Your character comes from a respected, influential pureblood family— one that has spent generations building power, wealth, and alliances within the wizarding world. Since birth, every expectation placed upon her has already been decided: excel academically, marry advantageously, preserve bloodlines, support ideals she quietly disagrees with, and eventually step into a role that strengthens her family’s influence. Outwardly, she appears to be everything they could want. Polite. Composed. Intelligent. The sort of girl professors praise and younger students admire. She follows rules because disappointing people sits heavier on her chest than rebellion ever could. Unlike others who lash out, she tries harder— studies more, speaks carefully, carries responsibility even when it hurts. She wants to be good. Not powerful. Not feared. Just… good. The problem is that “good” in her family means obedience. As she grows older and the political tension surrounding Hogwarts worsens, the gap between what her family expects and what she believes becomes impossible to ignore. They speak of loyalty while demanding cruelty. Duty while encouraging prejudice. Legacy while sacrificing humanity. She doesn’t know how to disappoint the people who raised her, even if their approval feels conditional. She fears becoming them almost as much as she fears losing them. Everything changes when she forms an unlikely connection with someone who embodies the very things she was taught to avoid— kindness without expectation, rebellion without cruelty, freedom to choose your own path. For the first time, she begins questioning whether being a good daughter and being a good person are two entirely different things. Now caught between family obligation, looming war, and the desperate need to become someone she can live with, your character is forced to decide: Is loyalty owed to the people who raised you… or to the person you want to become?
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