited for this story! I'm still in the middle of writing it, but don't worry - I never abandon a story. I'll try and get chapters done at least every other week. Enjoy!

Ginny slid her keys into her bag as she walked into work. She'd just pulled off her biggest event yet, a conference of 5000 people and she had coordinated it all: the expo-center, the hotels, the food, the speakers, the free stuff, all of it. And it had gone off without a hitch. She was looking forward to simply writing up her final review and then getting started on the next event, a much smaller in-house event for the company management.

"Ms. Weasley," a deadly sweet voice called out as she sat down at her desk. Ginny turned to find a squatted toad in a pink dress suit.

Dolores Umbridge stood directly to her left with what looked like excitement across her normally sour face. "I need a word, in my office."

She looked at Ginny expectantly as Ginny cautiously stood from her chair; then the toad turned on her heels and practically marched down the hall.

Ginny knew this couldn't be good, but she couldn't figure out what it could be about. The conference had gone off perfectly, she'd even come in exactly on budget - no small feat. It hit her when she walked into Dolores' office and saw the HR representative sitting at the desk.

"You're firing me?" Ginny could feel her eyes bulging out of their sockets.

"Ginny, it's nice to see you," the HR rep that had hired her, Richard if she remembered correctly, stood and held out his hand. Ginny didn't take it, she just stood, rooted to carpet.

"You're firing me?" She turned to Dolores who smiled.

"Oh no, but we are dissolving the position of event coordinator. We'll be moving all of your responsibilities to each department's secretary." Dolores practically beamed as she settled in her seat, "Please, sit down."

Ginny wearily took the empty seat, "What about the corporate wide events?"

"The secretaries will work as a team and split the work," Richard chimed in.

Ginny almost laughed. That was ridiculous. You couldn't make these events happen without a main face, someone who all the vendors could come to and know they'd get a direct answer. Event planning wasn't committee material.

"And," Dolores pushed a small stack of papers across the desk to Ginny, "we'd like to offer you the opportunity to be the marketing department's new secretary."

Ginny glanced at the offer letter and this time she did laugh out loud. "That's a 30% pay cut."

"But it's continued employment," Richard added hastily.

Ginny took a deep breath and counted to ten, slowly, before speaking. "I'd like be considered a layoff and have my severance package instead."

The look in Dolores' eyes told Ginny she'd played right into their hand. Whatever. Fine. It didn't matter.

"Richard has that paperwork," Dolores turned to him. "After you sign it all he will escort you to your desk and then out of the building."

Ginny wasn't listening. She was focusing on not screaming. She wasn't going to give the pink toad the satisfaction. She was going to walk out of this damn building with her head held high.

The next ten minutes felt like an out of body experience. Ginny went through the paperwork, signed everything, collected her belongings, and nodded politely to Richard as she handed over her badge. She slid into her car, shut the door, took a deep breath, and then screamed at the top of her lungs.

They'd fired her!

After pulling off the kind of events she was for this stupid company they fired her!

Ginny had been mad before, but this was a whole new level of furious. She needed to get home. She needed to call Luna. And she needed to scream a bit more.

Twenty minutes later, Ginny sat on her sofa, still in her power suit, a carton of ice cream in her hand and Luna offering some comfort on the other side of the sofa.

"I'm so sorry, Ginny." Luna repeated for the millionth time.

"Thanks," Ginny sighed and took another bite of ice cream before grabbing her laptop off the table. "I guess I should go update my resume and start applying for a new position."

"Is event coordinator something most companies hire?" Luna asked as she moved closer to Ginny.

"Depends," Ginny shrugged. "If they're big enough and they do events outside the company then usually."

Luna looked worried as she took in that information, but Ginny tried not to notice. She was going to believe that there was a job out there right now just for her.


It turned out that she should have shared Luna's concern. Ginny had spent a full month applying and interviewing for corporate event coordinator positions to no avail.

"I don't know what to do," Ginny groaned as she sat across from her dad. He'd invited her out to lunch and she ignored how readily she'd agreed to a paid meal, along with the tinge of embarrassment she felt when he handed her two cooler bags full of food her mum had prepared.

"Maybe you need to broaden your search," her dad furrowed his brow. "Be willing to relocate or switch fields."

Ginny grimaced at the thought of switching fields. The only other thing that existed for event coordinators outside of corporate was wedding planning.

No, thank you.

Ginny didn't have anything against weddings, aside from the fact that they were ridiculous and overdone and overpriced and she couldn't put on the show that every bride was getting her happily ever after day in and day out. Nevermind that Ginny was convinced that she wasn't going to be getting a wedding of her own. As her mother so frequently put it, "you're nearly 36, don't you think it's time you settled down?" Which translated in Ginny's mind as "you're nearly past your prime, find someone before you expire." But Ginny had no prospects, and no real desire to play the dating game again. She'd played it all through her twenties, and she was tired of it. So Ginny had accepted that she was probably just going to be single and put a lot of effort into being a good aunt and daughter and friend and person.

"I know you don't like the idea of moving," Arthur patted her hand, "but sometimes we have to roll with the punches. Life has a way of leading us in the right direction if we're doing our best to be decent human beings."

The conversation moved on from there but Ginny couldn't keep from fretting. She was starting to dig into her savings. Her severance was one week of pay for every year she'd worked at the company. Her four years of working there gave her one month's pay and even with cutting back on her expenses, she knew that her savings wouldn't last forever.

Ginny walked to her car after bidding her dad goodbye and felt trapped in her situation. She was overqualified for any store attendant position and specialized enough that standard marketing positions preferred other applicants over her. She was running out of options almost as fast as she was running out of money. Ginny was pulled from her melancholy thoughts by her phone buzzing. It was an email from someone who found her on LinkedIn asking if she'd be willing to interview with Wedding Composition to be their newest wedding coordinator.

Ginny stared at the email. She really didn't want to do this, but she couldn't see an alternative. Her savings would run out, and that money had originally been for something entirely different than sustaining her through unemployment. She could always interview with them, take the job if offered, and then keep looking for something in corporate. It would at least pay the bills and make it so she wouldn't need to scrimp after every penny. She would simply jump ship the minute something in corporate came along. Weddings would be easy. No one ever had weddings that compared to the scale of some of the corporate events she pulled off. She would have plenty of time to interview elsewhere. The more she thought about it, the more Ginny thought it was a great idea.

Ginny selected the contact number on her phone and hit the dial option.

Emily McCarthy was exactly what Ginny pictured when she thought of a wedding coordinator. She was bubbly and excited and exuded an optimism that bordered on insanity. But she loved Ginny and was positive that Ginny would love wedding planning so much she'd give up on finding a corporate event coordinator position and stay on forever with her and the rest of the team.

The rest of the team included Josh and Lyndi, both had years of experience in wedding planning. They also were in love with their work and thought they were creating dreams. They echoed Emily's sentiments that Ginny would lose all desire to work anywhere else after she'd experienced wedding planning. But Ginny really didn't care, she just was happy to have a job again and a paycheck coming in.

"Congratulations!" Molly beamed at her daughter that Sunday. Bill had complained that the family hadn't gathered in a few months and Molly had risen to the occasion, inviting everyone home for a full family dinner. Ginny took note that Bill and his family had yet to show up.

"Thanks, Mum," Ginny smiled, "it's nice to have a job again."

"You found a position?" Hermione gave Ginny a hug and shifted baby Rose to one side.

"I found something to get me by for now," Ginny tickled Rose's tummy before sighing. "I'm the newest wedding coordinator for Wedding Composition."

Hermione's face scrunched in confusion. She knew how much Ginny looked down on wedding planning. But Ginny was saved from having to explain by Bill and his brood filing through the door along with a young man with turquoise blue hair.

"Way to show up, slacker."

"Be nice," Molly chided Ginny as she ushered everyone in.

"Excuse me, everyone," Bill raised his voice, "I'd like to introduce the man who wants to steal my daughter. Ted Lupin, meet the rest of your future family."

Ginny's mind quickly processed the words her brother spoke and looked down at her niece's hand. Sure enough, an engagement ring sparkled in the light. Then the room erupted with cheers and questions and a lot of tears on Molly's part.

Ginny knew her niece was old enough on paper to get married. She even knew Vic had been dating the same boy for the last three years. But Ginny couldn't wrap her brain around it. Little Vicky was getting married at just 18? It felt absurd.

But then, it felt nauseating, because her little niece would be married, and Ginny was not. Ginny thought she had come to terms with the idea that she probably wouldn't marry, but that was before the next generation started marrying. That was before 35 suddenly felt like 70. Ginny was about to excuse herself when her mother added to the anxiety.

"Oh this is perfect! Ginny just took a position as the newest wedding coordinator at Wedding Composition!" Molly turned to Ginny with an excitement in her eyes that Ginny was sure she'd only seen when weddings and babies were being discussed. "Ginny you have to plan Victoire and Ted's wedding! It would be perfect!"

Ginny forced the panic down and put on a smile, hoping it didn't look like a grimace. "I'd love to, you'll be my first clients!"

Bill put his arm around Ginny, "Great, let's talk budget before Vic gives you her wish list, and Ted can get you in touch with his godfather. He's offered to help pay for the photographer and the flowers and suits."

"Godfather?" Ginny repeated, surprised that it wasn't his parents offering to help pay.

Ted shrugged, "He's the only family I've got."


The next day was Ginny's official first day at work, but it really was just going to be a continuation of the previous evening. After laying out the budget with Bill she had spent the following three hours trying to go over wedding details with Vic. It was useless though because every female family member had to have her say about what would make the wedding perfect. Ginny had figured out pretty quick she wasn't going to get very far and just let everyone talk at Vic and Ted. This morning she was going to be able to actually begin planning things out with her niece and soon to be nephew, along with the godfather who was coming to give her his budget figures.

She sighed as she opened her calendar on her tablet, so much for being able to jump ship the minute she found another job. Now she was stuck coordinating weddings until Vic was married. The next ten months were going to be very long months. Oh well. She pulled out the white binder with gold lace applique printed on it and Vic and Ted's names printed on a sticker and placed on the binding. Emily had handed it to Ginny when she told Emily that her first client would be Vic. Emily had been ecstatic at the news and insisted that Ginny give Vic and Ted the family discount, something Bill was very happy about when Ginny called to tell him. Ginny flipped through the binder making sure she had filled in everything that she already knew the answers to. It wasn't too different from her corporate event planning. Instead of branding it was wedding colors. Instead of the presentation it was the wedding ceremony. But the venue was still there and the catering and the lodging. There was just the addition of things like wedding dress shopping, and suits, and bridesmaid dresses, and flower bouquets, and photographers that she hadn't done before.

"Aunt Ginny?"

Ginny looked up to find Vic and Ted standing at the entrance to her office.

"Thanks again for doing this, Ginny, Vic is so excited I think she's going to explode." Ted put a comfortable arm around Vic's waist and kissed her temple. Ginny smiled, Vic had found a good one.

"Come on in and have a seat," Ginny rose and gave Vic a hug. It still seemed surreal that little Vicky was old enough to be getting married. They were so young. Ginny was in her mid-thirties and she still felt clueless half the time. Yet here were these babies asking her to help them have the wedding of their dreams.

"I thought your godfather was going to be here," Ginny turned to Ted as they all sat down.

"He's on his way," Ted nodded, "he got a little hung up."

"No matter," Ginny waved it away. "Let's start with the important stuff, and contrary to what everyone at the Burrow told you, that is not the colors or the dress or any of that. I first need to know the number of people you're going to have at the wedding ceremony and the reception."

"Oh," Vic's cheeks blushed and she looked down at her hand intertwined with Ted's. "I hadn't thought about that part actually."

Ginny sighed. Obviously brides weren't nearly as organized as most of her previous managers.

"As practical as that is," a voice sounded from the door, "doesn't that take some of the fun out of the first meeting with your wedding coordinator?"

Ginny looked up at her door to see a very attractive man with dark hair that fell in every direction and green, green eyes behind a pair of dark framed glasses.

"Harry!" Ted jumped up and gave the man a hug.

"Sorry I'm late, Teddy," Harry shook his head as he pulled away.

"It's fine, really, we understand." Ted turned to Ginny, "Harry, this is Vic's aunt and our wedding coordinator, Ginny Weasley. Ginny, this is my godfather, Harry Potter."

"Pleasure," Harry shook her proffered hand, and Ginny had to pull every trick in the book to maintain her cool. Harry's eyes bore into her and his smile was captivating. But she didn't particularly like being called out on her growing pains when it came to transitioning from corporate events to weddings.

"We don't want to take up too much of your time, Mr. Potter, so let's go ahead and talk about what you would like to add to the couple's budget and then you can head back to work."

"Harry, please," he pulled a chair up next to Ted. "And I've taken the rest of the day off to help with this and everything else Teddy has planned today."

"Right," Ginny took a deep breath. She had dealt with Umbridge every day for four years, surely she could handle a sassy, good looking man with minimal issue.

Harry gave her the number and as she wrote it down in the binder he cleared his throat.

"There's one thing though, I'm sure Teddy would have brought it up when you came to it, but we want to make it clear that there will be no alcohol at the reception."

Ginny looked up confused. "What?"

Harry looked at her intently. "There will be no alcohol served or available or smuggled in."

Ginny turned to look at the couple who nodded at her solemnly.

"Er, alright," she grabbed her red pen and made a note on the catering page. She wasn't sure what the aversion to alcohol was all about, but obviously the couple agreed which was all that mattered really. "Any other unusual requests?"

Harry flashed her a grin, "Not at the moment."

Ginny shook her head and tried to hide the smile that was pulling on her lips. This man was ridiculous.

With a little help from Harry and herself, they were able to nail down a good estimate for the number of people to be at the ceremony and the reception. Next Ginny brought up the venue and she watched as Vic heaved a sigh. Ginny felt bad, really she did, but this was the right way to plan out an event. They'd get to colors and dresses and cakes when the big priced items were taken care of and they knew how much money was left after that.

"You know," Harry stretched, "I could really do with a tea or something. How about we move this little meeting to the cafe down the street?"

"We have a little reception room down the hall that has a kitchenette with tea and water and sodas." Ginny shook her head. Emily had told her to use the formal reception room for Vic, but Ginny found the room to be over the top. She had decided her office was a much more practical place to meet with her clients.

"Lead on, Ms. Weasley," Harry stood and gestured out the door.

Ginny grabbed her tablet and the binder and her pens and everything else she thought she'd need before leading her little group into the formal reception room.

The room had cream colored couches and chairs with antique white coffee and side tables. The counter for the kitchenette was white marble and the faucet and handles for the cabinets were gold colored and polished to shine. The walls had large blown up images of smiling brides in beautiful wedding dresses surrounded by flowers and delicate decor. Ginny felt like it was trying to hard. But as she led the little group into the room, she heard Vic gasp and turned to see her niece gripping Ted's arm with the biggest smile she'd seen on her face since the big family dinner the night before.

"This is beautiful!"

Ginny stared at Vic. Apparently being a French woman's daughter gave you a severe romantic streak? She turned when she heard water running as Harry filled the electric kettle. He winked at her before he began rummaging through the cabinets looking for tea. Then he opened the mini-fridge and scowled before shaking his head. He reached in and pulled out a Diet Coke.

"Here Teddy," he handed it over to Ted who grinned and thanked him.

Ginny joined Harry in rummaging through the cabinets for cups and tea and biscuits. As the kettle clicked, Harry leaned closer to her to whisper.

"I'm not about to tell you how to do your job, but your poor niece is looking like you just took her childhood dream and made it a conference room training. So maybe let her have some of the fairytale back." He poured the cream into Vic's tea before turning to carry it to her.

Ginny stared at the space he'd just vacated. Who the hell did this guy think he was? She turned her head to glare at him, but she caught a glimpse of Vic and paused. Vic was smiling like the whole world was right. She looked excited and like she couldn't wait for the day she'd become Mrs. Edward Lupin. Ginny sighed. She absolutely hated being wrong. But she loved Vic. Vic was the little girl who made her an aunt. Vic was the little girl that she took to parks and played tea party with. She was who Vic stayed with when Fleur went into labor with Dominique. Vic was something special and Ginny grudgingly admitted that Harry was right, she deserved the fairytale.

"Now then," Ginny sat down across from Victoire, "why don't you tell me what you want your wedding to look like?"

Vic's eyes lit up like Ginny had just offered her chocolate cake. She proceeded into a monologue of everything she'd dreamed her wedding would be. She wanted the main color to be the same color turquoise as Ted's hair, accented with silver and white and black. She wanted it to be elegant. She wanted a roses and orchids. She wanted a proper tea instead of a cocktail hour while photographs of the family were being taken after the ceremony. She went on about her dress and the bridesmaids dresses and the way she wanted the venue decorated, how the cake would look, what food they'd have, the music that would play.

And as Vic shared her dreams for her wedding, Ginny just sat and listened. She remembered being young and in love. She remembered what she'd imagined a wedding for herself would have been like. She remembered it had never included the logistics. And finally it hit her. A wedding coordinator existed to keep the magic of the wedding alive, while making sure the logistics went smoothly. An event coordinator had to prove that they had the logistics under control, keep them out in front for their manager to see it was going exactly how they expected it would and was within budget. Ginny realized she'd been trying to be an event coordinator with Vic's wedding, and she'd been killing the magic.

Ginny glanced at Harry as Vic continued, and found him watching her intently. He nodded once when she caught his eye, and Ginny felt like he could see right through her. She didn't particularly care for that feeling, but she pushed it away and turned back to Vic as the girl seemed to be winding down on her monologue.

"What do you think?" Vic looked at Ginny with hopeful eyes as she nervously pulled her bottom lip between her teeth.

Ginny moved quickly to wrap her niece in her arms. "It sounds perfect, Vicky."

They spent the next half hour filling in exactly what the first page of the binder Emily gave Ginny said to decide: date, colors, aesthetic, theme if any, flowers, ceremony desires, location desires, and number of guests. The bottom of that page had a space for the next appointment to be filled in. Ginny stared at it a moment before deciding to trust it. She set up their next meeting and walked the trio back to the front of the little shop.

"Thank you, Aunt Ginny!" Vic hugged her tight. "I'm so excited!"

Ginny held this precious girl in her arms for a long moment and smiled at Ted and Harry. "I'm going to make sure this is as perfect as I can make it for you, Vic."

Harry winked at her as he pulled the engaged couple out the door. "We'll see you at the next meeting."

It wasn't until she stepped back into her office that Ginny realized what he'd said. Did Harry really think it necessary to come to every meeting? There must have been a miscommunication somewhere along the line because for the most part she would only need Vic and Ted. Wedding dress shopping would of course include more people, as would the selection of suits, but that was it. It wasn't worth fretting over though, because Ginny had a lot of research to do. Vic wanted her dream wedding, and Ginny was going to make sure that all the money Bill and Harry were putting towards it would stretch as far as she could make it.

She was deep in her figuring of numbers to determine how much the kind of dress Vic wanted would cost in comparison to venues and flowers and cake and catering when Emily knocked on her door.

"Wow," Emily looked at the spreadsheets across Ginny's monitors and the number of browser tabs open both on her computer and the one she could see on the tablet. Ginny's notebook was open as well, notes scribbled across both pages. "I knew you were good, but this is incredibly thorough, Ginny."

Ginny smiled, "She is my niece after all."

Emily slid into a chair on the other side of Ginny's desk. "What exactly are you doing?"

"I'm making sure she can have everything she wants," Ginny pasted another link into her spreadsheet and entered in another price point, watching the figures update.

"We have the vendors that we normally work with," Emily reminded her.

"Of course," Ginny nodded, "and I have all of their information in my spreadsheets as well, but I want to make sure that her budget stretches as far as I can make it. My brother and her fiance's godfather are both putting money in but it's still a limited budget."

"His parents aren't contributing?" Emily asked with a furrowed brow.

"He told me his godfather was the only family he had."

Emily's eyes immediately filled with tears. "Well thank goodness that he has someone!"

Ginny smiled. Harry Potter was a sassy and pretentious someone, but yes, he was someone.

"Well, I wanted to tell you that I have another couple that I'll be assigning to you. I've scheduled their first meeting to be a week from today. We like to do those introductory meetings on Mondays here whenever possible." Emily handed her another binder, just like the one she had for Vic and Ted. This time, however, Emily had filled in the names and phone numbers.

"Do they have a budget?" Ginny asked, noticing that space was left blank.

Emily chuckled. "Kathleen Hawthorne's father is quite wealthy. He's planning on simply selling off a property to pay for his daughter's wedding."

Ginny's mouth dropped. "You're giving me a rich client?"

"Of course, you're my most thorough coordinator and I actually think that is going to make Mr. Hawthorne much more likely to broadcast around to his friends that Wedding Composition is the best place for even the aristocracy to bring their daughters."

"That's a pretty tall order," Ginny smiled, "but I'll do my best."

"I know you will. Let me know if you need anything." Emily stood up to leave before turning. "Oh, how did your niece like the reception room?"

Ginny smiled, "It took her breath away."

"That's the goal," she chuckled, "before you leave today, remember to restock what you used. I noticed you already put the cups and saucers in the dishwasher, thank you for that."

Ginny nodded as Emily walked out to prepare for her next meeting.

Ginny spent the entire day doing research for Vic's wedding, determined to find the best prices on everything. It felt good to be working and it felt good to be doing the part of her job she liked best. Sorting through all her vendor options, pitting their best prices against each other and sweet talking her way into deals. She loved seeing an event go off perfectly, but she lived for putting it all together so that she could be confident that nothing could go so wrong at the event that it couldn't be saved.

Before heading home for the day, Ginny pulled a Diet Coke from the stock room and walked it into the reception room. She slid it into the fridge but stopped a moment when she saw what was sitting next to the assortment of sodas. Bottles of champagne sat ready to open and serve to the clients. She'd need to remember that for when Kathleen Hawthorne and Travis Schultz came in next week. That would probably be exactly what big money like that would want. Ginny put a note in her phone to pick up some fruit and scones on her way in that day as well.

But before she could meet her expensive taste clients, she had to find Vic a venue to get married in.


"I have five places to look at today, but if you don't feel like any of them are right we can look at a few more. These are just the ones I think you'll fall in love with." Ginny smiled at Vic who sat in the front seat of her car with her, nearly bouncing with excitement. Ted and Harry sat in the back. She'd have to remember to tell Harry that he didn't need to keep taking work off for this, she'd let Ted know if he needed to be there or not. Ginny glanced back in the rearview mirror and accidentally caught Harry's eye. He winked at her before looking back out his window.

Ginny tried to ignore the way the blood rushed to her ears.

Thankfully she was pulling up to the first reception hall.

The place was very modern. Clean lines everywhere and gold and silver finishes. The floors were polished black granite and every table had a white marble top. Ginny heard Vic's breath catch as they walked in and she grinned. But as they went through the tour, Ginny could see that while this had the elegance Vic had wanted, it was a bit too much for her.

"We have the exact date of your wedding open as well," the host spoke to Vic as she continued to tell her how they could make this facility into her dream.

"Vic," Ginny stepped between the host and her niece, "remember I have four other facilities for you to look at. You don't have to pick right now."

Vic smiled in relief, "Let's go look at the other places, I want to know what all my options are." The poor girl grabbed Teddy's hand and practically bolted for the door. Ginny chuckled before thanking the host and arranging to bring her next clients through as well. This hall looked like the kind of thing they might just eat up.

"Remember, Vic," Ginny said as she drove the to the next hall, "you aren't required to give them an answer at all. I can call them and get everything set up after you're back at home. We'll have meetings to make sure it's exactly what you want, so don't let them pressure you into making decisions before you're ready."

"It's your day," Harry added, "and we're all just here to make sure you love it."

Ginny looked at Harry in her rearview mirror and he winked at her again. Ginny immediately looked back at the road. Why did this man have to be so, so, so, whatever, it didn't matter. She'd let him know he didn't need to be around for these things and then she wouldn't see him again aside from suits and the wedding day.

Vic went through the next two venues with a bit more confidence, but the fourth venue had her staring out the window while everyone else filed out of the car.

"It looks even better out of the car, love." Ted opened her door and offered his hand. Vic took it and slowly stepped out.

"Oh my," she breathed.

The venue was an old converted manor house that had a very French chateaux feel. The gardens were the definition of a fairytale, even with it being late August. Roses, lilies, and freesias of every color were slowly fading but covered the beds around the house with sweet peas intermixed throughout. Greenery and trees brought an elegant balance to the whimsical colors. The entire picture was everything that Vic had described and Ginny had been the beyond excited to show it to her.

"Wait till you see inside," Ginny beckoned Vic forward.

Ted gave her a gentle tug and Vic walked slowly, looking for all the world like she'd just walked through the gateway into Narnia.

Sara, the owner of the manor house turned chateaux reception hall, met them at the door. She showed them around the hall then the gardens. Sara painted the picture of a garden ceremony as the sun began to set. She showed where the tea would be held in the smaller hall on one end of the home, and how the reception could be either out in the gardens or in the larger hall off the main entrance. Sara even knew where the perfect place to take photographs would be and offered to speak with the photographer before the wedding so Vic would have the perfect pictures of her amazing day.

Ginny let a smug smile touch her lips as she watched her niece. This was the place, and Sara had just sealed the deal by inviting Vic and Ted to take some time to walk around and picture it for themselves.

"Why did you save this one for last?"

Ginny jumped as she realized that Harry had snuck up next to her.

"It isn't last," Ginny chuckled, "there's still one more. We hit them in the order of closest to the office first."

"But you knew she'd pick this one," Harry stepped closer to her and Ginny felt her heart rate increase.

"I suspected she would, but I didn't know."

Harry gave a quiet laugh that was more of a rumble in his chest and that did things to Ginny that she hadn't experienced in ages. "What did you do before becoming a wedding coordinator?"

"How do you know I haven't always been a wedding coordinator?" Ginny was suddenly weary of where he was pulling that kind of personal information on her.

Harry stared at her a moment before gesturing to the engaged couple walking the gardens hand in hand. "I'm Teddy's godfather, amazingly enough, and I do tend to talk to him. Vic talks a lot about you too when she's at ours."

Ginny felt her neck grow hot and a tinge of embarrassment gripped her stomach. She kept forgetting that Harry was the equivalent of Bill. He certainly didn't look much older than her, but some people just aged well, and Harry was probably one of them. Ted was a year older than Vic, and so Ginny assumed that Harry must be closer to Bill's age.

"I suppose that puts us on uneven footing. I know nothing about you, and you already know that this is the first time I've coordinated a wedding."

Harry took another step closer to her, leaving a breath's distance between them. "I'd be happy to put us on even footing, if that would put you at ease."

Ginny felt her breath stop. Was heā€¦flirting with her?

It'd been so long since she'd put herself out there that she wasn't even sure how to respond as Harry stared down at her with those green eyes and messy hair that her fingers itched to touch.

"Aunt Ginny," Vic apparently decided Ginny didn't need to respond, and for the briefest moment, Ginny wished her niece would go snog her fiance for the next two or three hours and leave her be.

"Aunt Ginny, this is it!" Vic exclaimed. "This is exactly what I want! I love it, and so does Ted! Can we get it reserved right now?"

Ginny gave herself a mental shake and smiled at Vic, "Absolutely! Let's go get Sara and we'll get everything reserved and set for your big day."

She led them back into the manor house and tried to shake the feeling that Harry was watching her. Instead she discreetly texted Luna and asked if she could stop by after work. She really needed someone to put her head back on straight.


Luna, thankfully, was free and Ginny dropped her crew off at the office where they'd all met up before grabbing takeaway and heading to her best friend.

"I brought your favorite," Ginny handed the bags over to Luna when she opened her door.

Luna chuckled as she ushered Ginny in, "So what's the emergency?"

Ginny threw herself onto Luna's sofa and sighed, "How did you know Rolf was interested in you before you started dating?"

Luna started unloading the food, "He told me he wanted to date me."

Ginny sighed, why couldn't everyone be just a bit eccentric like Luna and Rolf? They were relationship goals. So straightforward and to the point with each other, and even with Rolf and Luna going separate expeditions all the time they were probably the tightest couple Ginny had ever laid eyes on.

"Who are you hoping is interested?"

Ginny shook her head, "I don't know if I even want him to be interested. I haven't dated since Dean and that was nearly five years ago. I'm justā€¦confused?"

"Confused," Luna echoed her.

"I guess," Ginny took a bite of food to buy her some time to think.

"He isn't a groom, is he?"

Ginny stared at her friend, almost sure she was taking the Mickey.

"He's Ted's godfather."

Luna smiled and Ginny was sure now that she was being teased. Luna loved to tease in her own quiet way, especially if it meant she could tease Ginny. They'd been friends for nearly there decades and the friendly teasing seemed to pull the rug out from Ginny's anxiety.

"I'm being ridiculous, aren't I?"

"Only mildly," Luna assured her with a quiet laugh. Ginny couldn't help but join in on the laughter, and pretty soon the two friends were in a right fit of giggles on the sofa. It took several minutes before either was able to gain control of themselves.

"Now then," Luna chuckled as she took hold of her water glass, "why don't you fill me in on what's going on like a sane person."

Ginny stuck her tongue out at Luna. "I told you about Ted's godfather, Harry, remember? Well he showed up to the venue tours today and he offered to tell me as much about himself as Vic and Ted had told him about me."

Luna wriggled her eyebrows, "Oooh that sounds so romantic."

"Luna, please," Ginny groaned, "I'm trying to figure out what to do!"

"Let the man," Luna shrugged, "you could do with a night out."

"He didn't ask me out for a pint," Ginny huffed. "I don't know what he was implying."

"Stop being thirteen," Luna stood and started clearing her food. "If you're interested in the man then let him know. If you're not then be professional and don't pursue him."

"That's the problem, I don't know if I'm interested," Ginny joined her in clearing their takeaway.

"I can't help you there," Luna put a comforting hand on Ginny's shoulder, "you're going to need to figure that out for yourself."

"And that's the hard part," Ginny sighed.

Ginny didn't know what she wanted. She was happy with her life, wasn't she? She was comfortable being single, at least she thought so. Things didn't end well with Dean and Ginny had decided she was done playing the field. She didn't want to try and convince some guy she was worth the time of day. But what did she want? Did she really want to keep coming home to an empty flat? Did she really want to spend the rest of her life single? Or did she really just want to avoid getting burned again?

When Ginny fell into bed that night, she still didn't know.


After meeting with Kathleen and Travis that Monday, which seemed to go off without a hitch, Ginny decided to see if Vic had time to look at the photographers portfolios with her. They would need to get engagement pictures done just as quickly as possible so they could decide on the invitations.

Vic responded to her text with a phone call.

"Hi Vicky."

"Hi Aunt Ginny, I got your text and I'm at Ted's. What do you think of coming over and after we pick a photographer you can stay for dinner?"

Ginny sighed, little Vicky was old enough to be the hostess now, when did that happen?

"That sounds lovely, thank you! Send me the address and I'll leave here in fifteen minutes."

Ginny had expected a flat. Ted was nineteen, only a year older than Vic, and she expected him to be living like a nineteen year old, in a flat, in a cheap part of town, with little food on hand. So when the GPS led Ginny out to the suburbs and a small home with a lovely little wrought iron fence and a slightly overgrown front garden, Ginny immediately checked that the addresses were the same. Everything looked to be right, so with a bit of trepidation and a lot of confusion, Ginny approached the front door and rang the bell. Her heart almost stopped when the door opened.

Harry Potter stood looking at her with those stupid green eyes and a sassy grin on his face.

"Oh good, you found it," He stepped off to the side and motioned for Ginny to come in.

"Er, yes, the GPS led me straight to it." Ginny's brain was quickly catching up with what was happening. Ted obviously lived with his godfather. Ginny was going to be having dinner with Vic and Ted...and Harry.

She was pulled from her musings by a soft hand on the small of her back as Harry led her down the hall. The spot on her back where his hand was touching seemed to burn and Ginny tried not to let her labored breathing show. The home was well kept and the smells coming from the kitchen were amazing. She was just about to ask Harry for clarification on what was going on when she heard her name.

"Aunt Ginny!" Vic jumped up from the sofa as Harry led them further into the house.

"You ready to pick out your photographer?" Ginny smiled as she wrapped Vic in a hug. Work, she needed to focus on the wedding and she would be fine. Ginny could have a professional work dinner with her clients. It would be fine.

"I'm so excited!" Vic pulled her down to the sofa.

Yes. Ginny was going to focus on work, and stop imagining that Harry was watching her, because he wasn't, she was sure he wasn't.

Ginny pulled her tablet out of her bag along with a couple printed portfolios from photographers that the shop kept on hand. "Ok, let's start with looking at the photos and then we can talk about which package would be right for you. No sense in paying to have a photographer all day if the wedding and reception will only be a few hours."

Vic picked up the first portfolio with excitement and put it across her lap and Ted's. "Wow, do you think I'll look like that?" Vic pointed to the first image of a bride surrounded by roses.

"You'll look more beautiful than every single picture here," Ted kissed her cheek and Ginny smiled as Vic's cheeks tinged pink.

"You are a flatterer, Edward."

"And you love it," Ted chuckled, "besides, I never say anything that isn't true."

Ginny remembered a time when she would have scoffed at that sort of exchange between her brothers and their wives. Even as recently as Luna and Rolf had Ginny rolled her eyes at what she considered sappy attempts to be romantic. But something about it being the next generation was different. It was heartwarming to see Vic growing up, to see her find someone who looked at her like she was his whole world, and Ginny couldn't bring herself to be cynical of any of it.

They sorted through photographers before deciding on the one that Vic liked best and had the best rate. Ginny excused herself to what Harry called his office in order to call and make the arrangements. She was just finishing up, consultation, engagement shoot, and wedding day booked and planned, when Harry stepped in the room.

"Just checking something," he smiled at her as he slid into his computer chair and began clicking around on his computer.

She should have left; she was already standing, she was finished with the call, she had no reason to still be in his office. But for some reason, Ginny pulled out her tablet out and looked with unseeing eyes at her calendar, alone in a room with Harry Potter.

"Were you able to get the dates for Vic and Teddy?" He slid up next to her and looked over her shoulder at the calendar.

"Yeah," Ginny bit her lip.

Harry was close, close like he had been when he offered to tell her as much about himself as he knew about her. She chanced to look up at him and found him smiling at her. Ginny felt like she needed to say something, she needed to break this spell he'd cast over her that had somehow rendered her trapped under his gaze. But she couldn't seem to gain control over her voice or manage to look away. His green eyes held hers and Ginny was rooted to the floor staring up at him with no idea of how to escape, and if she was honest, she didn't want to escape.

Suddenly, Ginny felt the nearly five years since she'd been this close to a man as keenly as she would have felt five years without ice cream. Had it really been almost five years since she'd kissed anyone? Had she really gone nearly sixty months since she'd been held? How had she managed these roughly seventeen hundred days without really touching another person? There was a part of Ginny's mind that reminded her that she was happy. She lived a fulfilling life and had wonderful friends and a loving family. But that part of her brain was being drowned out by the part of her that had sprung to life like a phoenix rising from the ashes, the part of her that wanted this, that wanted Harry.

"Do," Ginny whispered, "do you want to come to the consultation, with the photographer?"

Harry's grin tilted just a bit higher and he glanced down at the screen, "I think I can be there for it, probably smart too, since I'm paying the man and all."

Ginny felt the smile pulling on her lips and she gave into it. "Yeah, got to make sure this bloke isn't going to take your money and run."

Harry laughed and moved closer, placing his hand on the small of her back again, "As long as he isn't also running off with the wedding coordinator."

Ginny stopped breathing. She honest to goodness forgot how to make her lungs pull breath in and expel it out.

"Harry," Ted's voice sounded down the hall. "The stove timer is going off, which dish is it for?"

Ginny saw annoyance flash in Harry's eyes as his hand fell from her back. The lack of contact brought her breath back, but Ginny would have almost rather passed out from lack of oxygen than have him not touching her. Harry moved toward the door and Ginny watched him in slow motion as Luna's advice rang through her ears.

"Harry," she barely heard her own voice but Harry stopped dead in his tracks and turned towards her.

"The," she bit her lip and took a deep breath, "the wedding coordinator is more interested in the godfather than the photographer."

Harry's smile bloomed on his face like a morning flower, "That's very good news." He winked at her before disappearing down the hallway.

Ginny felt her breath leave with him.