Chapter 1
The Dark Lord Ascending
The two men appeared out of nowhere, a
few yards apart in the narrow, moonlit lane. For a second they stood
quite still, wands directed at each other’s chests; then,
recognizing each other, they stowed their wands beneath their cloaks
and started walking briskly in the same direction.
“News?” asked the taller of the
two.
“The best,” replied Severus Snape.
The lane was bordered on the left by
wild, low-growing brambles, on the right by a high, neatly manicured
hedge. The men’s long cloaks flapped around their ankles as they
marched.
“Thought I might be late,” said
Yaxley, his blunt features sliding in and out of sight as the
branches of overhanging trees broke the moonlight. “It was a little
trickier than I expected. But I hope he will be satisfied. You sound
confident that your reception will be good?”
Snape nodded, but did not elaborate.
They turned right, into a wide driveway that led off the lane. The
high hedge curved with them, running off into the distance beyond the
pair of impressive wrought-iron gates barring the men’s way.
Neither of them broke step: In silence both raised their left arms in
a kind of salute and passed straight through, as though the dark
metal were smoke.
The yew hedges muffled the sound of the
men’s footsteps. There was a rustle somewhere to their right:
Yaxley drew his wand again, pointing it over his companion’s head,
but the source of the noise proved to be nothing more than a
pure-white peacock, strutting majestically along the top of the
hedge.
“He always did himself well, Lucius.
Peacocks…” Yaxley thrust his wand back under his cloak with a
snort.
A handsome manor house grew out of the
darkness at the end of the straight drive, lights glinting in the
diamond-paned downstairs windows. Somewhere in the dark garden beyond
the hedge a fountain was playing. Gravel crackled beneath their feet
as Snape and Yaxley sped toward the front door, which swung inward at
their approach, though nobody had visibly opened it.
The hallway was large, dimly lit, and
sumptuously decorated, with a magnificent carpet covering most of the
stone floor. The eyes of the pale-faced portraits on the walls
followed Snape and Yaxley as they strode past. The two men halted at
a heavy wooden door leading into the next room, hesitated for the
space of a heartbeat, then Snape turned the bronze handle.
The drawing room was full of silent
people, sitting at a long and ornate table. The room’s usual
furniture had been pushed carelessly up against the walls.
Illumination came from a roaring fire beneath a handsome marble
mantelpiece surmounted by a gilded mirror. Snape and Yaxley lingered
for a moment on the threshold. As their eyes grew accustomed to the
lack of light, they were drawn upward to the strangest feature of the
scene: an apparently unconscious human figure hanging upside down
over the table, revolving slowly as if suspended by an invisible
rope, and reflected in the mirror and in the bare, polished surface
of the table below. None of the people seated underneath this
singular sight was looking at it except for a pale young man sitting
almost directly below it. He seemed unable to prevent himself from
glancing upward every minute or so.
“Yaxley. Snape,” said a high, clear
voice from the head of the table. “You are very nearly late.”
The speaker was seated directly in
front of the fireplace, so that it was difficult, at first, for the
new arrivals to make out more than his silhouette. As they drew
nearer, however, his face shone through the gloom, hairless,
snakelike, with slits for nostrils and gleaming red eyes whose pupils
were vertical. He was so pale that he seemed to emit a pearly glow.
“Severus, here,” said Voldemort,
indicating the seat on his immediate right. “Yaxley—beside
Dolohov.”
The two men took their allotted places.
Most of the eyes around the table followed Snape, and it was to him
that Voldemort spoke first.
“So?”
“My Lord, the Order of the Phoenix
intends to move Harry Potter from his current place of safety on
Saturday next, at nightfall.”
The interest around the table sharpened
palpably: Some stiffened, others fidgeted, all gazing at Snape and
Voldemort.
“Saturday… at nightfall,”
repeated Voldemort. His red eyes fastened upon Snape’s black ones
with such intensity that some of the watchers looked away, apparently
fearful that they themselves would be scorched by the ferocity of the
gaze. Snape, however, looked calmly back into Voldemort’s face and,
after a moment or two, Voldemort’s lipless mouth curved into
something like a smile.
“Good. Very good. And this
information comes—”
“—from the source we discussed,”
said Snape.
“My Lord.”
Yaxley had leaned forward to look down
the long table at Voldemort and Snape. All faces turned to him.
“My Lord, I have heard differently.”
Yaxley waited, but Voldemort did not
speak, so he went on, “Dawlish, the Auror, let slip that Potter
will not be moved until the thirtieth, the night before the boy turns
seventeen.”
Snape was smiling.
“My source told me that there are
plans to lay a false trail; this must be it. No doubt a Confundus
Charm has been placed upon Dawlish. It would not be the first time;
he is known to be susceptible.”
“I assure you, my Lord, Dawlish
seemed quite certain,” said Yaxley.
“If he has been Confunded, naturally
he is certain,” said Snape. “I assure you, Yaxley, the Auror
Office will play no further part in the protection of Harry Potter.
The Order believes that we have infiltrated the Ministry.”
“The Order’s got one thing right,
then, eh?” said a squat man sitting a short distance from Yaxley;
he gave a wheezy giggle that was echoed here and there along the
table.
Voldemort did not laugh. His gaze had
wandered upward to the body revolving slowly overhead, and he seemed
to be lost in thought.
“My Lord,” Yaxley went on, “Dawlish
believes an entire party of Aurors will be used to transfer the boy—”
Voldemort held up a large white hand,
and Yaxley subsided at once, watching resentfully as Voldemort turned
back to Snape.
“Where are they going to hide the boy
next?”
“At the home of one of the Order,”
said Snape. “The place, according to the source, has been given
every protection that the Order and Ministry together could provide.
I think that there is little chance of taking him once he is there,
my Lord, unless, of course, the Ministry has fallen before next
Saturday, which might give us the opportunity to discover and undo
enough of the enchantments to break through the rest.”
“Well, Yaxley?” Voldemort called
down the table, the firelight glinting strangely in his red eyes.
“Will the Ministry have fallen by next Saturday?”
Once again, all heads turned. Yaxley
squared his shoulders.
“My Lord, I have good news on that
score. I have—with difficulty, and after great effort—suceeded in
placing an Imperius Curse upon Pius Thicknesse.”
Many of those sitting around Yaxley
looked impressed; his neighbor, Dolohov, a man with a long, twisted
face, clapped him on the back.
“It is a start,” said Voldemort.
“But Thicknesse is only one man. Scrimgeour must be surrounded by
our people before I act. One failed attempt on the Minister’s life
will set me back a long way.”
“Yes—my Lord, that is true—but
you know, as Head of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement,
Thicknesse has regular contact not only with the Minister himself,
but also with the Heads of all the other Ministry departments. It
will, I think, be easy now that we have such a high-ranking official
under our control, to subjugate the others, and then they can all
work together to bring Scrimgeour down.”
“As long as our friend Thicknesse is
not discovered before he has converted the rest,” said Voldemort.
“At any rate, it remains unlikely that the Ministry will be mine
before next Saturday. If we cannot touch the boy at his destination,
then it must be done while he travels.”
“We are at an advantage there, my
Lord,” said Yaxley, who seemed determined to receive some portion
of approval. “We now have several people planted within the
Department of Magical Transport. If Potter Apparates or uses the Floo
Network, we shall know immediately.”
“He will not do either,” said
Snape. “The Order is eschewing any form of transport that is
controlled or regulated by the Ministry; they mistrust everything to
do with the place.”
“All the better,” said Voldemort.
“He will have to move in the open. Easier to take, by far.”
Again, Voldemort looked up at the
slowly revolving body as he went on, “I shall attend to the boy in
person. There have been too many mistakes where Harry Potter is
concerned. Some of them have been my own. That Potter lives is due
more to my errors than to his triumphs.”
The company around the table watched
Voldemort apprehensively, each of them, by his or her expression,
afraid that they might be blamed for Harry Potter’s continued
existence. Voldemort, however, seemed to be speaking more to himself
than to any of them, still addressing the unconscious body above him.
“I have been careless, and so have
been thwarted by luck and chance, those wreckers of all but the
best-laid plans. But I know better now. I understand those things
that I did not understand before. I must be the one to kill Harry
Potter, and I shall be.”
At these words, seemingly in response
to them, a sudden wail sounded, a terrible, drawn-out cry of misery
and pain. Many of those at the table looked downward, startled, for
the sound had seemed to issue from below their feet.
“Wormtail,” said Voldemort, with no
change in his quiet, thoughtful tone, and without removing his eyes
from the revolving body above, “have I not spoken to you about
keeping our prisoner quiet?”
“Yes, m-my Lord,” gasped a small
man halfway down the table, who had been sitting so low in his chair
that it had appeared, at first glance, to be unoccupied. Now he
scrambled from his seat and scurried from the room, leaving nothing
behind him but a curious gleam of silver.
“As I was saying,” continued
Voldemort, looking again at the tense faces of his followers, “I
understand better now. I shall need, for instance, to borrow a wand
from one of you before I go to kill Potter.”
The faces around him displayed nothing
but shock; he might have announced that he wanted to borrow one of
their arms.
“No volunteers?” said Voldemort.
“Let’s see… Lucius, I see no reason for you to have a wand
anymore.”
Lucius Malfoy looked up. His skin
appeared yellowish and waxy in the firelight, and his eyes were
sunken and shadowed. When he spoke, his voice was hoarse.
“My Lord?”
“Your wand, Lucius. I require your
wand.”
“I…”
Malfoy glanced sideways at his wife.
She was staring straight ahead, quite as pale as he was, her long
blonde hair hanging down her back, but beneath the table her slim
fingers closed briefly on his wrist. At her touch, Malfoy put his
hand into his robes, withdrew a wand, and passed it along to
Voldemort, who held it up in front of his red eyes, examining it
closely.
“What is it?”
“Elm, my Lord,” whispered Malfoy.
“And the core?”
“Dragon—dragon heartstring.”
“Good,” said Voldemort. He drew out
his own wand and compared the lengths. Lucius Malfoy made an
involuntary movement; for a fraction of a second, it seemed he
expected to receive Voldemort’s wand in exchange for his own. The
gesture was not missed by Voldemort, whose eyes widened maliciously.
“Give you my wand, Lucius? My wand?”
Some of the throng sniggered.
“I have given you your liberty,
Lucius, is that not enough for you? But I have noticed that you and
your family seem less than happy of late… What is it about my
presence in your home that displeases you, Lucius?”
“Nothing—nothing, my Lord!”
“Such lies, Lucius…”
The soft voice seemed to hiss on even
after the cruel mouth had stopped moving. One or two of the wizards
barely repressed a shudder as the hissing grew louder; something
heavy could be heard sliding across the floor beneath the table.
The huge snake emerged to climb slowly
up Voldemort’s chair. It rose, seemingly endlessly, and came to
rest across Voldemort’s shoulders: its neck the thickness of a
man’s thigh; its eyes, with their vertical slits for pupils,
unblinking. Voldemort stroked the creature absently with long thin
fingers, still looking at Lucius Malfoy.
“Why do the Malfoys look so unhappy
with their lot? Is my return, my rise to power, not the very thing
they professed to desire for so many years?”
“Of course, my Lord,” said Lucius
Malfoy. His hand shook as he wiped sweat from his upper lip. “We
did desire it—we do.”
To Malfoy’s left, his wife made an
odd, stiff nod, her eyes averted from Voldemort and the snake. To his
right, his son, Draco, who had been gazing up at the inert body
overhead, glanced quickly at Voldemort and away again, terrified to
make eye contact.
“My Lord,” said a dark woman
halfway down the table, her voice constricted with emotion, “it is
an honor to have you here, in our family’s house. There can be no
higher pleasure.”
She sat beside her sister, as unlike
her in looks, with her dark hair and heavily lidded eyes, as she was
in bearing and demeanor; where Narcissa sat rigid and impassive,
Bellatrix leaned toward Voldemort, for mere words could not
demonstrate her longing for closeness.
“No higher pleasure,” repeated
Voldemort, his head tilted a little to one side as he considered
Bellatrix. “That means a great deal, Bellatrix, from you.”
Her face flooded with color; her eyes
welled with tears of delight.
“My Lord knows I speak nothing but
the truth!”
“No higher pleasure… even compared
with the happy event that, I hear, has taken place in your family
this week?”
She stared at him, her lips parted,
evidently confused.
“I don’t know what you mean, my
Lord.”
“I’m talking about your niece,
Bellatrix. And yours, Lucius and Narcissa. She has just married the
werewolf, Remus Lupin. You must be so proud.”
There was an eruption of jeering
laughter from around the table. Many leaned forward to exchange
gleeful looks; a few thumped the table with their fists. The great
snake, disliking the disturbance, opened its mouth wide and hissed
angrily, but the Death Eaters did not hear it, so jubilant were they
at Bellatrix and the Malfoys’ humiliation. Bellatrix’s face, so
recently flushed with happiness, had turned an ugly, blotchy red.
“She is no niece of ours, my Lord,”
she cried over the outpouring of mirth. “We—Narcissa and I—have
never set eyes on our sister since she married the Mudblood. This
brat has nothing to do with either of us, nor any beast she marries.”
“What say you, Draco?” asked
Voldemort, and though his voice was quiet, it carried clearly through
the catcalls and jeers. “Will you babysit the cubs?”
The hilarity mounted; Draco Malfoy
looked in terror at his father, who was staring down into his own
lap, then caught his mother’s eye. She shook her head almost
imperceptibly, then resumed her own deadpan stare at the opposite
wall.
“Enough,” said Voldemort, stroking
the angry snake. “Enough.”
And the laughter died at once.
“Many of our oldest family trees
become a little diseased over time,” he said as Bellatrix gazed at
him, breathless and imploring. “You must prune yours, must you not,
to keep it healthy? Cut away those parts that threaten the health of
the rest.”
“Yes, my Lord,” whispered
Bellatrix, and her eyes swam with tears of gratitude again. “At the
first chance!”
“You shall have it,” said
Voldemort. “And in your family, so in the world… we shall cut
away the canker that infects us until only those of the true blood
remain…”
Voldemort raised Lucius Malfoy’s
wand, pointed it directly at the slowly revolving figure suspended
over the table, and gave it a tiny flick. The figure came to life
with a groan and began to struggle against invisible bonds.
“Do you recognize our guest,
Severus?” asked Voldemort.
Snape raised his eyes to the
upside-down face. All of the Death Eaters were looking up at the
captive now, as though they had been given permission to show
curiosity. As she revolved to face the firelight, the woman said in a
cracked and terrified voice, “Severus! Help me!”
“Ah, yes,” said Snape as the
prisoner turned slowly away again.
“And you, Draco?” asked Voldemort,
stroking the snake’s snout with his wand-free hand. Draco shook his
head jerkily. Now that the woman had woken, he seemed unable to look
at her anymore.
“But you would not have taken her
classes,” said Voldemort. “For those of you who do not know, we
are joined here tonight by Charity Burbage who, until recently,
taught at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.”
There were small noises of
comprehension around the table. A broad, hunched woman with pointed
teeth cackled.
“Yes… Professor Burbage taught the
children of witches and wizards all about Muggles… how they are not
so different from us…”
One of the Death Eaters spat on the
floor. Charity Burbage revolved to face Snape again.
“Severus… please… please…”
“Silence,” said Voldemort, with
another twitch of Malfoy’s wand, and Charity fell silent as if
gagged. “Not content with corrupting and polluting the minds of
Wizarding children, last week Professor Burbage wrote an impassioned
defense of Mudbloods in the Daily Prophet. Wizards, she says, must
accept these thieves of their knowledge and magic. The dwindling of
the purebloods is, says Professor Burbage, a most desirable
circumstance… She would have us all mate with Muggles… or, no
doubt, werewolves…”
Nobody laughed this time: There was no
mistaking the anger and contempt in Voldemort’s voice. For the
third time, Charity Burbage revolved to face Snape. Tears were
pouring from her eyes into her hair. Snape looked back at her, quite
impassive, as she turned slowly away from him again.
“Avada Kedavra.”
The flash of green light illuminated
every corner of the room. Charity fell, with a resounding crash, onto
the table below, which trembled and creaked. Several of the Death
Eaters leapt back in their chairs. Draco fell out of his onto the
floor.
“Dinner, Nagini,” said Voldemort
softly, and the great snake swayed and slithered from his shoulders
onto the polished wood.
Chapter 2
In Memoriam
Harry was bleeding. Clutching his right
hand in his left and swearing under his breath, he shouldered open
his bedroom door. There was a crunch of breaking china: He had
trodden on a cup of cold tea that had been sitting on the floor
outside his bedroom door.
“What the—?”
He looked around; the landing of number
four, Privet Drive, was deserted. Possibly the cup of tea was
Dudley’s idea of a clever booby trap. Keeping his bleeding hand
elevated, Harry scraped the fragments of cup together with the other
hand and threw them into the already crammed bin just visible inside
his bedroom door. Then he tramped across to the bathroom to run his
finger under the tap.
It was stupid, pointless, irritating
beyond belief that he still had four days left of being unable to
perform magic… but he had to admit to himself that this jagged cut
in his finger would have defeated him. He had never learned how to
repair wounds, and now he came to think of it—particularly in light
of his immediate plans—this seemed a serious flaw in his magical
education. Making a mental note to ask Hermione how it was done, he
used a large wad of toilet paper to mop up as much of the tea as he
could, before returning to his bedroom and slamming the door behind
him.
Harry had spent the morning completely
emptying his school trunk for the first time since he had packed it
six years ago. At the start of the intervening school years, he had
merely skimmed off the topmost three quarters of the contents and
replaced or updated them, leaving a layer of general debris at the
bottom—old quills, desiccated beetle eyes, single socks that no
longer fit. Minutes previously, Harry had plunged his hand into this
mulch, experienced a stabbing pain in the fourth finger of his right
hand, and withdrawn it to see a lot of blood.
He now proceeded a little more
cautiously. Kneeling down beside the trunk again, he groped around in
the bottom and, after retrieving an old badge that flickered feebly
between Support CEDRIC DIGGORY and POTTER STINKS, a cracked and
worn-out Sneakoscope, and a gold locket inside which a note signed
R.A.B. had been hidden, he finally discovered the sharp edge that had
done the damage. He recognized it at once. It was a two-inch-long
fragment of the enchanted mirror that his dead godfather, Sirius, had
given him. Harry laid it aside and felt cautiously around the trunk
for the rest, but nothing more remained of his godfather’s last
gift except powdered glass, which clung to the deepest layer of
debris like glittering grit.
Harry sat up and examined the jagged
piece on which he had cut himself, seeing nothing but his own bright
green eye reflected back at him. Then he placed the fragment on top
of that morning’s Daily Prophet, which lay unread on the bed, and
attempted to stem the sudden upsurge of bitter memories, the stabs of
regret and of longing the discovery of the broken mirror had
occasioned, by attacking the rest of the rubbish in the trunk.
It took another hour to empty it
completely, throw away the useless items, and sort the remainder in
piles according to whether or not he would need them from now on. His
school and Quidditch robes, cauldron, parchment, quills, and most of
his textbooks were piled in a corner, to be left behind. He wondered
what his aunt and uncle would do with them; burn them in the dead of
night, probably, as if they were the evidence of some dreadful crime.
His Muggle clothing, Invisibility Cloak, potion-making kit, certain
books, the photograph album Hagrid had once given him, a stack of
letters, and his wand had been repacked into an old rucksack. In a
front pocket were the Marauder’s Map and the locket with the note
signed R.A.B. inside it. The locket was accorded this place of honor
not because it was valuable—in all usual senses it was
worthless—but because of what it had cost to attain it.
This left a sizable stack of newspapers
sitting on his desk beside his snowy owl, Hedwig: one for each of the
days Harry had spent at Privet Drive this summer.
He got up off the floor, stretched, and
moved across to his desk. Hedwig made no movement as he began to
flick through the newspapers, throwing them onto the rubbish pile one
by one. The owl was asleep, or else faking; she was angry with Harry
about the limited amount of time she was allowed out of her cage at
the moment.
As he neared the bottom of the pile of
newspapers, Harry slowed down, searching for one particular issue
that he knew had arrived shortly after he had returned to Privet
Drive for the summer; he remembered that there had been a small
mention on the front about the resignation of Charity Burbage, the
Muggle Studies teacher at Hogwarts. At last he found it. Turning to
page ten, he sank into his desk chair and reread the article he had
been looking for.
ALBUS DUMBLEDORE REMEMBERED
by Elphias Doge
I met Albus Dumbledore at the age of
eleven, on our first day at Hogwarts. Our mutual attraction was
undoubtedly due to the fact that we both felt ourselves to be
outsiders. I had contracted dragon pox shortly before arriving at
school, and while I was no longer contagious, my pockmarked visage
and greenish hue did not encourage many to approach me. For his part,
Albus had arrived at Hogwarts under the burden of unwanted notoriety.
Scarcely a year previously, his father, Percival, had been convicted
of a savage and well-publicized attack upon three young Muggles.
Albus never attempted to deny that his
father (who was to die in Azkaban) had committed this crime; on the
contrary, when I plucked up courage to ask him, he assured me that he
knew his father to be guilty. Beyond that, Dumbledore refused to
speak of the sad business, though many attempted to make him do so.
Some, indeed, were disposed to praise his father’s action and
assumed that Albus too was a Muggle-hater. They could not have been
more mistaken: As anybody who knew Albus would attest, he never
revealed the remotest anti-Muggle tendency. Indeed, his determined
support for Muggle rights gained him many enemies in subsequent
years.
In a matter of months, however, Albus’s
own fame had begun to eclipse that of his father. By the end of his
first year he would never again be known as the son of a
Muggle-hater, but as nothing more or less than the most brilliant
student ever seen at the school. Those of us who were privileged to
be his friends benefited from his example, not to mention his help
and encouragement, with which he was always generous. He confessed to
me in later life that he knew even then that his greatest pleasure
lay in teaching.
He not only won every prize of note
that the school offered, he was soon in regular correspondence with
the most notable magical names of the day, including Nicolas Flamel,
the celebrated alchemist; Bathilda Bagshot, the noted historian; and
Adalbert Waffling, the magical theoretician. Several of his papers
found their way into learned publications such as Transfiguration
Today, Challenges in Charming, and The Practical Potioneer.
Dumbledore’s future career seemed likely to be meteoric, and the
only question that remained was when he would become Minister of
Magic. Though it was often predicted in later years that he was on
the point of taking the job, however, he never had Ministerial
ambitions.
Three years after we had started at
Hogwarts, Albus’s brother, Aberforth, arrived at school. They were
not alike; Aberforth was never bookish and, unlike Albus, preferred
to settle arguments by dueling rather than through reasoned
discussion. However, it is quite wrong to suggest, as some have, that
the brothers were not friends. They rubbed along as comfortably as
two such different boys could do. In fairness to Aberforth, it must
be admitted that living in Albus’s shadow cannot have been an
altogether comfortable experience. Being continually outshone was an
occupational hazard of being his friend and cannot have been any more
pleasurable as a brother.
When Albus and I left Hogwarts we
intended to take the then-traditional tour of the world together,
visiting and observing foreign wizards, before pursuing our separate
careers. However, tragedy intervened. On the very eve of our trip,
Albus’s mother, Kendra, died, leaving Albus the head, and sole
breadwinner, of the family. I postponed my departure long enough to
pay my respects at Kendra’s funeral, then left for what was now to
be a solitary journey. With a younger brother and sister to care for,
and little gold left to them, there could no longer be any question
of Albus accompanying me.
That was the period of our lives when
we had least contact. I wrote to Albus, describing, perhaps
insensitively, the wonders of my journey, from narrow escapes from
chimaeras in Greece to the experiments of the Egyptian alchemists.
His letters told me little of his day-to-day life, which I guessed to
be frustratingly dull for such a brilliant wizard. Immersed in my own
experiences, it was with horror that I heard, toward the end of my
year’s travels, that yet another tragedy had struck the
Dumbledores: the death of his sister, Ariana.
Though Ariana had been in poor health
for a long time, the blow, coming so soon after the loss of their
mother, had a profound effect on both of her brothers. All those
closest to Albus—and I count myself one of that lucky number—agree
that Ariana’s death, and Albus’s feeling of personal
responsibility for it (though, of course, he was guiltless), left
their mark upon him forevermore.
I returned home to find a young man who
had experienced a much older person’s suffering. Albus was more
reserved than before, and much less light-hearted. To add to his
misery, the loss of Ariana had led, not to a renewed closeness
between Albus and Aberforth, but to an estrangement. (In time this
would lift—in later years they reestablished, if not a close
relationship, then certainly a cordial one.) However, he rarely spoke
of his parents or of Ariana from then on, and his friends learned not
to mention them.
Other quills will describe the triumphs
of the following years. Dumbledore’s innumerable contributions to
the store of Wizarding knowledge, including his discovery of the
twelve uses of dragon’s blood, will benefit generations to come, as
will the wisdom he displayed in the many judgments he made while
Chief Warlock of the Wizengamot. They say, still, that no Wizarding
duel ever matched that between Dumbledore and Grindelwald in 1945.
Those who witnessed it have written of the terror and the awe they
felt as they watched these two extraordinary wizards do battle.
Dumbledore’s triumph, and its consequences for the Wizarding world,
are considered a turning point in magical history to match the
introduction of the International Statute of Secrecy or the downfall
of He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named.
Albus Dumbledore was never proud or
vain; he could find something to value in anyone, however apparently
insignificant or wretched, and I believe that his early losses
endowed him with great humanity and sympathy. I shall miss his
friendship more than I can say, but my loss is as nothing compared to
the Wizarding world’s. That he was the most inspiring and the best
loved of all Hogwarts headmasters cannot be in question. He died as
he lived: working always for the greater good and, to his last hour,
as willing to stretch out a hand to a small boy with dragon pox as he
was on the day that I met him.
Harry finished reading but continued to
gaze at the picture accompanying the obituary. Dumbledore was wearing
his familiar, kindly smile, but as he peered over the top of his
half-moon spectacles, he gave the impression, even in newsprint, of
X-raying Harry, whose sadness mingled with a sense of humiliation.
He had thought he knew Dumbledore quite
well, but ever since reading this obituary he had been forced to
recognize that he had barely known him at all. Never once had he
imagined Dumbledore’s childhood or youth; it was as though he had
sprung into being as Harry had known him, venerable and silver-haired
and old. The idea of a teenage Dumbledore was simply odd, like trying
to imagine a stupid Hermione or a friendly Blast-Ended Skrewt.
He had never thought to ask Dumbledore
about his past. No doubt it would have felt strange, impertinent
even, but after all, it had been common knowledge that Dumbledore had
taken part in that legendary duel with Grindelwald, and Harry had not
thought to ask Dumbledore what that had been like, nor about any of
his other famous achievements. No, they had always discussed Harry,
Harry’s past, Harry’s future, Harry’s plans… and it seemed to
Harry now, despite the fact that his future was so dangerous and so
uncertain, that he had missed irreplaceable opportunities when he had
failed to ask Dumbledore more about himself, even though the only
personal question he had ever asked his headmaster was also the only
one he suspected that Dumbledore had not answered honestly:
“What do you see when you look in the
mirror?”
“I? I see myself holding a pair of
thick, woolen socks.”
After several minutes’ thought, Harry
tore the obituary out of the Prophet, folded it carefully, and tucked
it inside the first volume of Practical Defensive Magic and Its Use
Against the Dark Arts. Then he threw the rest of the newspaper onto
the rubbish pile and turned to face the room. It was much tidier. The
only things left out of place were today’s Daily Prophet, still
lying on the bed, and on top of it, the piece of broken mirror.
Harry moved across the room, slid the
mirror fragment off today’s Prophet, and unfolded the newspaper. He
had merely glanced at the headline when he had taken the rolled-up
paper from the delivery owl early that morning and thrown it aside,
after noting that it said nothing about Voldemort. Harry was sure
that the Ministry was leaning on the Prophet to suppress news about
Voldemort. It was only now, therefore, that he saw what he had
missed.
Across the bottom half of the front
page a smaller headline was set over a picture of Dumbledore striding
along looking harried:
DUMBLEDORE—THE TRUTH AT LAST?
Coming next week, the shocking story of
the flawed genius considered by many to be the greatest wizard of his
generation. Stripping away the popular image of serene,
silver-bearded wisdom, Rita Skeeter reveals the disturbed childhood,
the lawless youth, the lifelong feuds, and the guilty secrets that
Dumbledore carried to his grave. WHY was the man tipped to be
Minister of Magic content to remain a mere headmaster? WHAT was the
real purpose of the secret organization known as the Order of the
Phoenix? HOW did Dumbledore really meet his end?
The answers to these and many more
questions are explored in the explosive new biography, The Life and
Lies of Albus Dumbledore, by Rita Skeeter, exclusively interviewed by
Betty Braithwaite, page 13, inside.
Harry ripped open the paper and found
page thirteen. The article was topped with a picture showing another
familiar face: a woman wearing jeweled glasses with elaborately
curled blonde hair, her teeth bared in what was clearly supposed to
be a winning smile, wiggling her fingers up at him. Doing his best to
ignore this nauseating image, Harry read on.
In person, Rita Skeeter is much warmer
and softer than her famously ferocious quill-portraits might suggest.
Greeting me in the hallway of her cozy home, she leads me straight
into the kitchen for a cup of tea, a slice of pound cake and, it goes
without saying, a steaming vat of freshest gossip.
“Well, of course, Dumbledore is a
biographer’s dream,” says Skeeter. “Such a long, full life. I’m
sure my book will be the first of very, very many.”
Skeeter was certainly quick off the
mark. Her nine-hundred-page book was completed a mere four weeks
after Dumbledore’s mysterious death in June. I ask her how she
managed this superfast feat.
“Oh, when you’ve been a journalist
as long as I have, working to a deadline is second nature. I knew
that the Wizarding world was clamoring for the full story and I
wanted to be the first to meet that need.”
I mention the recent, widely publicized
remarks of Elphias Doge, Special Advisor to the Wizengamot and
longstanding friend of Albus Dumbledore’s, that “Skeeter’s book
contains less fact than a Chocolate Frog card.”
Skeeter throws back her head and
laughs.
“Darling Dodgy! I remember
interviewing him a few years back about merpeople rights, bless him.
Completely gaga, seemed to think we were sitting at the bottom of
Lake Windermere, kept telling me to watch out for trout.”
And yet Elphias Doge’s accusations of
inaccuracy have been echoed in many places. Does Skeeter really feel
that four short weeks have been enough to gain a full picture of
Dumbledore’s long and extraordinary life?
“Oh, my dear,” beams Skeeter,
rapping me affectionately across the knuckles, “you know as well as
I do how much information can be generated by a fat bag of Galleons,
a refusal to hear the word ‘no,’ and a nice sharp Quick-Quotes
Quill! People were queuing to dish the dirt on Dumbledore anyway. Not
everyone thought he was so wonderful, you know—he trod on an awful
lot of important toes. But old Dodgy Doge can get off his high
hippogriff, because I’ve had access to a source most journalists
would swap their wands for, one who has never spoken in public before
and who was close to Dumbledore during the most turbulent and
disturbing phase of his youth.”
The advance publicity for Skeeter’s
biography has certainly suggested that there will be shocks in store
for those who believe Dumbledore to have led a blameless life. What
were the biggest surprises she uncovered, I ask?
“Now, come off it, Betty, I’m not
giving away all the highlights before anybody’s bought the book!”
laughs Skeeter. “But I can promise that anybody who still thinks
Dumbledore was white as his beard is in for a rude awakening! Let’s
just say that nobody hearing him rage against You-Know-Who would have
dreamed that he dabbled in the Dark Arts himself in his youth! And
for a wizard who spent his later years pleading for tolerance, he
wasn’t exactly broad-minded when he was younger! Yes, Albus
Dumbledore had an extremely murky past, not to mention that very
fishy family, which he worked so hard to keep hushed up.”
I ask whether Skeeter is referring to
Dumbledore’s brother, Aberforth, whose conviction by the Wizengamot
for misuse of magic caused a minor scandal fifteen years ago.
“Oh, Aberforth is just the tip of the
dung heap,” laughs Skeeter. “No, no, I’m talking about much
worse than a brother with a fondness for fiddling about with goats,
worse even than the Muggle-maiming father—Dumbledore couldn’t
keep either of them quiet anyway, they were both charged by the
Wizengamot. No, it’s the mother and the sister that intrigued me,
and a little digging uncovered a positive nest of nastiness—but, as
I say, you’ll have to wait for chapters nine to twelve for full
details. All I can say now is, it’s no wonder Dumbledore never
talked about how his nose got broken.”
Family skeletons notwithstanding, does
Skeeter deny the brilliance that led to Dumbledore’s many magical
discoveries?
“He had brains,” she concedes,
“although many now question whether he could really take full
credit for all of his supposed achievements. As I reveal in chapter
sixteen, Ivor Dillonsby claims he had already discovered eight uses
of dragon’s blood when Dumbledore ‘borrowed’ his papers.”
But the importance of some of
Dumbledore’s achievements cannot, I venture, be denied. What of his
famous defeat of Grindelwald?
“Oh, now, I’m glad you mentioned
Grindelwald,” says Skeeter with a tantalizing smile. “I’m
afraid those who go dewy-eyed over Dumbledore’s spectacular victory
must brace themselves for a bombshell—or perhaps a Dungbomb. Very
dirty business indeed. All I’ll say is, don’t be so sure that
there really was the spectacular duel of legend. After they’ve read
my book, people may be forced to conclude that Grindelwald simply
conjured a white handkerchief from the end of his wand and came
quietly!”
Skeeter refuses to give any more away
on this intriguing subject, so we turn instead to the relationship
that will undoubtedly fascinate her readers more than any other.
“Oh yes,” says Skeeter, nodding
briskly, “I devote an entire chapter to the whole Potter-Dumbledore
relationship. It’s been called unhealthy, even sinister. Again,
your readers will have to buy my book for the whole story, but there
is no question that Dumbledore took an unnatural interest in Potter
from the word go. Whether that was really in the boy’s best
interests—well, we’ll see. It’s certainly an open secret that
Potter has had a most troubled adolescence.”
I ask whether Skeeter is still in touch
with Harry Potter, whom she so famously interviewed last year: a
breakthrough piece in which Potter spoke exclusively of his
conviction that You-Know-Who had returned.
“Oh, yes, we’ve developed a close
bond,” says Skeeter. “Poor Potter has few real friends, and we
met at one of the most testing moments of his life—the Triwizard
Tournament. I am probably one of the only people alive who can say
that they know the real Harry Potter.”
Which leads us neatly to the many
rumors still circulating about Dumbledore’s final hours. Does
Skeeter believe that Potter was there when Dumbledore died?
“Well, I don’t want to say too
much—it’s all in the book—but eyewitnesses inside Hogwarts
castle saw Potter running away from the scene moments after
Dumbledore fell, jumped, or was pushed. Potter later gave evidence
against Severus Snape, a man against whom he has a notorious grudge.
Is everything as it seems? That is for the Wizarding community to
decide—once they’ve read my book.”
On that intriguing note, I take my
leave. There can be no doubt that Skeeter has quilled an instant
bestseller. Dumbledore’s legions of admirers, meanwhile, may well
be trembling at what is soon to emerge about their hero.
Harry reached the bottom of the
article, but continued to stare blankly at the page. Revulsion and
fury rose in him like vomit; he balled up the newspaper and threw it,
with all his force, at the wall, where it joined the rest of the
rubbish heaped around his overflowing bin.
He began to stride blindly around the
room, opening empty drawers and picking up books only to replace them
on the same piles, barely conscious of what he was doing, as random
phrases from Rita’s article echoed in his head: An entire chapter
to the whole Potter-Dumbledore relationship… It’s been called
unhealthy, even sinister… He dabbled in the Dark Arts himself in
his youth… I’ve had access to a source most journalists would
swap their wands for…
“Lies!” Harry bellowed, and through
the window he saw the next-door neighbor, who had paused to restart
his lawn mower, look up nervously.
Harry sat down hard on the bed. The
broken bit of mirror danced away from him; he picked it up and turned
it over in his fingers, thinking, thinking of Dumbledore and the lies
with which Rita Skeeter was defaming him…
A flash of brightest blue. Harry froze,
his cut finger slipping on the jagged edge of the mirror again. He
had imagined it, he must have done. He glanced over his shoulder, but
the wall was a sickly peach color of Aunt Petunia’s choosing: There
was nothing blue there for the mirror to reflect. He peered into the
mirror fragment again, and saw nothing but his own bright green eye
looking back at him.
He had imagined it, there was no other
explanation; imagined it, because he had been thinking of his dead
headmaster. If anything was certain, it was that the bright blue eyes
of Albus Dumbledore would never pierce him again.
Chapter 3
The Dursleys Departing
The sound of the front door slamming
echoed up the stairs and a voice yelled, “Oi! You!”
Sixteen years of being addressed thus
left Harry in no doubt whom his uncle was calling; nevertheless, he
did not immediately respond. He was still gazing at the mirror
fragment in which, for a split second, he had thought he saw
Dumbledore’s eye. It was not until his uncle bellowed, “BOY!”
that Harry got slowly to his feet and headed for the bedroom door,
pausing to add the piece of broken mirror to the rucksack filled with
things he would be taking with him.
“You took your time!” roared Vernon
Dursley when Harry appeared at the top of the stairs. “Get down
here, I want a word!”
Harry strolled downstairs, his hands
deep in his jeans pockets. When he reached the living room he found
all three Dursleys. They were dressed for traveling: Uncle Vernon in
a fawn zip-up jacket, Aunt Petunia in a neat salmon-colored coat, and
Dudley, Harry’s large, blond, muscular cousin, in his leather
jacket.
“Yes?” asked Harry.
“Sit down!” said Uncle Vernon.
Harry raised his eyebrows. “Please!” added Uncle Vernon, wincing
slightly as though the word was sharp in his throat.
Harry sat. He thought he knew what was
coming. His uncle began to pace up and down, Aunt Petunia and Dudley
following his movements with anxious expressions. Finally, his large
purple face crumpled with concentration, Uncle Vernon stopped in
front of Harry and spoke.
“I’ve changed my mind,” he said.
“What a surprise,” said Harry.
“Don’t you take that tone—”
began Aunt Petunia in a shrill voice, but Vernon Dursley waved her
down.
“It’s all a lot of claptrap,”
said Uncle Vernon, glaring at Harry with piggy little eyes. “I’ve
decided I don’t believe a word of it. We’re staying put, we’re
not going anywhere.”
Harry looked up at his uncle and felt a
mixture of exasperation and amusement. Vernon Dursley had been
changing his mind every twenty-four hours for the past four weeks,
packing and unpacking and repacking the car with every change of
heart. Harry’s favorite moment had been the one when Uncle Vernon,
unaware that Dudley had added his dumbbells to his case since the
last time it had been unpacked, had attempted to hoist it back into
the boot and collapsed with roars of pain and much swearing.
“According to you,” Vernon Dursley
said now, resuming his pacing up and down the living room,
“we—Petunia, Dudley, and I—are in danger. From—from—”
“Some of ‘my lot,’ right,” said
Harry.
“Well, I don’t believe it,”
repeated Uncle Vernon, coming to a halt in front of Harry again. “I
was awake half the night thinking it all over, and I believe it’s a
plot to get the house.”
“The house?” repeated Harry. “What
house?”
“This house!” shrieked Uncle
Vernon, the vein in his forehead starting to pulse. “Our house!
House prices are skyrocketing around here! You want us out of the way
and then you’re going to do a bit of hocus-pocus and before we know
it the deeds will be in your name and—”
“Are you out of your mind?”
demanded Harry. “A plot to get this house? Are you actually as
stupid as you look?”
“Don’t you dare—!” squealed
Aunt Petunia, but again, Vernon waved her down: Slights on his
personal appearance were, it seemed, as nothing to the danger he had
spotted.
“Just in case you’ve forgotten,”
said Harry, “I’ve already got a house, my godfather left me one.
So why would I want this one? All the happy memories?”
There was silence. Harry thought he had
rather impressed his uncle with this argument.
“You claim,” said Uncle Vernon,
starting to pace yet again, “that this Lord Thing—”
“—Voldemort,” said Harry
impatiently, “and we’ve been through this about a hundred times
already. This isn’t a claim, it’s fact, Dumbledore told you last
year, and Kingsley and Mr. Weasley—”
Vernon Dursley hunched his shoulders
angrily, and Harry guessed that his uncle was attempting to ward off
recollections of the unannounced visit, a few days into Harry’s
summer holidays, of two fully grown wizards. The arrival on the
doorstep of Kingsley Shacklebolt and Arthur Weasley had come as a
most unpleasant shock to the Dursleys. Harry had to admit, however,
that as Mr. Weasley had once demolished half of the living room, his
reappearance could not have been expected to delight Uncle Vernon.
“—Kingsley and Mr. Weasley
explained it all as well,” Harry pressed on remorselessly. “Once
I’m seventeen, the protective charm that keeps me safe will break,
and that exposes you as well as me. The Order is sure Voldemort will
target you, whether to torture you to try and find out where I am, or
because he thinks by holding you hostage I’d come and try to rescue
you.”
Uncle Vernon’s and Harry’s eyes
met. Harry was sure that in that instant they were both wondering the
same thing. Then Uncle Vernon walked on and Harry resumed, “You’ve
got to go into hiding and the Order wants to help. You’re being
offered serious protection, the best there is.”
Uncle Vernon said nothing, but
continued to pace up and down. Outside the sun hung low over the
privet hedges. The next-door neighbor’s lawn mower stalled again.
“I thought there was a Ministry of
Magic?” asked Vernon Dursley abruptly.
“There is,” said Harry, surprised.
“Well, then, why can’t they protect
us? It seems to me that, as innocent victims, guilty of nothing more
than harboring a marked man, we ought to qualify for government
protection!”
Harry laughed; he could not help
himself. It was so very typical of his uncle to put his hopes in the
establishment, even within this world that he despised and
mistrusted.
“You heard what Mr. Weasley and
Kingsley said,” Harry replied. “We think the Ministry has been
infiltrated.”
Uncle Vernon strode to the fireplace
and back, breathing so heavily that his great black mustache rippled,
his face still purple with concentration.
“All right,” he said, stopping in
front of Harry yet again. “All right, let’s say, for the sake of
argument, we accept this protection. I still don’t see why we can’t
have that Kingsley bloke.”
Harry managed not to roll his eyes, but
with difficulty. This question had also been addressed half a dozen
times.
“As I’ve told you,” he said
through gritted teeth, “Kingsley is protecting the Mug—I mean,
your Prime Minister.”
“Exactly—he’s the best!” said
Uncle Vernon, pointing at the blank television screen. The Dursleys
had spotted Kingsley on the news, walking along discreetly behind the
Muggle Prime Minister as he visited a hospital. This, and the fact
that Kingsley had mastered the knack of dressing like a Muggle, not
to mention a certain reassuring something in his slow, deep voice,
had caused the Dursleys to take to Kingsley in a way that they had
certainly not done with any other wizard, although it was true that
they had never seen him with his earring in.
“Well, he’s taken,” said Harry.
“But Hestia Jones and Dedalus Diggle are more than up to the job—”
“If we’d even seen CVs…” began
Uncle Vernon, but Harry lost patience. Getting to his feet, he
advanced on his uncle, now pointing at the TV set himself.
“These accidents aren’t
accidents—the crashes and explosions and derailments and whatever
else has happened since we last watched the news. People are
disappearing and dying and he’s behind it—Voldemort. I’ve told
you this over and over again, he kills Muggles for fun. Even the
fogs—they’re caused by dementors, and if you can’t remember
what they are, ask your son!”
Dudley’s hands jerked upward to cover
his mouth. With his parents’ and Harry’s eyes upon him, he slowly
lowered them again and asked, “There are… more of them?”
“More?” laughed Harry. “More than
the two that attacked us, you mean? Of course there are, there are
hundreds, maybe thousands by this time, seeing as they feed off fear
and despair—”
“All right, all right,” blustered
Vernon Dursley. “You’ve made your point—”
“I hope so,” said Harry, “because
once I’m seventeen, all of them—Death Eaters, dementors, maybe
even Inferi—which means dead bodies enchanted by a Dark wizard—will
be able to find you and will certainly attack you. And if you
remember the last time you tried to outrun wizards, I think you’ll
agree you need help.”
There was a brief silence in which the
distant echo of Hagrid smashing down a wooden front door seemed to
reverberate through the intervening years. Aunt Petunia was looking
at Uncle Vernon; Dudley was staring at Harry. Finally Uncle Vernon
blurted out, “But what about my work? What about Dudley’s school?
I don’t suppose those things matter to a bunch of layabout
wizards—”
“Don’t you understand?” shouted
Harry. “They will torture and kill you like they did my parents!”
“Dad,” said Dudley in a loud voice,
“Dad—I’m going with these Order people.”
“Dudley,” said Harry, “for the
first time in your life, you’re talking sense.”
He knew that the battle was won. If
Dudley was frightened enough to accept the Order’s help, his
parents would accompany him: There could be no question of being
separated from their Diddykins. Harry glanced at the carriage clock
on the mantelpiece.
“They’ll be here in about five
minutes,” he said, and when none of the Dursleys replied, he left
the room. The prospect of parting—probably forever—from his aunt,
uncle, and cousin was one that he was able to contemplate quite
cheerfully, but there was nevertheless a certain awkwardness in the
air. What did you say to one another at the end of sixteen years’
solid dislike?
Back in his bedroom, Harry fiddled
aimlessly with his rucksack, then poked a couple of owl nuts through
the bars of Hedwig’s cage. They fell with dull thuds to the bottom,
where she ignored them.
“We’re leaving soon, really soon,”
Harry told her. “And then you’ll be able to fly again.”
The doorbell rang. Harry hesitated,
then headed back out of his room and downstairs. It was too much to
expect Hestia and Dedalus to cope with the Dursleys on their own.
“Harry Potter!” squeaked an excited
voice, the moment Harry had opened the door; a small man in a mauve
top hat was sweeping him a deep bow. “An honor, as ever!”
“Thanks, Dedalus,” said Harry,
bestowing a small and embarrassed smile upon the dark-haired Hestia.
“It’s really good of you to do this… They’re through here, my
aunt and uncle and cousin…”
“Good day to you, Harry Potter’s
relatives!” said Dedalus happily, striding into the living room.
The Dursleys did not look at all happy to be addressed thus; Harry
half expected another change of mind. Dudley shrank nearer to his
mother at the sight of the witch and wizard.
“I see you are packed and ready.
Excellent! The plan, as Harry has told you, is a simple one,” said
Dedalus, pulling an immense pocket watch out of his waistcoat and
examining it. “We shall be leaving before Harry does. Due to the
danger of using magic in your house—Harry being still underage, it
could provide the Ministry with an excuse to arrest him—we shall be
driving, say, ten miles or so, before Disapparating to the safe
location we have picked out for you. You know how to drive, I take
it?” he asked Uncle Vernon politely.
“Know how to—? Of course I ruddy
well know how to drive!” spluttered Uncle Vernon.
“Very clever of you, sir, very
clever, I personally would be utterly bamboozled by all those buttons
and knobs,” said Dedalus. He was clearly under the impression that
he was flattering Vernon Dursley, who was visibly losing confidence
in the plan with every word Dedalus spoke.
“Can’t even drive,” he muttered
under his breath, his mustache rippling indignantly, but fortunately
neither Dedalus nor Hestia seemed to hear him.
“You, Harry,” Dedalus continued,
“will wait here for your guard. There has been a little change in
the arrangements—”
“What d’you mean?” said Harry at
once. “I thought Mad-Eye was going to come and take me by
Side-Along-Apparition?”
“Can’t do it,” said Hestia
tersely. “Mad-Eye will explain.”
The Dursleys, who had listened to all
of this with looks of utter incomprehension on their faces, jumped as
a loud voice screeched, “Hurry up!” Harry looked all around the
room before realizing that the voice had issued from Dedalus’s
pocket watch.
“Quite right, we’re operating to a
very tight schedule,” said Dedalus, nodding at his watch and
tucking it back into his waistcoat. “We are attempting to time your
departure from the house with your family’s Disapparition, Harry;
thus, the charm breaks at the moment you all head for safety.” He
turned to the Dursleys. “Well, are we all packed and ready to go?”
None of them answered him. Uncle Vernon
was still staring, appalled, at the bulge in Dedalus’s waistcoat
pocket.
“Perhaps we should wait outside in
the hall, Dedalus,” murmured Hestia. She clearly felt that it would
be tactless for them to remain in the room while Harry and the
Dursleys exchanged loving, possibly tearful farewells.
“There’s no need,” Harry
muttered, but Uncle Vernon made any further explanation unnecessary
by saying loudly,
“Well, this is good-bye, then, boy.”
He swung his right arm upward to shake
Harry’s hand, but at the last moment seemed unable to face it, and
merely closed his fist and began swinging it backward and forward
like a metronome.
“Ready, Diddy?” asked Aunt Petunia,
fussily checking the clasp of her handbag so as to avoid looking at
Harry altogether.
Dudley did not answer, but stood there
with his mouth slightly ajar, reminding Harry a little of the giant,
Grawp.
“Come along, then,” said Uncle
Vernon.
He had already reached the living room
door when Dudley mumbled, “I don’t understand.”
“What don’t you understand,
popkin?” asked Aunt Petunia, looking up at her son.
Dudley raised a large, hamlike hand to
point at Harry.
“Why isn’t he coming with us?”
Uncle Vernon and Aunt Petunia froze
where they stood, staring at Dudley as though he had just expressed a
desire to become a ballerina.
“What?” said Uncle Vernon loudly.
“Why isn’t he coming too?” asked
Dudley.
“Well, he—he doesn’t want to,”
said Uncle Vernon, turning to glare at Harry and adding, “You don’t
want to, do you?”
“Not in the slightest,” said Harry.
“There you are,” Uncle Vernon told
Dudley. “Now come on, we’re off.”
He marched out of the room. They heard
the front door open, but Dudley did not move and after a few
faltering steps Aunt Petunia stopped too.
“What now?” barked Uncle Vernon,
reappearing in the doorway.
It seemed that Dudley was struggling
with concepts too difficult to put into words. After several moments
of apparently painful internal struggle he said, “But where’s he
going to go?”
Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon looked at
each other. It was clear that Dudley was frightening them. Hestia
Jones broke the silence.
“But… surely you know where your
nephew is going?” she asked, looking bewildered.
“Certainly we know,” said Vernon
Dursley. “He’s off with some of your lot, isn’t he? Right,
Dudley, let’s get in the car, you heard the man, we’re in a
hurry.”
Again, Vernon Dursley marched as far as
the front door, but Dudley did not follow.
“Off with some of our lot?”
Hestia looked outraged. Harry had met
this attitude before: Witches and wizards seemed stunned that his
closest living relatives took so little interest in the famous Harry
Potter.
“It’s fine,” Harry assured her.
“It doesn’t matter, honestly.”
“Doesn’t matter?” repeated
Hestia, her voice rising ominously. “Don’t these people realize
what you’ve been through? What danger you are in? The unique
position you hold in the hearts of the anti-Voldemort movement?”
“Er—no, they don’t,” said
Harry. “They think I’m a waste of space, actually, but I’m used
to—”
“I don’t think you’re a waste of
space.”
If Harry had not seen Dudley’s lips
move, he might not have believed it. As it was, he stared at Dudley
for several seconds before accepting that it must have been his
cousin who had spoken; for one thing, Dudley had turned red. Harry
was embarrassed and astonished himself.
“Well… er… thanks, Dudley.”
Again, Dudley appeared to grapple with
thoughts too unwieldy for expression before mumbling, “You saved my
life.”
“Not really,” said Harry. “It was
your soul the dementor would have taken…”
He looked curiously at his cousin. They
had had virtually no contact during this summer or last, as Harry had
come back to Privet Drive so briefly and kept to his room so much. It
now dawned on Harry, however, that the cup of cold tea on which he
had trodden that morning might not have been a booby trap at all.
Although rather touched, he was nevertheless quite relieved that
Dudley appeared to have exhausted his ability to express his
feelings. After opening his mouth once or twice more, Dudley subsided
into scarlet-faced silence.
Aunt Petunia burst into tears. Hestia
Jones gave her an approving look that changed to outrage as Aunt
Petunia ran forward and embraced Dudley rather than Harry.
“S-so sweet, Dudders…” she sobbed
into his massive chest. “S-such a lovely b-boy… s-saying thank
you…”
“But he hasn’t said thank you at
all!” said Hestia indignantly. “He only said he didn’t think
Harry was a waste of space!”
“Yeah, but coming from Dudley that’s
like ‘I love you,’” said Harry, torn between annoyance and a
desire to laugh as Aunt Petunia continued to clutch at Dudley as if
he had just saved Harry from a burning building.
“Are we going or not?” roared Uncle
Vernon, reappearing yet again at the living room door. “I thought
we were on a tight schedule!”
“Yes—yes, we are,” said Dedalus
Diggle, who had been watching these exchanges with an air of
bemusement and now seemed to pull himself together. “We really must
be off. Harry—”
He tripped forward and wrung Harry’s
hand with both of his own.
“—good luck. I hope we meet again.
The hopes of the Wizarding world rest upon your shoulders.”
“Oh,” said Harry, “right.
Thanks.”
“Farewell, Harry,” said Hestia,
also clasping his hand. “Our thoughts go with you.”
“I hope everything’s okay,” said
Harry with a glance toward Aunt Petunia and Dudley.
“Oh, I’m sure we shall end up the
best of chums,” said Diggle brightly, waving his hat as he left the
room. Hestia followed him.
Dudley gently released himself from his
mother’s clutches and walked toward Harry, who had to repress an
urge to threaten him with magic. Then Dudley held out his large, pink
hand.
“Blimey, Dudley,” said Harry over
Aunt Petunia’s renewed sobs, “did the dementors blow a different
personality into you?”
“Dunno,” muttered Dudley. “See
you, Harry.”
“Yeah…” said Harry, taking
Dudley’s hand and shaking it. “Maybe. Take care, Big D.”
Dudley nearly smiled, then lumbered
from the room. Harry heard his heavy footfalls on the graveled drive,
and then a car door slammed.
Aunt Petunia, whose face had been
buried in her handkerchief, looked around at the sound. She did not
seem to have expected to find herself alone with Harry. Hastily
stowing her wet handkerchief into her pocket, she said,
“Well—good-bye,” and marched toward the door without looking at
him.
“Good-bye,” said Harry.
She stopped and looked back. For a
moment Harry had the strangest feeling that she wanted to say
something to him: She gave him an odd, tremulous look and seemed to
teeter on the edge of speech, but then, with a little jerk of her
head, she bustled out of the room after her husband and son.
Chapter 4
The Seven Potters
Harry ran back upstairs to his bedroom,
arriving at the window just in time to see the Dursleys’ car
swinging out of the drive and off up the road. Dedalus’s top hat
was visible between Aunt Petunia and Dudley in the backseat. The car
turned right at the end of Privet Drive, its windows burned scarlet
for a moment in the now setting sun, and then it was gone.
Harry picked up Hedwig’s cage, his
Firebolt, and his rucksack, gave his unnaturally tidy bedroom one
last sweeping look, and then made his ungainly way back downstairs to
the hall, where he deposited cage, broomstick, and bag near the foot
of the stairs. The light was fading rapidly now, the hall full of
shadows in the evening light. It felt most strange to stand here in
the silence and know that he was about to leave the house for the
last time. Long ago, when he had been left alone while the Dursleys
went out to enjoy themselves, the hours of solitude had been a rare
treat: Pausing only to sneak something tasty from the fridge, he had
rushed upstairs to play on Dudley’s computer, or put on the
television and flicked through the channels to his heart’s content.
It gave him an odd, empty feeling to remember those times; it was
like remembering a younger brother whom he had lost.
“Don’t you want to take a last look
at the place?” he asked Hedwig, who was still sulking with her head
under her wing. “We’ll never be here again. Don’t you want to
remember all the good times? I mean, look at this doormat. What
memories… Dudley puked on it after I saved him from the dementors…
Turns out he was grateful after all, can you believe it?…And last
summer, Dumbledore walked through that front door…”
Harry lost the thread of his thoughts
for a moment and Hedwig did nothing to help him retrieve it, but
continued to sit with her head under her wing. Harry turned his back
on the front door.
“And under here, Hedwig”—Harry
pulled open a door under the stairs—“is where I used to sleep!
You never knew me then—Blimey, it’s small, I’d forgotten…”
Harry looked around at the stacked
shoes and umbrellas, remembering how he used to wake every morning
looking up at the underside of the staircase, which was more often
than not adorned with a spider or two. Those had been the days before
he had known anything about his true identity; before he had found
out how his parents had died or why such strange things often
happened around him. But Harry could still remember the dreams that
had dogged him, even in those days: confused dreams involving flashes
of green light and once—Uncle Vernon had nearly crashed the car
when Harry had recounted it—a flying motorbike…
There was a sudden, deafening roar from
somewhere nearby. Harry straightened up with a jerk and smacked the
top of his head on the low door frame. Pausing only to employ a few
of Uncle Vernon’s choicest swear words, he staggered back into the
kitchen, clutching his head and staring out of the window into the
back garden.
The darkness seemed to be rippling, the
air itself quivering. Then, one by one, figures began to pop into
sight as their Disillusionment Charms lifted. Dominating the scene
was Hagrid, wearing a helmet and goggles and sitting astride an
enormous motorbike with a black sidecar attached. All around him
other people were dismounting from brooms and, in two cases,
skeletal, black winged horses.
Wrenching open the back door, Harry
hurtled into their midst. There was a general cry of greeting as
Hermione flung her arms around him, Ron clapped him on the back, and
Hagrid said, “All righ’, Harry? Ready fer the off?”
“Definitely,” said Harry, beaming
around at them all. “But I wasn’t expecting this many of you!”
“Change of plan,” growled Mad-Eye,
who was holding two enormous, bulging sacks, and whose magical eye
was spinning from darkening sky to house to garden with dizzying
rapidity. “Let’s get undercover before we talk you through it.”
Harry led them all back into the
kitchen where, laughing and chattering, they settled on chairs, sat
themselves upon Aunt Petunia’s gleaming work surfaces, or leaned up
against her spotless appliances: Ron, long and lanky; Hermione, her
bushy hair tied back in a long plait; Fred and George, grinning
identically; Bill, badly scarred and long-haired; Mr. Weasley,
kind-faced, balding, his spectacles a little awry; Mad-Eye,
battle-worn, one-legged, his bright blue magical eye whizzing in its
socket; Tonks, whose short hair was her favorite shade of bright
pink; Lupin, grayer, more lined; Fleur, slender and beautiful, with
her long silvery blonde hair; Kingsley, bald, black,
broad-shouldered; Hagrid, with his wild hair and beard, standing
hunchbacked to avoid hitting his head on the ceiling; and Mundungus
Fletcher, small, dirty, and hangdog, with his droopy basset hound’s
eyes and matted hair. Harry’s heart seemed to expand and glow at
the sight: He felt incredibly fond of all of them, even Mundungus,
whom he had tried to strangle the last time they had met.
“Kingsley, I thought you were looking
after the Muggle Prime Minister?” he called across the room.
“He can get along without me for one
night,” said Kingsley. “You’re more important.”
“Harry, guess what?” said Tonks
from her perch on top of the washing machine, and she wiggled her
left hand at him; a ring glittered there.
“You got married?” Harry yelped,
looking from her to Lupin.
“I’m sorry you couldn’t be there,
Harry, it was very quiet.”
“That’s brilliant, congrat—”
“All right, all right, we’ll have
time for a cozy catch-up later!” roared Moody over the hubbub, and
silence fell in the kitchen. Moody dropped his sacks at his feet and
turned to Harry. “As Dedalus probably told you, we had to abandon
Plan A. Pius Thicknesse has gone over, which gives us a big problem.
He’s made it an imprisonable offense to connect this house to the
Floo Network, place a Portkey here, or Apparate in or out. All done
in the name of your protection, to prevent You-Know-Who getting in at
you. Absolutely pointless, seeing as your mother’s charm does that
already. What he’s really done is to stop you getting out of here
safely.
“Second problem: You’re underage,
which means you’ve still got the Trace on you.”
“I don’t—”
“The Trace, the Trace!” said
Mad-Eye impatiently. “The charm that detects magical activity
around under-seventeens, the way the Ministry finds out about
underage magic! If you, or anyone around you, casts a spell to get
you out of here, Thicknesse is going to know about it, and so will
the Death Eaters.
“We can’t wait for the Trace to
break, because the moment you turn seventeen you’ll lose all the
protection your mother gave you. In short: Pius Thicknesse thinks
he’s got you cornered good and proper.”
Harry could not help but agree with the
unknown Thicknesse.
“So what are we going to do?”
“We’re going to use the only means
of transport left to us, the only ones the Trace can’t detect,
because we don’t need to cast spells to use them: brooms,
thestrals, and Hagrid’s motorbike.”
Harry could see flaws in this plan;
however, he held his tongue to give Mad-Eye the chance to address
them.
“Now, your mother’s charm will only
break under two conditions: when you come of age, or”—Moody
gestured around the pristine kitchen—“you no longer call this
place home. You and your aunt and uncle are going your separate ways
tonight, in the full understanding that you’re never going to live
together again, correct?”
Harry nodded.
“So this time, when you leave,
there’ll be no going back, and the charm will break the moment you
get outside its range. We’re choosing to break it early, because
the alternative is waiting for You-Know-Who to come and seize you the
moment you turn seventeen.
“The one thing we’ve got on our
side is that You-Know-Who doesn’t know we’re moving you tonight.
We’ve leaked a fake trail to the Ministry: They think you’re not
leaving until the thirtieth. However, this is You-Know-Who we’re
dealing with, so we can’t just rely on him getting the date wrong;
he’s bound to have a couple of Death Eaters patrolling the skies in
this general area, just in case. So, we’ve given a dozen different
houses every protection we can throw at them. They all look like they
could be the place we’re going to hide you, they’ve all got some
connection with the Order: my house, Kingsley’s place, Molly’s
Auntie Muriel’s—you get the idea.”
“Yeah,” said Harry, not entirely
truthfully, because he could still spot a gaping hole in the plan.
“You’ll be going to Tonks’s
parents. Once you’re within the boundaries of the protective
enchantments we’ve put on their house, you’ll be able to use a
Portkey to the Burrow. Any questions?”
“Er—yes,” said Harry. “Maybe
they won’t know which of the twelve secure houses I’m heading for
at first, but won’t it be sort of obvious once”—he performed a
quick headcount—“fourteen of us fly off toward Tonks’s
parents’?”
“Ah,” said Moody, “I forgot to
mention the key point. Fourteen of us won’t be flying to Tonks’s
parents’. There will be seven Harry Potters moving through the
skies tonight, each of them with a companion, each pair heading for a
different safe house.”
From inside his cloak Moody now
withdrew a flask of what looked like mud. There was no need for him
to say another word; Harry understood the rest of the plan
immediately.
“No!” he said loudly, his voice
ringing through the kitchen. “No way!”
“I told them you’d take it like
this,” said Hermione with a hint of complacency.
“If you think I’m going to let six
people risk their lives—!”
“—because it’s the first time for
all of us,” said Ron.
“This is different, pretending to be
me—”
“Well, none of us really fancy it,
Harry,” said Fred earnestly. “Imagine if something went wrong and
we were stuck as specky, scrawny gits forever.”
Harry did not smile.
“You can’t do it if I don’t
cooperate, you need me to give you some hair.”
“Well, that’s that plan scuppered,”
said George. “Obviously there’s no chance at all of us getting a
bit of your hair unless you cooperate.”
“Yeah, thirteen of us against one
bloke who’s not allowed to use magic; we’ve got no chance,”
said Fred.
“Funny,” said Harry, “really
amusing.”
“If it has to come to force, then it
will,” growled Moody, his magical eye now quivering a little in its
socket as he glared at Harry. “Everyone here’s overage, Potter,
and they’re all prepared to take the risk.”
Mundungus shrugged and grimaced; the
magical eye swerved sideways to glare at him out of the side of
Moody’s head.
“Let’s have no more arguments.
Time’s wearing on. I want a few of your hairs, boy, now.”
“But this is mad, there’s no need—”
“No need!” snarled Moody. “With
You-Know-Who out there and half the Ministry on his side? Potter, if
we’re lucky he’ll have swallowed the fake bait and he’ll be
planning to ambush you on the thirtieth, but he’d be mad not to
have a Death Eater or two keeping an eye out, it’s what I’d do.
They might not be able to get at you or this house while your
mother’s charm holds, but it’s about to break and they know the
rough position of the place. Our only chance is to use decoys. Even
You-Know-Who can’t split himself into seven.”
Harry caught Hermione’s eye and
looked away at once.
“So, Potter—some of your hair, if
you please.”
Harry glanced at Ron, who grimaced at
him in a just-do-it sort of way.
“Now!” barked Moody.
With all of their eyes upon him, Harry
reached up to the top of his head, grabbed a hank of hair, and
pulled.
“Good,” said Moody, limping forward
as he pulled the stopper out of the flask of potion. “Straight in
here, if you please.”
Harry dropped the hair into the mudlike
liquid. The moment it made contact with its surface, the potion began
to froth and smoke, then, all at once, it turned a clear, bright
gold.
“Ooh, you look much tastier than
Crabbe and Goyle, Harry,” said Hermione, before catching sight of
Ron’s raised eyebrows, blushing slightly, and saying, “Oh, you
know what I mean—Goyle’s potion looked like bogies.”
“Right then, fake Potters line up
over here, please,” said Moody.
Ron, Hermione, Fred, George, and Fleur
lined up in front of Aunt Petunia’s gleaming sink.
“We’re one short,” said Lupin.
“Here,” said Hagrid gruffly, and he
lifted Mundungus by the scruff of the neck and dropped him down
beside Fleur, who wrinkled her nose pointedly and moved along to
stand between Fred and George instead.
“I’ve toldjer, I’d sooner be a
protector,” said Mundungus.
“Shut it,” growled Moody. “As
I’ve already told you, you spineless worm, any Death Eaters we run
into will be aiming to capture Potter, not kill him. Dumbledore
always said You-Know-Who would want to finish Potter in person. It’ll
be the protectors who have got the most to worry about, the Death
Eaters’ll want to kill them.”
Mundungus did not look particularly
reassured, but Moody was already pulling half a dozen eggcup-sized
glasses from inside his cloak, which he handed out, before pouring a
little Polyjuice Potion into each one.
“Altogether, then…”
Ron, Hermione, Fred, George, Fleur, and
Mundungus drank. All of them gasped and grimaced as the potion hit
their throats: At once, their features began to bubble and distort
like hot wax. Hermione and Mundungus were shooting upward; Ron, Fred,
and George were shrinking; their hair was darkening, Hermione’s and
Fleur’s appearing to shoot backward into their skulls.
Moody, quite unconcerned, was now
loosening the ties of the large sacks he had brought with him. When
he straightened up again, there were six Harry Potters gasping and
panting in front of him.
Fred and George turned to each other
and said together, “Wow—we’re identical!”
“I dunno, though, I think I’m still
better-looking,” said Fred, examining his reflection in the kettle.
“Bah,” said Fleur, checking herself
in the microwave door, “Bill, don’t look at me—I’m ’ideous.”
“Those whose clothes are a bit roomy,
I’ve got smaller here,” said Moody, indicating the first sack,
“and vice versa. Don’t forget the glasses, there’s six pairs in
the side pocket. And when you’re dressed, there’s luggage in the
other sack.”
The real Harry thought that this might
just be the most bizarre thing he had ever seen, and he had seen some
extremely odd things. He watched as his six doppelgangers rummaged in
the sacks, pulling out sets of clothes, putting on glasses, stuffing
their own things away. He felt like asking them to show a little more
respect for his privacy as they all began stripping off with
impunity, clearly much more at ease with displaying his body than
they would have been with their own.
“I knew Ginny was lying about that
tattoo,” said Ron, looking down at his bare chest.
“Harry, your eyesight really is
awful,” said Hermione, as she put on glasses.
Once dressed, the fake Harrys took
rucksacks and owl cages, each containing a stuffed snowy owl, from
the second sack.
“Good,” said Moody, as at last
seven dressed, bespectacled, and luggage-laden Harrys faced him. “The
pairs will be as follows: Mundungus will be traveling with me, by
broom—”
“Why’m I with you?” grunted the
Harry nearest the back door.
“Because you’re the one that needs
watching,” growled Moody, and sure enough, his magical eye did not
waver from Mundungus as he continued, “Arthur and Fred—”
“I’m George,” said the twin at
whom Moody was pointing. “Can’t you even tell us apart when we’re
Harry?”
“Sorry, George—”
“I’m only yanking your wand, I’m
Fred really—”
“Enough messing around!” snarled
Moody. “The other one—George or Fred or whoever you are—you’re
with Remus. Miss Delacour—”
“I’m taking Fleur on a thestral,”
said Bill. “She’s not that fond of brooms.”
Fleur walked over to stand beside him,
giving him a soppy, slavish look that Harry hoped with all his heart
would never appear on his face again.
“Miss Granger with Kingsley, again by
thestral—”
Hermione looked reassured as she
answered Kingsley’s smile; Harry knew that Hermione too lacked
confidence on a broomstick.
“Which leaves you and me, Ron!”
said Tonks brightly, knocking over a mug tree as she waved at him.
Ron did not look quite as pleased as
Hermione.
“An’ you’re with me, Harry. That
all righ’?” said Hagrid, looking a little anxious. “We’ll be
on the bike, brooms an’ thestrals can’t take me weight, see. Not
a lot o’ room on the seat with me on it, though, so you’ll be in
the sidecar.”
“That’s great,” said Harry, not
altogether truthfully.
“We think the Death Eaters will
expect you to be on a broom,” said Moody, who seemed to guess how
Harry was feeling. “Snape’s had plenty of time to tell them
everything about you he’s never mentioned before, so if we do run
into any Death Eaters, we’re betting they’ll choose one of the
Potters who look at home on a broomstick. All right then,” he went
on, tying up the sack with the fake Potters’ clothes in it and
leading the way back to the door, “I make it three minutes until
we’re supposed to leave. No point locking the back door, it won’t
keep the Death Eaters out when they come looking… Come on…”
Harry hurried into the hall to fetch
his rucksack, Firebolt, and Hedwig’s cage before joining the others
in the dark back garden. On every side broomsticks were leaping into
hands; Hermione had already been helped up onto a great black
thestral by Kingsley, Fleur onto the other by Bill. Hagrid was
standing ready beside the motorbike, goggles on.
“Is this it? Is this Sirius’s
bike?”
“The very same,” said Hagrid,
beaming down at Harry. “An’ the last time yeh was on it, Harry, I
could fit yeh in one hand!”
Harry could not help but feel a little
humiliated as he got into the sidecar. It placed him several feet
below everybody else: Ron smirked at the sight of him sitting there
like a child in a bumper car. Harry stuffed his rucksack and
broomstick down by his feet and rammed Hedwig’s cage between his
knees. It was extremely uncomfortable.
“Arthur’s done a bit o’
tinkerin’,” said Hagrid, quite oblivious to Harry’s discomfort.
He settled himself astride the motorcycle, which creaked slightly and
sank inches into the ground. “It’s got a few tricks up its
handlebars now. Tha’ one was my idea.”
He pointed a thick finger at a purple
button near the speedometer.
“Please be careful, Hagrid,” said
Mr. Weasley, who was standing beside them, holding his broomstick.
“I’m still not sure that was advisable and it’s certainly only
to be used in emergencies.”
“All right then,” said Moody.
“Everyone ready, please; I want us all to leave at exactly the same
time or the whole point of the diversion’s lost.”
Everybody mounted their brooms.
“Hold tight now, Ron,” said Tonks,
and Harry saw Ron throw a furtive, guilty look at Lupin before
placing his hands on either side of her waist. Hagrid kicked the
motorbike into life: It roared like a dragon, and the sidecar began
to vibrate.
“Good luck, everyone,” shouted
Moody. “See you all in about an hour at the Burrow. On the count of
three. One… two… THREE.”
There was a great roar from the
motorbike, and Harry felt the sidecar give a nasty lurch: He was
rising through the air fast, his eyes watering slightly, hair whipped
back off his face. Around him brooms were soaring upward too; the
long black tail of a thestral flicked past. His legs, jammed into the
sidecar by Hedwig’s cage and his rucksack, were already sore and
starting to go numb. So great was his discomfort that he almost
forgot to take a last glimpse of number four, Privet Drive; by the
time he looked over the edge of the sidecar he could no longer tell
which one it was. Higher and higher they climbed into the sky—
And then, out of nowhere, out of
nothing, they were surrounded. At least thirty hooded figures,
suspended in midair, formed a vast circle in the midst of which the
Order members had risen, oblivious—
Screams, a blaze of green light on
every side: Hagrid gave a yell and the motorbike rolled over. Harry
lost any sense of where they were: Streetlights above him, yells
around him, he was clinging to the sidecar for dear life. Hedwig’s
cage, the Firebolt, and his rucksack slipped from beneath his knees—
“No—HEDWIG!”
The broomstick spun to earth, but he
just managed to seize the strap of his rucksack and the top of the
cage as the motorbike swung the right way up again. A second’s
relief, and then another burst of green light. The owl screeched and
fell to the floor of the cage.
“No—NO!”
The motorbike zoomed forward; Harry
glimpsed hooded Death Eaters scattering as Hagrid blasted through
their circle.
“Hedwig—Hedwig—”
But the owl lay motionless and pathetic
as a toy on the floor of her cage. He could not take it in, and his
terror for the others was paramount. He glanced over his shoulder and
saw a mass of people moving, flares of green light, two pairs of
people on brooms soaring off into the distance, but he could not tell
who they were—
“Hagrid, we’ve got to go back,
we’ve got to go back!” he yelled over the thunderous roar of the
engine, pulling out his wand, ramming Hedwig’s cage onto the floor,
refusing to believe that she was dead. “Hagrid, TURN AROUND!”
“My job’s ter get you there safe,
Harry!” bellowed Hagrid, and he opened the throttle.
“Stop—STOP!” Harry shouted, but
as he looked back again two jets of green light flew past his left
ear: Four Death Eaters had broken away from the circle and were
pursuing them, aiming for Hagrid’s broad back. Hagrid swerved, but
the Death Eaters were keeping up with the bike; more curses shot
after them, and Harry had to sink low into the sidecar to avoid them.
Wriggling around he cried, “Stupefy!” and a red bolt of light
shot from his own wand, cleaving a gap between the four pursuing
Death Eaters as they scattered to avoid it.
“Hold on, Harry, this’ll do for
’em!” roared Hagrid, and Harry looked up just in time to see
Hagrid slamming a thick finger into a green button near the fuel
gauge.
A wall, a solid brick wall, erupted out
of the exhaust pipe. Craning his neck, Harry saw it expand into being
in midair. Three of the Death Eaters swerved and avoided it, but the
fourth was not so lucky: He vanished from view and then dropped like
a boulder from behind it, his broomstick broken into pieces. One of
his fellows slowed up to save him, but they and the airborne wall
were swallowed by darkness as Hagrid leaned low over the handlebars
and sped up.
More Killing Curses flew past Harry’s
head from the two remaining Death Eaters’ wands; they were aiming
for Hagrid. Harry responded with further Stunning Spells: Red and
green collided in midair in a shower of multicolored sparks, and
Harry thought wildly of fireworks, and the Muggles below who would
have no idea what was happening—
“Here we go again, Harry, hold on!”
yelled Hagrid, and he jabbed at a second button. This time a great
net burst from the bike’s exhaust, but the Death Eaters were ready
for it. Not only did they swerve to avoid it, but the companion who
had slowed to save their unconscious friend had caught up. He bloomed
suddenly out of the darkness and now three of them were pursuing the
motorbike, all shooting curses after it.
“This’ll do it, Harry, hold on
tight!” yelled Hagrid, and Harry saw him slam his whole hand onto
the purple button beside the speedometer.
With an unmistakable bellowing roar,
dragon fire burst from the exhaust, white-hot and blue, and the
motorbike shot forward like a bullet with a sound of wrenching metal.
Harry saw the Death Eaters swerve out of sight to avoid the deadly
trail of flame, and at the same time felt the sidecar sway ominously:
Its metal connections to the bike had splintered with the force of
acceleration.
“It’s all righ’, Harry!”
bellowed Hagrid, now thrown flat onto his back by the surge of speed;
nobody was steering now, and the sidecar was starting to twist
violently in the bike’s slipstream.
“I’m on it, Harry, don’ worry!”
Hagrid yelled, and from inside his jacket pocket he pulled his
flowery pink umbrella.
“Hagrid! No! Let me!”
“REPARO!”
There was a deafening bang and the
sidecar broke away from the bike completely: Harry sped forward,
propelled by the impetus of the bike’s flight, then the sidecar
began to lose height—
In desperation Harry pointed his wand
at the sidecar and shouted, “Wingardium Leviosa!”
The sidecar rose like a cork,
unsteerable but at least still airborne: He had but a split second’s
relief, however, as more curses streaked past him: The three Death
Eaters were closing in.
“I’m comin’, Harry!” Hagrid
yelled from out of the darkness, but Harry could feel the sidecar
beginning to sink again: Crouching as low as he could, he pointed at
the middle of the oncoming figures and yelled, “Impedimenta!”
The jinx hit the middle Death Eater in
the chest: For a moment the man was absurdly spread-eagled in midair
as though he had hit an invisible barrier: One of his fellows almost
collided with him—
Then the sidecar began to fall in
earnest, and the remaining Death Eater shot a curse so close to Harry
that he had to duck below the rim of the car, knocking out a tooth on
the edge of his seat—
“I’m comin’, Harry, I’m
comin’!”
A huge hand seized the back of Harry’s
robes and hoisted him out of the plummeting sidecar; Harry pulled his
rucksack with him as he dragged himself onto the motorbike’s seat
and found himself back-to-back with Hagrid. As they soared upward,
away from the two remaining Death Eaters, Harry spat blood out of his
mouth, pointed his wand at the falling sidecar, and yelled,
“Confringo!”
He knew a dreadful, gut-wrenching pang
for Hedwig as it exploded; the Death Eater nearest it was blasted off
his broom and fell from sight; his companion fell back and vanished.
“Harry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry,”
moaned Hagrid, “I shouldn’ta tried ter repair it meself—yeh’ve
got no room—”
“It’s not a problem, just keep
flying!” Harry shouted back, as two more Death Eaters emerged out
of the darkness, drawing closer.
As the curses came shooting across the
intervening space again, Hagrid swerved and zigzagged: Harry knew
that Hagrid did not dare use the dragon-fire button again, with Harry
seated so insecurely. Harry sent Stunning Spell after Stunning Spell
back at their pursuers, barely holding them off. He shot another
blocking jinx at them: The closest Death Eater swerved to avoid it
and his hood slipped, and by the red light of his next Stunning
Spell, Harry saw the strangely blank face of Stanley Shunpike—Stan—
“Expelliarmus!” Harry yelled.
“That’s him, it’s him, it’s the
real one!”
The hooded Death Eater’s shout
reached Harry even above the thunder of the motorbike’s engine:
Next moment, both pursuers had fallen back and disappeared from view.
“Harry, what’s happened?”
bellowed Hagrid. “Where’ve they gone?”
“I don’t know!”
But Harry was afraid: The hooded Death
Eater had shouted “It’s the real one!”; how had he known? He
gazed around at the apparently empty darkness and felt its menace.
Where were they?
He clambered around on the seat to face
forward and seized hold of the back of Hagrid’s jacket.
“Hagrid, do the dragon-fire thing
again, let’s get out of here!”
“Hold on tight, then, Harry!”
There was a deafening, screeching roar
again and the white-blue fire shot from the exhaust: Harry felt
himself slipping backward off what little of the seat he had, Hagrid
flung backward upon him, barely maintaining his grip on the
handlebars—
“I think we’ve lost ’em Harry, I
think we’ve done it!” yelled Hagrid.
But Harry was not convinced: Fear
lapped at him as he looked left and right for pursuers he was sure
would come… Why had they fallen back? One of them had still had a
wand… It’s him… it’s the real one… They had said it right
after he had tried to Disarm Stan…
“We’re nearly there, Harry, we’ve
nearly made it!” shouted Hagrid.
Harry felt the bike drop a little,
though the lights down on the ground still seemed remote as stars.
Then the scar on his forehead burned
like fire; as a Death Eater appeared on either side of the bike, two
Killing Curses missed Harry by millimeters, cast from behind—
And then Harry saw him. Voldemort was
flying like smoke on the wind, without broomstick or thestral to hold
him, his snakelike face gleaming out of the blackness, his white
fingers raising his wand again—
Hagrid let out a bellow of fear and
steered the motorbike into a vertical dive. Clinging on for dear
life, Harry sent Stunning Spells flying at random into the whirling
night. He saw a body fly past him and knew he had hit one of them,
but then he heard a bang and saw sparks from the engine; the
motorbike spiraled through the air, completely out of control—
Green jets of light shot past them
again. Harry had no idea which way was up, which down: His scar was
still burning; he expected to die at any second. A hooded figure on a
broomstick was feet from him, he saw it raise its arm—
“NO!”
With a shout of fury Hagrid launched
himself off the bike at the Death Eater; to his horror, Harry saw
both Hagrid and the Death Eater falling out of sight, their combined
weight too much for the broomstick—
Barely gripping the plummeting bike
with his knees, Harry heard Voldemort scream, “Mine!”
It was over: He could not see or hear
where Voldemort was; he glimpsed another Death Eater swooping out of
the way and heard, “Avada—”
As the pain from Harry’s scar forced
his eyes shut, his wand acted of its own accord. He felt it drag his
hand around like some great magnet, saw a spurt of golden fire
through his half-closed eyelids, heard a crack and a scream of fury.
The remaining Death Eater yelled; Voldemort screamed, “No!”:
Somehow, Harry found his nose an inch from the dragon-fire button. He
punched it with his wand-free hand and the bike shot more flames into
the air, hurtling straight toward the ground.
“Hagrid!” Harry called, holding on
to the bike for dear life. “Hagrid—Accio Hagrid!”
The motorbike sped up, sucked toward
the earth. Face level with the handlebars, Harry could see nothing
but distant lights growing nearer and nearer: He was going to crash
and there was nothing he could do about it. Behind him came another
scream, “Your wand, Selwyn, give me your wand!”
He felt Voldemort before he saw him.
Looking sideways, he stared into the red eyes and was sure they would
be the last thing he ever saw: Voldemort preparing to curse him once
more—
And then Voldemort vanished. Harry
looked down and saw Hagrid spread-eagled on the ground below him. He
pulled hard at the handlebars to avoid hitting him, groped for the
brake, but with an earsplitting, ground-trembling crash, he smashed
into a muddy pond.
Chapter 5
Fallen Warrior
“Hagrid?”
Harry struggled to raise himself out of
the debris of metal and leather that surrounded him; his hands sank
into inches of muddy water as he tried to stand. He could not
understand where Voldemort had gone and expected him to swoop out of
the darkness at any moment. Something hot and wet was trickling down
his chin and from his forehead. He crawled out of the pond and
stumbled toward the great dark mass on the ground that was Hagrid.
“Hagrid? Hagrid, talk to me—”
But the dark mass did not stir.
“Who’s there? Is it Potter? Are you
Harry Potter?”
Harry did not recognize the man’s
voice. Then a woman shouted, “They’ve crashed, Ted! Crashed in
the garden!”
Harry’s head was swimming.
“Hagrid,” he repeated stupidly, and
his knees buckled.
The next thing he knew, he was lying on
his back on what felt like cushions, with a burning sensation in his
ribs and right arm. His missing tooth had been regrown. The scar on
his forehead was still throbbing.
“Hagrid?”
He opened his eyes and saw that he was
lying on a sofa in an unfamiliar, lamplit sitting room. His rucksack
lay on the floor a short distance away, wet and muddy. A fair-haired,
big-bellied man was watching Harry anxiously.
“Hagrid’s fine, son,” said the
man, “the wife’s seeing to him now. How are you feeling? Anything
else broken? I’ve fixed your ribs, your tooth, and your arm. I’m
Ted, by the way, Ted Tonks—Dora’s father.”
Harry sat up too quickly: Lights popped
in front of his eyes and he felt sick and giddy.
“Voldemort—”
“Easy, now,” said Ted Tonks,
placing a hand on Harry’s shoulder and pushing him back against the
cushions. “That was a nasty crash you just had. What happened,
anyway? Something go wrong with the bike? Arthur Weasley overstretch
himself again, him and his Muggle contraptions?”
“No,” said Harry, as his scar
pulsed like an open wound. “Death Eaters, loads of them—we were
chased—”
“Death Eaters?” said Ted sharply.
“What d’you mean, Death Eaters? I thought they didn’t know you
were being moved tonight, I thought—”
“They knew,” said Harry.
Ted Tonks looked up at the ceiling as
though he could see through it to the sky above.
“Well, we know our protective charms
hold, then, don’t we? They shouldn’t be able to get within a
hundred yards of the place in any direction.”
Now Harry understood why Voldemort had
vanished; it had been at the point when the motorbike crossed the
barrier of the Order’s charms. He only hoped they would continue to
work: He imagined Voldemort, a hundred yards above them as they
spoke, looking for a way to penetrate what Harry visualized as a
great transparent bubble.
He swung his legs off the sofa; he
needed to see Hagrid with his own eyes before he would believe that
he was alive. He had barely stood up, however, when a door opened and
Hagrid squeezed through it, his face covered in mud and blood,
limping a little but miraculously alive.
“Harry!”
Knocking over two delicate tables and
an aspidistra, he covered the floor between them in two strides and
pulled Harry into a hug that nearly cracked his newly repaired ribs.
“Blimey, Harry, how did yeh get out o’ that? I thought we were
both goners.”
“Yeah, me too. I can’t believe—”
Harry broke off. He had just noticed
the woman who had entered the room behind Hagrid.
“You!” he shouted, and he thrust
his hand into his pocket, but it was empty.
“Your wand’s here, son,” said
Ted, tapping it on Harry’s arm. “It fell right beside you, I
picked it up. And that’s my wife you’re shouting at.”
“Oh, I’m—I’m sorry.”
As she moved forward into the room,
Mrs. Tonks’s resemblance to her sister Bellatrix became much less
pronounced: Her hair was a light, soft brown and her eyes were wider
and kinder. Nevertheless, she looked a little haughty after Harry’s
exclamation.
“What happened to our daughter?”
she asked. “Hagrid said you were ambushed; where is Nymphadora?”
“I don’t know,” said Harry. “We
don’t know what happened to anyone else.”
She and Ted exchanged looks. A mixture
of fear and guilt gripped Harry at the sight of their expressions; if
any of the others had died, it was his fault, all his fault. He had
consented to the plan, given them his hair…
“The Portkey,” he said, remembering
all of a sudden. “We’ve got to get back to the Burrow and find
out—then we’ll be able to send you word, or—or Tonks will, once
she’s—”
“Dora’ll be okay, ’Dromeda,”
said Ted. “She knows her stuff, she’s been in plenty of tight
spots with the Aurors. The Portkey’s through here,” he added to
Harry. “It’s supposed to leave in three minutes, if you want to
take it.”
“Yeah, we do,” said Harry. He
seized his rucksack, swung it onto his shoulders. “I—”
He looked at Mrs. Tonks, wanting to
apologize for the state of fear in which he left her and for which he
felt so terribly responsible, but no words occurred to him that did
not seem hollow and insincere.
“I’ll tell Tonks—Dora—to send
word, when she… Thanks for patching us up, thanks for everything.
I—”
He was glad to leave the room and
follow Ted Tonks along a short hallway and into a bedroom. Hagrid
came after them, bending low to avoid hitting his head on the door
lintel.
“There you go, son. That’s the
Portkey.”
Mr. Tonks was pointing to a small,
silver-backed hairbrush lying on the dressing table.
“Thanks,” said Harry, reaching out
to place a finger on it, ready to leave.
“Wait a moment,” said Hagrid,
looking around. “Harry, where’s Hedwig?”
“She… she got hit,” said Harry.
The realization crashed over him: He
felt ashamed of himself as the tears stung his eyes. The owl had been
his companion, his one great link with the magical world whenever he
had been forced to return to the Dursleys.
Hagrid reached out a great hand and
patted him painfully on the shoulder.
“Never mind,” he said gruffly.
“Never mind. She had a great old life—”
“Hagrid!” said Ted Tonks warningly,
as the hairbrush glowed bright blue, and Hagrid only just got his
forefinger to it in time.
With a jerk behind the navel as though
an invisible hook and line had dragged him forward, Harry was pulled
into nothingness, spinning uncontrollably, his finger glued to the
Portkey as he and Hagrid hurtled away from Mr. Tonks. Seconds later
Harry’s feet slammed onto hard ground and he fell onto his hands
and knees in the yard of the Burrow. He heard screams. Throwing aside
the no longer glowing hairbrush, Harry stood up, swaying slightly,
and saw Mrs. Weasley and Ginny running down the steps by the back
door as Hagrid, who had also collapsed on landing, clambered
laboriously to his feet.
“Harry? You are the real Harry? What
happened? Where are the others?” cried Mrs. Weasley.
“What d’you mean? Isn’t anyone
else back?” Harry panted.
The answer was clearly etched in Mrs.
Weasley’s pale face.
“The Death Eaters were waiting for
us,” Harry told her. “We were surrounded the moment we took
off—they knew it was tonight—I don’t know what happened to
anyone else, four of them chased us, it was all we could do to get
away, and then Voldemort caught up with us—”
He could hear the self-justifying note
in his voice, the plea for her to understand why he did not know what
had happened to her sons, but—
“Thank goodness you’re all right,”
she said, pulling him into a hug he did not feel he deserved.
“Haven’t go’ any brandy, have
yeh, Molly?” asked Hagrid a little shakily. “Fer medicinal
purposes?”
She could have summoned it by magic,
but as she hurried back toward the crooked house, Harry knew that she
wanted to hide her face. He turned to Ginny and she answered his
unspoken plea for information at once.
“Ron and Tonks should have been back
first, but they missed their Portkey, it came back without them,”
she said, pointing at a rusty oil can lying on the ground nearby.
“And that one,” she pointed at an ancient sneaker, “should have
been Dad and Fred’s, they were supposed to be second. You and
Hagrid were third and,” she checked her watch, “if they made it,
George and Lupin ought to be back in about a minute.”
Mrs. Weasley reappeared carrying a
bottle of brandy, which she handed to Hagrid. He uncorked it and
drank it straight down in one.
“Mum!” shouted Ginny, pointing to a
spot several feet away.
A blue light had appeared in the
darkness: It grew larger and brighter, and Lupin and George appeared,
spinning and then falling. Harry knew immediately that there was
something wrong: Lupin was supporting George, who was unconscious and
whose face was covered in blood.
Harry ran forward and seized George’s
legs. Together, he and Lupin carried George into the house and
through the kitchen to the sitting room, where they laid him on the
sofa. As the lamplight fell across George’s head, Ginny gasped and
Harry’s stomach lurched: One of George’s ears was missing. The
side of his head and neck were drenched in wet, shockingly scarlet
blood.
No sooner had Mrs. Weasley bent over
her son than Lupin grabbed Harry by the upper arm and dragged him,
none too gently, back into the kitchen, where Hagrid was still
attempting to ease his bulk through the back door.
“Oi!” said Hagrid indignantly. “Le’
go of him! Le’ go of Harry!”
Lupin ignored him.
“What creature sat in the corner the
first time that Harry Potter visited my office at Hogwarts?” he
said, giving Harry a small shake. “Answer me!”
“A—a grindylow in a tank, wasn’t
it?”
Lupin released Harry and fell back
against a kitchen cupboard.
“Wha’ was tha’ about?” roared
Hagrid.
“I’m sorry, Harry, but I had to
check,” said Lupin tersely. “We’ve been betrayed. Voldemort
knew that you were being moved tonight and the only people who could
have told him were directly involved in the plan. You might have been
an impostor.”
“So why aren’ you checkin’ me?”
panted Hagrid, still struggling to fit through the door.
“You’re half-giant,” said Lupin,
looking up at Hagrid. “The Polyjuice Potion is designed for human
use only.”
“None of the Order would have told
Voldemort we were moving tonight,” said Harry. The idea was
dreadful to him, he could not believe it of any of them. “Voldemort
only caught up with me toward the end, he didn’t know which one I
was in the beginning. If he’d been in on the plan he’d have known
from the start I was the one with Hagrid.”
“Voldemort caught up with you?”
said Lupin sharply. “What happened? How did you escape?”
Harry explained briefly how the Death
Eaters pursuing them had seemed to recognize him as the true Harry,
how they had abandoned the chase, how they must have summoned
Voldemort, who had appeared just before he and Hagrid had reached the
sanctuary of Tonks’s parents.
“They recognized you? But how? What
had you done?”
“I…” Harry tried to remember; the
whole journey seemed like a blur of panic and confusion. “I saw
Stan Shunpike… You know, the bloke who was the conductor on the
Knight Bus? And I tried to Disarm him instead of—well, he doesn’t
know what he’s doing, does he? He must be Imperiused!”
Lupin looked aghast.
“Harry, the time for Disarming is
past! These people are trying to capture and kill you! At least Stun
if you aren’t prepared to kill!”
“We were hundreds of feet up! Stan’s
not himself, and if I Stunned him and he’d fallen, he’d have died
the same as if I’d used Avada Kedavra! Expelliarmus saved me from
Voldemort two years ago,” Harry added defiantly. Lupin was
reminding him of the sneering Hufflepuff Zacharias Smith, who had
jeered at Harry for wanting to teach Dumbledore’s Army how to
Disarm.
“Yes, Harry,” said Lupin with
painful restraint, “and a great number of Death Eaters witnessed
that happening! Forgive me, but it was a very unusual move then,
under imminent threat of death. Repeating it tonight in front of
Death Eaters who either witnessed or heard about the first occasion
was close to suicidal!”
“So you think I should have killed
Stan Shunpike?” said Harry angrily.
“Of course not,” said Lupin, “but
the Death Eaters—frankly, most people!—would have expected you to
attack back! Expelliarmus is a useful spell, Harry, but the Death
Eaters seem to think it is your signature move, and I urge you not to
let it become so!”
Lupin was making Harry feel idiotic,
and yet there was still a grain of defiance inside him.
“I won’t blast people out of my way
just because they’re there,” said Harry. “That’s Voldemort’s
job.”
Lupin’s retort was lost: Finally
succeeding in squeezing through the door, Hagrid staggered to a chair
and sat down; it collapsed beneath him. Ignoring his mingled oaths
and apologies, Harry addressed Lupin again.
“Will George be okay?”
All Lupin’s frustration with Harry
seemed to drain away at the question.
“I think so, although there’s no
chance of replacing his ear, not when it’s been cursed off—”
There was a scuffling from outside.
Lupin dived for the back door; Harry leapt over Hagrid’s legs and
sprinted into the yard.
Two figures had appeared in the yard,
and as Harry ran toward them he realized they were Hermione, now
returning to her normal appearance, and Kingsley, both clutching a
bent coat hanger. Hermione flung herself into Harry’s arms, but
Kingsley showed no pleasure at the sight of any of them. Over
Hermione’s shoulder Harry saw him raise his wand and point it at
Lupin’s chest.
“The last words Albus Dumbledore
spoke to the pair of us?”
“‘Harry is the best hope we have.
Trust him,’” said Lupin calmly.
Kingsley turned his wand on Harry, but
Lupin said, “It’s him, I’ve checked!”
“All right, all right!” said
Kingsley, stowing his wand back beneath his cloak. “But somebody
betrayed us! They knew, they knew it was tonight!”
“So it seems,” replied Lupin, “but
apparently they did not realize that there would be seven Harrys.”
“Small comfort!” snarled Kingsley.
“Who else is back?”
“Only Harry, Hagrid, George, and me.”
Hermione stifled a little moan behind
her hand.
“What happened to you?” Lupin asked
Kingsley.
“Followed by five, injured two,
might’ve killed one,” Kingsley reeled off, “and we saw
You-Know-Who as well, he joined the chase halfway through but
vanished pretty quickly. Remus, he can—”
“Fly,” supplied Harry. “I saw him
too, he came after Hagrid and me.”
“So that’s why he left, to follow
you!” said Kingsley. “I couldn’t understand why he’d
vanished. But what made him change targets?”
“Harry behaved a little too kindly to
Stan Shunpike,” said Lupin.
“Stan?” repeated Hermione. “But I
thought he was in Azkaban?”
Kingsley let out a mirthless laugh.
“Hermione, there’s obviously been a
mass breakout which the Ministry has hushed up. Travers’s hood fell
off when I cursed him, he’s supposed to be inside too. But what
happened to you, Remus? Where’s George?”
“He lost an ear,” said Lupin.
“Lost an—?” repeated Hermione in
a high voice.
“Snape’s work,” said Lupin.
“Snape?” shouted Harry. “You
didn’t say—”
“He lost his hood during the chase.
Sectumsempra was always a speciality of Snape’s. I wish I could say
I’d paid him back in kind, but it was all I could do to keep George
on the broom after he was injured, he was losing so much blood.”
Silence fell between the four of them
as they looked up at the sky. There was no sign of movement; the
stars stared back, unblinking, indifferent, unobscured by flying
friends. Where was Ron? Where were Fred and Mr. Weasley? Where were
Bill, Fleur, Tonks, Mad-Eye, and Mundungus?
“Harry, give us a hand!” called
Hagrid hoarsely from the door, in which he was stuck again. Glad of
something to do, Harry pulled him free, then headed through the empty
kitchen and back into the sitting room, where Mrs. Weasley and Ginny
were still tending to George. Mrs. Weasley had staunched his bleeding
now, and by the lamplight Harry saw a clean, gaping hole where
George’s ear had been.
“How is he?”
Mrs. Weasley looked around and said, “I
can’t make it grow back, not when it’s been removed by Dark
Magic. But it could have been so much worse… He’s alive.”
“Yeah,” said Harry. “Thank God.”
“Did I hear someone else in the
yard?” Ginny asked.
“Hermione and Kingsley,” said
Harry.
“Thank goodness,” Ginny whispered.
They looked at each other; Harry wanted to hug her, hold on to her;
he did not even care much that Mrs. Weasley was there, but before he
could act on the impulse there was a great crash from the kitchen.
“I’ll prove who I am, Kingsley,
after I’ve seen my son, now back off if you know what’s good for
you!”
Harry had never heard Mr. Weasley shout
like that before. He burst into the living room, his bald patch
gleaming with sweat, his spectacles askew, Fred right behind him,
both pale but uninjured.
“Arthur!” sobbed Mrs. Weasley. “Oh
thank goodness!”
“How is he?”
Mr. Weasley dropped to his knees beside
George. For the first time since Harry had known him, Fred seemed to
be lost for words. He gaped over the back of the sofa at his twin’s
wound as if he could not believe what he was seeing.
Perhaps roused by the sound of Fred and
their father’s arrival, George stirred.
“How do you feel, Georgie?”
whispered Mrs. Weasley.
George’s fingers groped for the side
of his head.
“Saintlike,” he murmured.
“What’s wrong with him?” croaked
Fred, looking terrified. “Is his mind affected?”
“Saintlike,” repeated George,
opening his eyes and looking up at his brother. “You see… I’m
holy. Holey, Fred, geddit?”
Mrs. Weasley sobbed harder than ever.
Color flooded Fred’s pale face.
“Pathetic,” he told George.
“Pathetic! With the whole wide world of ear-related humor before
you, you go for holey?”
“Ah well,” said George, grinning at
his tear-soaked mother. “You’ll be able to tell us apart now,
anyway, Mum.”
He looked around.
“Hi, Harry—you are Harry, right?”
“Yeah, I am,” said Harry, moving
closer to the sofa.
“Well, at least we got you back
okay,” said George. “Why aren’t Ron and Bill huddled round my
sickbed?”
“They’re not back yet, George,”
said Mrs. Weasley. George’s grin faded.
Harry glanced at Ginny and motioned to
her to accompany him back outside. As they walked through the kitchen
she said in a low voice, “Ron and Tonks should be back by now. They
didn’t have a long journey; Auntie Muriel’s not that far from
here.”
Harry said nothing. He had been trying
to keep fear at bay ever since reaching the Burrow, but now it
enveloped him, seeming to crawl over his skin, throbbing in his
chest, clogging his throat. As they walked down the back steps into
the dark yard, Ginny took his hand.
Kingsley was striding backward and
forward, glancing up at the sky every time he turned. Harry was
reminded of Uncle Vernon pacing the living room a million years ago.
Hagrid, Hermione, and Lupin stood shoulder to shoulder, gazing upward
in silence. None of them looked around when Harry and Ginny joined
their silent vigil.
The minutes stretched into what might
as well have been years. The slightest breath of wind made them all
jump and turn toward the whispering bush or tree in the hope that one
of the missing Order members might leap unscathed from its leaves—
And then a broom materialized directly
above them and streaked toward the ground—
“It’s them!” screamed Hermione.
Tonks landed in a long skid that sent
earth and pebbles everywhere.
“Remus!” Tonks cried as she
staggered off the broom into Lupin’s arms. His face was set and
white: He seemed unable to speak. Ron tripped dazedly toward Harry
and Hermione.
“You’re okay,” he mumbled, before
Hermione flew at him and hugged him tightly.
“I thought—I thought—”
“’M all right,” said Ron, patting
her on the back. “’M fine.”
“Ron was great,” said Tonks warmly,
relinquishing her hold on Lupin. “Wonderful. Stunned one of the
Death Eaters, straight to the head, and when you’re aiming at a
moving target from a flying broom—”
“You did?” said Hermione, gazing up
at Ron with her arms still around his neck.
“Always the tone of surprise,” he
said a little grumpily, breaking free. “Are we the last back?”
“No,” said Ginny, “we’re still
waiting for Bill and Fleur and Mad-Eye and Mundungus. I’m going to
tell Mum and Dad you’re okay, Ron—”
She ran back inside.
“So what kept you? What happened?”
Lupin sounded almost angry at Tonks.
“Bellatrix,” said Tonks. “She
wants me quite as much as she wants Harry, Remus, she tried very hard
to kill me. I just wish I’d got her, I owe Bellatrix. But we
definitely injured Rodolphus… Then we got to Ron’s Auntie
Muriel’s and we’d missed our Portkey and she was fussing over
us—”
A muscle was jumping in Lupin’s jaw.
He nodded, but seemed unable to say anything else.
“So what happened to you lot?”
Tonks asked, turning to Harry, Hermione, and Kingsley.
They recounted the stories of their own
journeys, but all the time the continued absence of Bill, Fleur,
Mad-Eye, and Mundungus seemed to lie upon them like a frost, its icy
bite harder and harder to ignore.
“I’m going to have to get back to
Downing Street, I should have been there an hour ago,” said
Kingsley finally, after a last sweeping gaze at the sky. “Let me
know when they’re back.”
Lupin nodded. With a wave to the
others, Kingsley walked away into the darkness toward the gate. Harry
thought he heard the faintest pop as Kingsley Disapparated just
beyond the Burrow’s boundaries.
Mr. and Mrs. Weasley came racing down
the back steps, Ginny behind them. Both parents hugged Ron before
turning to Lupin and Tonks.
“Thank you,” said Mrs. Weasley,
“for our sons.”
“Don’t be silly, Molly,” said
Tonks at once.
“How’s George?” asked Lupin.
“What’s wrong with him?” piped up
Ron.
“He’s lost—”
But the end of Mrs. Weasley’s
sentence was drowned in a general outcry: A thestral had just soared
into sight and landed a few feet from them. Bill and Fleur slid from
its back, windswept but unhurt.
“Bill! Thank God, thank God—”
Mrs. Weasley ran forward, but the hug
Bill bestowed upon her was perfunctory. Looking directly at his
father, he said, “Mad-Eye’s dead.”
Nobody spoke, nobody moved. Harry felt
as though something inside him was falling, falling through the
earth, leaving him forever.
“We saw it,” said Bill; Fleur
nodded, tear tracks glittering on her cheeks in the light from the
kitchen window. “It happened just after we broke out of the circle:
Mad-Eye and Dung were close by us, they were heading north too.
Voldemort—he can fly—went straight for them. Dung panicked, I
heard him cry out, Mad-Eye tried to stop him, but he Disapparated.
Voldemort’s curse hit Mad-Eye full in the face, he fell backward
off his broom and—there was nothing we could do, nothing, we had
half a dozen of them on our own tail—”
Bill’s voice broke.
“Of course you couldn’t have done
anything,” said Lupin.
They all stood looking at each other.
Harry could not quite comprehend it. Mad-Eye dead; it could not be…
Mad-Eye, so tough, so brave, the consummate survivor…
At last it seemed to dawn on everyone,
though nobody said it, that there was no point waiting in the yard
anymore, and in silence they followed Mr. and Mrs. Weasley back into
the Burrow, and into the living room, where Fred and George were
laughing together.
“What’s wrong?” said Fred,
scanning their faces as they entered. “What’s happened? Who’s—?”
“Mad-Eye,” said Mr. Weasley.
“Dead.”
The twins’ grins turned to grimaces
of shock. Nobody seemed to know what to do. Tonks was crying silently
into a handkerchief: She had been close to Mad-Eye, Harry knew, his
favorite and his protégée at the Ministry of Magic. Hagrid, who had
sat down on the floor in the corner where he had most space, was
dabbing at his eyes with his tablecloth-sized handkerchief.
Bill walked over to the sideboard and
pulled out a bottle of fire-whisky and some glasses.
“Here,” he said, and with a wave of
his wand he sent twelve full glasses soaring through the room to each
of them, holding the thirteenth aloft. “Mad-Eye.”
“Mad-Eye,” they all said, and
drank.
“Mad-Eye,” echoed Hagrid, a little
late, with a hiccup.
The firewhisky seared Harry’s throat.
It seemed to burn feeling back into him, dispelling the numbness and
sense of unreality, firing him with something that was like courage.
“So Mundungus disappeared?” said
Lupin, who had drained his own glass in one.
The atmosphere changed at once.
Everybody looked tense, watching Lupin, both wanting him to go on, it
seemed to Harry, and slightly afraid of what they might hear.
“I know what you’re thinking,”
said Bill, “and I wondered that too, on the way back here, because
they seemed to be expecting us, didn’t they? But Mundungus can’t
have betrayed us. They didn’t know there would be seven Harrys,
that confused them the moment we appeared, and in case you’ve
forgotten, it was Mundungus who suggested that little bit of
skullduggery. Why wouldn’t he have told them the essential point? I
think Dung panicked, it’s as simple as that. He didn’t want to
come in the first place, but Mad-Eye made him, and You-Know-Who went
straight for them. It was enough to make anyone panic.”
“You-Know-Who acted exactly as
Mad-Eye expected him to,” sniffed Tonks. “Mad-Eye said he’d
expect the real Harry to be with the toughest, most skilled Aurors.
He chased Mad-Eye first, and when Mundungus gave them away he
switched to Kingsley…”
“Yes, and zat eez all very good,”
snapped Fleur, “but still eet does not explain ’ow zey knew we
were moving ’Arry tonight, does eet? Somebody must ’ave been
careless. Somebody let slip ze date to an outsider. It is ze only
explanation for zem knowing ze date but not ze ’ole plan.”
She glared around at them all, tear
tracks still etched on her beautiful face, silently daring any of
them to contradict her. Nobody did. The only sound to break the
silence was that of Hagrid hiccuping from behind his handkerchief.
Harry glanced at Hagrid, who had just risked his own life to save
Harry’s—Hagrid, whom he loved, whom he trusted, who had once been
tricked into giving Voldemort crucial information in exchange for a
dragon’s egg…
“No,” Harry said aloud, and they
all looked at him, surprised: The firewhisky seemed to have amplified
his voice. “I mean… if somebody made a mistake,” Harry went on,
“and let something slip, I know they didn’t mean to do it. It’s
not their fault,” he repeated, again a little louder than he would
usually have spoken. “We’ve got to trust each other. I trust all
of you, I don’t think anyone in this room would ever sell me to
Voldemort.”
More silence followed his words. They
were all looking at him; Harry felt a little hot again, and drank
some more firewhisky for something to do. As he drank, he thought of
Mad-Eye. Mad-Eye had always been scathing about Dumbledore’s
willingness to trust people.
“Well said, Harry,” said Fred
unexpectedly.
“Yeah, ’ear, ’ear,” said
George, with half a glance at Fred, the corner of whose mouth
twitched.
Lupin was wearing an odd expression as
he looked at Harry. It was close to pitying.
“You think I’m a fool?” demanded
Harry.
“No, I think you’re like James,”
said Lupin, “who would have regarded it as the height of dishonor
to mistrust his friends.”
Harry knew what Lupin was getting at:
that his father had been betrayed by his friend, Peter Pettigrew. He
felt irrationally angry. He wanted to argue, but Lupin had turned
away from him, set down his glass upon a side table, and addressed
Bill, “There’s work to do. I can ask Kingsley whether—”
“No,” said Bill at once, “I’ll
do it, I’ll come.”
“Where are you going?” said Tonks
and Fleur together.
“Mad-Eye’s body,” said Lupin. “We
need to recover it.”
“Can’t it—?” began Mrs. Weasley
with an appealing look at Bill.
“Wait?” said Bill. “Not unless
you’d rather the Death Eaters took it?”
Nobody spoke. Lupin and Bill said
good-bye and left.
The rest of them now dropped into
chairs, all except for Harry, who remained standing. The suddenness
and completeness of death was with them like a presence.
“I’ve got to go too,” said Harry.
Ten pairs of startled eyes looked at
him.
“Don’t be silly, Harry,” said
Mrs. Weasley. “What are you talking about?”
“I can’t stay here.”
He rubbed his forehead; it was
prickling again, it had not hurt like this for more than a year.
“You’re all in danger while I’m
here. I don’t want—”
“But don’t be so silly!” said
Mrs. Weasley. “The whole point of tonight was to get you here
safely, and thank goodness it worked. And Fleur’s agreed to get
married here rather than in France, we’ve arranged everything so
that we can all stay together and look after you—”
She did not understand; she was making
him feel worse, not better.
“If Voldemort finds out I’m here—”
“But why should he?” asked Mrs.
Weasley.
“There are a dozen places you might
be now, Harry,” said Mr. Weasley. “He’s got no way of knowing
which safe house you’re in.”
“It’s not me I’m worried for!”
said Harry.
“We know that,” said Mr. Weasley
quietly, “but it would make our efforts tonight seem rather
pointless if you left.”
“Yer not goin’ anywhere,” growled
Hagrid. “Blimey, Harry, after all we wen’ through ter get you
here?”
“Yeah, what about my bleeding ear?”
said George, hoisting himself up on his cushions.
“I know that—”
“Mad-Eye wouldn’t want—”
“I KNOW!” Harry bellowed.
He felt beleaguered and blackmailed:
Did they think he did not know what they had done for him, didn’t
they understand that it was for precisely that reason that he wanted
to go now, before they had to suffer any more on his behalf? There
was a long and awkward silence in which his scar continued to prickle
and throb, and which was broken at last by Mrs. Weasley.
“Where’s Hedwig, Harry?” she said
coaxingly. “We can put her up with Pigwidgeon and give her
something to eat.”
His insides clenched like a fist. He
could not tell her the truth. He drank the last of his firewhisky to
avoid answering.
“Wait till it gets out yeh did it
again, Harry,” said Hagrid. “Escaped him, fought him off when he
was right on top of yeh!”
“It wasn’t me,” said Harry
flatly. “It was my wand. My wand acted of its own accord.”
After a few moments, Hermione said
gently, “But that’s impossible, Harry. You mean that you did
magic without meaning to; you reacted instinctively.”
“No,” said Harry. “The bike was
falling, I couldn’t have told you where Voldemort was, but my wand
spun in my hand and found him and shot a spell at him, and it wasn’t
even a spell I recognized. I’ve never made gold flames appear
before.”
“Often,” said Mr. Weasley, “when
you’re in a pressured situation you can produce magic you never
dreamed of. Small children often find, before they’re trained—”
“It wasn’t like that,” said Harry
through gritted teeth. His scar was burning: He felt angry and
frustrated; he hated the idea that they were all imagining him to
have power to match Voldemort’s.
No one said anything. He knew that they
did not believe him. Now that he came to think of it, he had never
heard of a wand performing magic on its own before.
His scar seared with pain; it was all
he could do not to moan aloud. Muttering about fresh air, he set down
his glass and left the room.
As he crossed the dark yard, the great
skeletal thestral looked up, rustled its enormous batlike wings, then
resumed its grazing. Harry stopped at the gate into the garden,
staring out at its overgrown plants, rubbing his pounding forehead
and thinking of Dumbledore.
Dumbledore would have believed him, he
knew it. Dumbledore would have known how and why Harry’s wand had
acted independently, because Dumbledore always had the answers; he
had known about wands, had explained to Harry the strange connection
that existed between his wand and Voldemort’s… But Dumbledore,
like Mad-Eye, like Sirius, like his parents, like his poor owl, all
were gone where Harry could never talk to them again. He felt a
burning in his throat that had nothing to do with firewhisky…
And then, out of nowhere, the pain in
his scar peaked. As he clutched his forehead and closed his eyes, a
voice screamed inside his head.
“You told me the problem would be
solved by using another’s wand!”
And into his mind burst the vision of
an emaciated old man lying in rags upon a stone floor, screaming, a
horrible, drawn-out scream, a scream of unendurable agony…
“No! No! I beg you, I beg you…”
“You lied to Lord Voldemort,
Ollivander!”
“I did not… I swear I did not…”
“You sought to help Potter, to help
him escape me!”
“I swear I did not… I believed a
different wand would work…”
“Explain, then, what happened.
Lucius’s wand is destroyed!”
“I cannot understand… The
connection… exists only… between your two wands…”
“Lies!”
“Please… I beg you…”
And Harry saw the white hand raise its
wand and felt Voldemort’s surge of vicious anger, saw the frail old
man on the floor writhe in agony—
“Harry?”
It was over as quickly as it had come:
Harry stood shaking in the darkness, clutching the gate into the
garden, his heart racing, his scar still tingling. It was several
moments before he realized that Ron and Hermione were at his side.
“Harry, come back in the house,”
Hermione whispered. “You aren’t still thinking of leaving?”
“Yeah, you’ve got to stay, mate,”
said Ron, thumping Harry on the back.
“Are you all right?” Hermione
asked, close enough now to look into Harry’s face. “You look
awful!”
“Well,” said Harry shakily, “I
probably look better than Ollivander…”
When he had finished telling them what
he had seen, Ron looked appalled, but Hermione downright terrified.
“But it was supposed to have stopped!
Your scar—it wasn’t supposed to do this anymore! You mustn’t
let that connection open up again—Dumbledore wanted you to close
your mind!”
When he did not reply, she gripped his
arm.
“Harry, he’s taking over the
Ministry and the newspapers and half the Wizarding world! Don’t let
him inside your head too!”
Chapter 6
The Ghoul in Pajamas
The shock of losing Mad-Eye hung over
the house in the days that followed; Harry kept expecting to see him
stumping in through the back door like the other Order members, who
passed in and out to relay news. Harry felt that nothing but action
would assuage his feelings of guilt and grief and that he ought to
set out on his mission to find and destroy Horcruxes as soon as
possible.
“Well, you can’t do anything about
the”—Ron mouthed the word Horcruxes—“till you’re seventeen.
You’ve still got the Trace on you. And we can plan here as well as
anywhere, can’t we? Or,” he dropped his voice to a whisper,
“d’you reckon you already know where the You-Know-Whats are?”
“No,” Harry admitted.
“I think Hermione’s been doing a
bit of research,” said Ron. “She said she was saving it for when
you got here.”
They were sitting at the breakfast
table; Mr. Weasley and Bill had just left for work. Mrs. Weasley had
gone upstairs to wake Hermione and Ginny, while Fleur had drifted off
to take a bath.
“The Trace’ll break on the
thirty-first,” said Harry. “That means I only need to stay here
four days. Then I can—”
“Five days,” Ron corrected him
firmly. “We’ve got to stay for the wedding. They’ll kill us if
we miss it.”
Harry understood “they” to mean
Fleur and Mrs. Weasley.
“It’s one extra day,” said Ron,
when Harry looked mutinous.
“Don’t they realize how
important—?”
“’Course they don’t,” said Ron.
“They haven’t got a clue. And now you mention it, I wanted to
talk to you about that.”
Ron glanced toward the door into the
hall to check that Mrs. Weasley was not returning yet, then leaned in
closer to Harry.
“Mum’s been trying to get it out of
Hermione and me. What we’re off to do. She’ll try you next, so
brace yourself. Dad and Lupin’ve both asked as well, but when we
said Dumbledore told you not to tell anyone except us, they dropped
it. Not Mum, though. She’s determined.”
Ron’s prediction came true within
hours. Shortly before lunch, Mrs. Weasley detached Harry from the
others by asking him to help identify a lone man’s sock that she
thought might have come out of his rucksack. Once she had him
cornered in the tiny scullery off the kitchen, she started.
“Ron and Hermione seem to think that
the three of you are dropping out of Hogwarts,” she began in a
light, casual tone.
“Oh,” said Harry. “Well, yeah. We
are.”
The mangle turned of its own accord in
a corner, wringing out what looked like one of Mr. Weasley’s vests.
“May I ask why you are abandoning
your education?” said Mrs. Weasley.
“Well, Dumbledore left me… stuff to
do,” mumbled Harry. “Ron and Hermione know about it, and they
want to come too.”
“What sort of ‘stuff’?”
“I’m sorry, I can’t—”
“Well, frankly, I think Arthur and I
have a right to know, and I’m sure Mr. and Mrs. Granger would
agree!” said Mrs. Weasley. Harry had been afraid of the “concerned
parent” attack. He forced himself to look directly into her eyes,
noticing as he did so that they were precisely the same shade of
brown as Ginny’s. This did not help.
“Dumbledore didn’t want anyone else
to know, Mrs. Weasley. I’m sorry. Ron and Hermione don’t have to
come, it’s their choice—”
“I don’t see that you have to go
either!” she snapped, dropping all pretense now. “You’re barely
of age, any of you! It’s utter nonsense, if Dumbledore needed work
doing, he had the whole Order at his command! Harry, you must have
misunderstood him. Probably he was telling you something he wanted
done, and you took it to mean that he wanted you—”
“I didn’t misunderstand,” said
Harry flatly. “It’s got to be me.”
He handed her back the single sock he
was supposed to be identifying, which was patterned with golden
bulrushes.
“And that’s not mine, I don’t
support Puddlemere United.”
“Oh, of course not,” said Mrs.
Weasley with a sudden and rather unnerving return to her casual tone.
“I should have realized. Well, Harry, while we’ve still got you
here, you won’t mind helping with the preparations for Bill and
Fleur’s wedding, will you? There’s still so much to do.”
“No—I—of course not,” said
Harry, disconcerted by this sudden change of subject.
“Sweet of you,” she replied, and
she smiled as she left the scullery.
From that moment on, Mrs. Weasley kept
Harry, Ron, and Hermione so busy with preparations for the wedding
that they hardly had any time to think. The kindest explanation of
this behavior would have been that Mrs. Weasley wanted to distract
them all from thoughts of Mad-Eye and the terrors of their recent
journey. After two days of nonstop cutlery cleaning, of
color-matching favors, ribbons, and flowers, of de-gnoming the garden
and helping Mrs. Weasley cook vast batches of canapés, however,
Harry started to suspect her of a different motive. All the jobs she
handed out seemed to keep him, Ron, and Hermione away from one
another; he had not had a chance to speak to the two of them alone
since the first night, when he had told them about Voldemort
torturing Ollivander.
“I think Mum thinks that if she can
stop the three of you getting together and planning, she’ll be able
to delay you leaving,” Ginny told Harry in an undertone, as they
laid the table for dinner on the third night of his stay.
“And then what does she think’s
going to happen?” Harry muttered. “Someone else might kill off
Voldemort while she’s holding us here making vol-au-vents?”
He had spoken without thinking, and saw
Ginny’s face whiten.
“So it’s true?” she said. “That’s
what you’re trying to do?”
“I—not—I was joking,” said
Harry evasively.
They stared at each other, and there
was something more than shock in Ginny’s expression. Suddenly Harry
became aware that this was the first time that he had been alone with
her since those stolen hours in secluded corners of the Hogwarts
grounds. He was sure she was remembering them too. Both of them
jumped as the door opened, and Mr. Weasley, Kingsley, and Bill walked
in.
They were often joined by other Order
members for dinner now, because the Burrow had replaced number
twelve, Grimmauld Place as the headquarters. Mr. Weasley had
explained that after the death of Dumbledore, their Secret-Keeper,
each of the people to whom Dumbledore had confided Grimmauld Place’s
location had become a Secret-Keeper in turn.
“And as there are around twenty of
us, that greatly dilutes the power of the Fidelius Charm. Twenty
times as many opportunities for the Death Eaters to get the secret
out of somebody. We can’t expect it to hold much longer.”
“But surely Snape will have told the
Death Eaters the address by now?” asked Harry.
“Well, Mad-Eye set up a couple of
curses against Snape in case he turns up there again. We hope they’ll
be strong enough both to keep him out and to bind his tongue if he
tries to talk about the place, but we can’t be sure. It would have
been insane to keep using the place as headquarters now that its
protection has become so shaky.”
The kitchen was so crowded that evening
it was difficult to maneuver knives and forks. Harry found himself
crammed beside Ginny; the unsaid things that had just passed between
them made him wish they had been separated by a few more people. He
was trying so hard to avoid brushing her arm he could barely cut his
chicken.
“No news about Mad-Eye?” Harry
asked Bill.
“Nothing,” replied Bill.
They had not been able to hold a
funeral for Moody, because Bill and Lupin had failed to recover his
body. It had been difficult to know where he might have fallen, given
the darkness and the confusion of the battle.
“The Daily Prophet hasn’t said a
word about him dying or about finding the body,” Bill went on. “But
that doesn’t mean much. It’s keeping a lot quiet these days.”
“And they still haven’t called a
hearing about all the underage magic I used escaping the Death
Eaters?” Harry called across the table to Mr. Weasley, who shook
his head.
“Because they know I had no choice or
because they don’t want me to tell the world Voldemort attacked
me?”
“The latter, I think. Scrimgeour
doesn’t want to admit that You-Know-Who is as powerful as he is,
nor that Azkaban’s seen a mass breakout.”
“Yeah, why tell the public the
truth?” said Harry, clenching his knife so tightly that the faint
scars on the back of his right hand stood out, white against his
skin: I must not tell lies.
“Isn’t anyone at the Ministry
prepared to stand up to him?” asked Ron angrily.
“Of course, Ron, but people are
terrified,” Mr. Weasley replied, “terrified that they will be
next to disappear, their children the next to be attacked! There are
nasty rumors going around; I for one don’t believe the Muggle
Studies professor at Hogwarts resigned. She hasn’t been seen for
weeks now. Meanwhile Scrimgeour remains shut up in his office all
day: I just hope he’s working on a plan.”
There was a pause in which Mrs. Weasley
magicked the empty plates onto the work surface and served apple
tart.
“We must decide ’ow you will be
disguised, ’Arry,” said Fleur, once everyone had pudding. “For
ze wedding,” she added, when he looked confused. “Of course, none
of our guests are Death Eaters, but we cannot guarantee zat zey will
not let something slip after zey ’ave ’ad champagne.”
From this, Harry gathered that she
still suspected Hagrid.
“Yes, good point,” said Mrs.
Weasley from the top of the table, where she sat, spectacles perched
on the end of her nose, scanning an immense list of jobs that she had
scribbled on a very long piece of parchment. “Now, Ron, have you
cleaned out your room yet?”
“Why?” exclaimed Ron, slamming his
spoon down and glaring at his mother. “Why does my room have to be
cleaned out? Harry and I are fine with it the way it is!”
“We are holding your brother’s
wedding here in a few days’ time, young man—”
“And are they getting married in my
bedroom?” asked Ron furiously. “No! So why in the name of
Merlin’s saggy left—”
“Don’t talk to your mother like
that,” said Mr. Weasley firmly. “And do as you’re told.”
Ron scowled at both his parents, then
picked up his spoon and attacked the last few mouthfuls of his apple
tart.
“I can help, some of it’s my mess,”
Harry told Ron, but Mrs. Weasley cut across him.
“No, Harry, dear, I’d much rather
you helped Arthur muck out the chickens, and Hermione, I’d be ever
so grateful if you’d change the sheets for Monsieur and Madame
Delacour; you know they’re arriving at eleven tomorrow morning.”
But as it turned out, there was very
little to do for the chickens. “There’s no need to, er, mention
it to Molly,” Mr. Weasley told Harry, blocking his access to the
coop, “but, er, Ted Tonks sent me most of what was left of Sirius’s
bike and, er, I’m hiding—that’s to say, keeping—it in here.
Fantastic stuff: There’s an exhaust gaskin, as I believe it’s
called, the most magnificent battery, and it’ll be a great
opportunity to find out how brakes work. I’m going to try and put
it all back together again when Molly’s not—I mean, when I’ve
got time.”
When they returned to the house, Mrs.
Weasley was nowhere to be seen, so Harry slipped upstairs to Ron’s
attic bedroom.
“I’m doing it, I’m doing—! Oh,
it’s you,” said Ron in relief, as Harry entered the room. Ron lay
back down on the bed, which he had evidently just vacated. The room
was just as messy as it had been all week; the only change was that
Hermione was now sitting in the far corner, her fluffy ginger cat,
Crookshanks, at her feet, sorting books, some of which Harry
recognized as his own, into two enormous piles.
“Hi, Harry,” she said, as he sat
down on his camp bed.
“And how did you manage to get away?”
“Oh, Ron’s mum forgot that she
asked Ginny and me to change the sheets yesterday,” said Hermione.
She threw Numerology and Grammatica onto one pile and The Rise and
Fall of the Dark Arts onto the other.
“We were just talking about Mad-Eye,”
Ron told Harry. “I reckon he might have survived.”
“But Bill saw him hit by the Killing
Curse,” said Harry.
“Yeah, but Bill was under attack
too,” said Ron. “How can he be sure what he saw?”
“Even if the Killing Curse missed,
Mad-Eye still fell about a thousand feet,” said Hermione, now
weighing Quidditch Teams of Britain and Ireland in her hand.
“He could have used a Shield Charm—”
“Fleur said his wand was blasted out
of his hand,” said Harry.
“Well, all right, if you want him to
be dead,” said Ron grumpily, punching his pillow into a more
comfortable shape.
“Of course we don’t want him to be
dead!” said Hermione, looking shocked. “It’s dreadful that he’s
dead! But we’re being realistic!”
For the first time, Harry imagined
Mad-Eye’s body, broken as Dumbledore’s had been, yet with that
one eye still whizzing in its socket. He felt a stab of revulsion
mixed with a bizarre desire to laugh.
“The Death Eaters probably tidied up
after themselves, that’s why no one’s found him,” said Ron
wisely.
“Yeah,” said Harry. “Like Barty
Crouch, turned into a bone and buried in Hagrid’s front garden.
They probably transfigured Moody and stuffed him—”
“Don’t!” squealed Hermione.
Startled, Harry looked over just in time to see her burst into tears
over her copy of Spellman’s Syllabary.
“Oh no,” said Harry, struggling to
get up from the old camp bed. “Hermione, I wasn’t trying to
upset—”
But with a great creaking of rusty
bedsprings, Ron bounded off the bed and got there first. One arm
around Hermione, he fished in his jeans pocket and withdrew a
revolting-looking handkerchief that he had used to clean out the oven
earlier. Hastily pulling out his wand, he pointed it at the rag and
said, “Tergeo.”
The wand siphoned off most of the
grease. Looking rather pleased with himself, Ron handed the slightly
smoking handkerchief to Hermione.
“Oh… thanks, Ron… I’m sorry…”
She blew her nose and hiccuped. “It’s just so awf-ful, isn’t
it? R-right after Dumbledore… I j-just n-never imagined Mad-Eye
dying, somehow, he seemed so tough!”
“Yeah, I know,” said Ron, giving
her a squeeze. “But you know what he’d say to us if he was here?”
“‘C-constant vigilance,’” said
Hermione, mopping her eyes.
“That’s right,” said Ron,
nodding. “He’d tell us to learn from what happened to him. And
what I’ve learned is not to trust that cowardly little squit,
Mundungus.”
Hermione gave a shaky laugh and leaned
forward to pick up two more books. A second later, Ron had snatched
his arm back from around her shoulders; she had dropped The Monster
Book of Monsters on his foot. The book had broken free from its
restraining belt and snapped viciously at Ron’s ankle.
“I’m sorry, I’m sorry!”
Hermione cried as Harry wrenched the book from Ron’s leg and retied
it shut.
“What are you doing with all those
books anyway?” Ron asked, limping back to his bed.
“Just trying to decide which ones to
take with us,” said Hermione. “When we’re looking for the
Horcruxes.”
“Oh, of course,” said Ron, clapping
a hand to his forehead. “I forgot we’ll be hunting down Voldemort
in a mobile library.”
“Ha ha,” said Hermione, looking
down at Spellman’s Syllabary. “I wonder… will we need to
translate runes? It’s possible… I think we’d better take it, to
be safe.”
She dropped the syllabary onto the
larger of the two piles and picked up Hogwarts, A History.
“Listen,” said Harry.
He had sat up straight. Ron and
Hermione looked at him with similar mixtures of resignation and
defiance.
“I know you said after Dumbledore’s
funeral that you wanted to come with me,” Harry began.
“Here he goes,” Ron said to
Hermione, rolling his eyes.
“As we knew he would,” she sighed,
turning back to the books. “You know, I think I will take Hogwarts,
A History. Even if we’re not going back there, I don’t think I’d
feel right if I didn’t have it with—”
“Listen!” said Harry again.
“No, Harry, you listen,” said
Hermione. “We’re coming with you. That was decided months
ago—years, really.”
“But—”
“Shut up,” Ron advised him.
“—are you sure you’ve thought
this through?” Harry persisted.
“Let’s see,” said Hermione,
slamming Travels with Trolls onto the discarded pile with a rather
fierce look. “I’ve been packing for days, so we’re ready to
leave at a moment’s notice, which for your information has included
doing some pretty difficult magic, not to mention smuggling Mad-Eye’s
whole stock of Polyjuice Potion right under Ron’s mum’s nose.
“I’ve also modified my parents’
memories so that they’re convinced they’re really called Wendell
and Monica Wilkins, and that their life’s ambition is to move to
Australia, which they have now done. That’s to make it more
difficult for Voldemort to track them down and interrogate them about
me—or you, because unfortunately, I’ve told them quite a bit
about you.
“Assuming I survive our hunt for the
Horcruxes, I’ll find Mum and Dad and lift the enchantment. If I
don’t—well, I think I’ve cast a good enough charm to keep them
safe and happy. Wendell and Monica Wilkins don’t know that they’ve
got a daughter, you see.
Hermione’s eyes were swimming with
tears again. Ron got back off the bed, put his arm around her once
more, and frowned at Harry as though reproaching him for lack of
tact. Harry could not think of anything to say, not least because it
was highly unusual for Ron to be teaching anyone else tact.
“I—Hermione, I’m sorry—I
didn’t—”
“Didn’t realize that Ron and I know
perfectly well what might happen if we come with you? Well, we do.
Ron, show Harry what you’ve done.”
“Nah, he’s just eaten,” said Ron.
“Go on, he needs to know!”
“Oh, all right. Harry, come here.”
For the second time Ron withdrew his
arm from around Hermione and stumped over to the door.
“C’mon.”
“Why?” Harry asked, following Ron
out of the room onto the tiny landing.
“Descendo,” muttered Ron, pointing
his wand at the low ceiling. A hatch opened right over their heads
and a ladder slid down to their feet. A horrible, half-sucking,
half-moaning sound came out of the square hole, along with an
unpleasant smell like open drains.
“That’s your ghoul, isn’t it?”
asked Harry, who had never actually met the creature that sometimes
disrupted the nightly silence.
“Yeah, it is,” said Ron, climbing
the ladder. “Come and have a look at him.”
Harry followed Ron up the few short
steps into the tiny attic space. His head and shoulders were in the
room before he caught sight of the creature curled up a few feet from
him, fast asleep in the gloom with its large mouth wide open.
“But it… it looks… do ghouls
normally wear pajamas?”
“No,” said Ron. “Nor have they
usually got red hair or that number of pustules.”
Harry contemplated the thing, slightly
revolted. It was human in shape and size, and was wearing what, now
that Harry’s eyes became used to the darkness, was clearly an old
pair of Ron’s pajamas. He was also sure that ghouls were generally
rather slimy and bald, rather than distinctly hairy and covered in
angry purple blisters.
“He’s me, see?” said Ron.
“No,” said Harry. “I don’t.”
“I’ll explain it back in my room,
the smell’s getting to me,” said Ron. They climbed back down the
ladder, which Ron returned to the ceiling, and rejoined Hermione, who
was still sorting books.
“Once we’ve left, the ghoul’s
going to come and live down here in my room,” said Ron. “I think
he’s really looking forward to it—well, it’s hard to tell,
because all he can do is moan and drool—but he nods a lot when you
mention it. Anyway, he’s going to be me with spattergroit. Good,
eh?”
Harry merely looked his confusion.
“It is!” said Ron, clearly
frustrated that Harry had not grasped the brilliance of the plan.
“Look, when we three don’t turn up at Hogwarts again, everyone’s
going to think Hermione and I must be with you, right? Which means
the Death Eaters will go straight for our families to see if they’ve
got information on where you are.”
“But hopefully it’ll look like I’ve
gone away with Mum and Dad; a lot of Muggle-borns are talking about
going into hiding at the moment,” said Hermione.
“We can’t hide my whole family,
it’ll look too fishy and they can’t all leave their jobs,” said
Ron. “So we’re going to put out the story that I’m seriously
ill with spattergroit, which is why I can’t go back to school. If
anyone comes calling to investigate, Mum or Dad can show them the
ghoul in my bed, covered in pustules. Spattergroit’s really
contagious, so they’re not going to want to go near him. It won’t
matter that he can’t say anything, either, because apparently you
can’t once the fungus has spread to your uvula.”
“And your mum and dad are in on this
plan?” asked Harry.
“Dad is. He helped Fred and George
transform the ghoul. Mum… well, you’ve seen what she’s like.
She won’t accept we’re going till we’ve gone.”
There was silence in the room, broken
only by gentle thuds as Hermione continued to throw books onto one
pile or the other. Ron sat watching her, and Harry looked from one to
the other, unable to say anything. The measures they had taken to
protect their families made him realize, more than anything else
could have done, that they really were going to come with him and
that they knew exactly how dangerous that would be. He wanted to tell
them what that meant to him, but he simply could not find words
important enough.
Through the silence came the muffled
sounds of Mrs. Weasley shouting from four floors below.
“Ginny’s probably left a speck of
dust on a poxy napkin ring,” said Ron. “I dunno why the Delacours
have got to come two days before the wedding.”
“Fleur’s sister’s a bridesmaid,
she needs to be here for the rehearsal, and she’s too young to come
on her own,” said Hermione, as she pored indecisively over Break
with a Banshee.
“Well, guests aren’t going to help
Mum’s stress levels,” said Ron.
“What we really need to decide,”
said Hermione, tossing Defensive Magical Theory into the bin without
a second glance and picking up An Appraisal of Magical Education in
Europe, “is where we’re going after we leave here. I know you
said you wanted to go to Godric’s Hollow first, Harry, and I
understand why, but… well… shouldn’t we make the Horcruxes our
priority?”
“If we knew where any of the
Horcruxes were, I’d agree with you,” said Harry, who did not
believe that Hermione really understood his desire to return to
Godric’s Hollow. His parents’ graves were only part of the
attraction: He had a strong, though inexplicable, feeling that the
place held answers for him. Perhaps it was simply because it was
there that he had survived Voldemort’s Killing Curse; now that he
was facing the challenge of repeating the feat, Harry was drawn to
the place where it had happened, wanting to understand.
“Don’t you think there’s a
possibility that Voldemort’s keeping a watch on Godric’s Hollow?”
Hermione asked. “He might expect you to go back and visit your
parents’ graves once you’re free to go wherever you like?”
This had not occurred to Harry. While
he struggled to find a counterargument, Ron spoke up, evidently
following his own train of thought.
“This R.A.B. person,” he said. “You
know, the one who stole the real locket?”
Hermione nodded.
“He said in his note he was going to
destroy it, didn’t he?”
Harry dragged his rucksack toward him
and pulled out the fake Horcrux in which R.A.B.’s note was still
folded.
“‘I have stolen the real Horcrux
and intend to destroy it as soon as I can,’” Harry read out.
“Well, what if he did finish it off?”
said Ron.
“Or she,” interposed Hermione.
“Whichever,” said Ron, “it’d be
one less for us to do!”
“Yes, but we’re still going to have
to try and trace the real locket, aren’t we?” said Hermione, “to
find out whether or not it’s destroyed.”
“And once we get hold of it, how do
you destroy a Horcrux?” asked Ron.
“Well,” said Hermione, “I’ve
been researching that.”
“How?” asked Harry. “I didn’t
think there were any books on Horcruxes in the library?”
“There weren’t,” said Hermione,
who had turned pink. “Dumbledore removed them all, but he—he
didn’t destroy them.”
Ron sat up straight, wide-eyed.
“How in the name of Merlin’s pants
have you managed to get your hands on those Horcrux books?”
“It—it wasn’t stealing!” said
Hermione, looking from Harry to Ron with a kind of desperation. “They
were still library books, even if Dumbledore had taken them off the
shelves. Anyway, if he really didn’t want anyone to get at them,
I’m sure he would have made it much harder to—”
“Get to the point!” said Ron.
“Well… it was easy,” said
Hermione in a small voice. “I just did a Summoning Charm. You
know—Accio. And—they zoomed out of Dumbledore’s study window
right into the girls’ dormitory.”
“But when did you do this?” Harry
asked, regarding Hermione with a mixture of admiration and
incredulity.
“Just after
his—Dumbledore’s—funeral,” said Hermione in an even smaller
voice. “Right after we agreed we’d leave school and go and look
for the Horcruxes. When I went back upstairs to get my things it—it
just occurred to me that the more we knew about them, the better it
would be… and I was alone in there… so I tried… and it worked.
They flew straight in through the open window and I—I packed them.”
She swallowed and then said
imploringly, “I can’t believe Dumbledore would have been angry,
it’s not as though we’re going to use the information to make a
Horcrux, is it?”
“Can you hear us complaining?” said
Ron. “Where are these books anyway?”
Hermione rummaged for a moment and then
extracted from the pile a large volume, bound in faded black leather.
She looked a little nauseated and held it as gingerly as if it were
something recently dead.
“This is the one that gives explicit
instructions on how to make a Horcrux. Secrets of the Darkest
Art—it’s a horrible book, really awful, full of evil magic. I
wonder when Dumbledore removed it from the library… If he didn’t
do it until he was headmaster, I bet Voldemort got all the
instruction he needed from here.”
“Why did he have to ask Slughorn how
to make a Horcrux, then, if he’d already read that?” asked Ron.
“He only approached Slughorn to find
out what would happen if you split your soul into seven,” said
Harry. “Dumbledore was sure Riddle already knew how to make a
Horcrux by the time he asked Slughorn about them. I think you’re
right, Hermione, that could easily have been where he got the
information.”
“And the more I’ve read about
them,” said Hermione, “the more horrible they seem, and the less
I can believe that he actually made six. It warns in this book how
unstable you make the rest of your soul by ripping it, and that’s
just by making one Horcrux!”
Harry remembered what Dumbledore had
said about Voldemort moving beyond “usual evil.”
“Isn’t there any way of putting
yourself back together?” Ron asked.
“Yes,” said Hermione with a hollow
smile, “but it would be excruciatingly painful.”
“Why? How do you do it?” asked
Harry.
“Remorse,” said Hermione. “You’ve
got to really feel what you’ve done. There’s a footnote.
Apparently the pain of it can destroy you. I can’t see Voldemort
attempting it somehow, can you?”
“No,” said Ron, before Harry could
answer. “So does it say how to destroy Horcruxes in that book?”
“Yes,” said Hermione, now turning
the fragile pages as if examining rotting entrails, “because it
warns Dark wizards how strong they have to make the enchantments on
them. From all that I’ve read, what Harry did to Riddle’s diary
was one of the few really foolproof ways of destroying a Horcrux.”
“What, stabbing it with a basilisk
fang?” asked Harry.
“Oh well, lucky we’ve got such a
large supply of basilisk fangs, then,” said Ron. “I was wondering
what we were going to do with them.”
“It doesn’t have to be a basilisk
fang,” said Hermione patiently. “It has to be something so
destructive that the Horcrux can’t repair itself. Basilisk venom
only has one antidote, and it’s incredibly rare—
“—phoenix tears,” said Harry,
nodding.
“Exactly,” said Hermione. “Our
problem is that there are very few substances as destructive as
basilisk venom, and they’re all dangerous to carry around with you.
That’s a problem we’re going to have to solve, though, because
ripping, smashing, or crushing a Horcrux won’t do the trick. You’ve
got to put it beyond magical repair.”
“But even if we wreck the thing it
lives in,” said Ron, “why can’t the bit of soul in it just go
and live in something else?”
“Because a Horcrux is the complete
opposite of a human being.”
Seeing that Harry and Ron looked
thoroughly confused, Hermione hurried on, “Look, if I picked up a
sword right now, Ron, and ran you through with it, I wouldn’t
damage your soul at all.”
“Which would be a real comfort to me,
I’m sure,” said Ron. Harry laughed.
“It should be, actually! But my point
is that whatever happens to your body, your soul will survive,
untouched,” said Hermione. “But it’s the other way round with a
Horcrux. The fragment of soul inside it depends on its container, its
enchanted body, for survival. It can’t exist without it.”
“That diary sort of died when I
stabbed it,” said Harry, remembering ink pouring like blood from
the punctured pages, and the screams of the piece of Voldemort’s
soul as it vanished.
“And once the diary was properly
destroyed, the bit of soul trapped in it could no longer exist. Ginny
tried to get rid of the diary before you did, flushing it away, but
obviously it came back good as new.”
“Hang on,” said Ron, frowning. “The
bit of soul in that diary was possessing Ginny, wasn’t it? How does
that work, then?”
“While the magical container is still
intact, the bit of soul inside it can flit in and out of someone if
they get too close to the object. I don’t mean holding it for too
long, it’s nothing to do with touching it,” she added before Ron
could speak. “I mean close emotionally. Ginny poured her heart out
into that diary, she made herself incredibly vulnerable. You’re in
trouble if you get too fond of or dependent on the Horcrux.”
“I wonder how Dumbledore destroyed
the ring?” said Harry. “Why didn’t I ask him? I never really…”
His voice tailed away: He was thinking
of all the things he should have asked Dumbledore, and of how, since
the headmaster had died, it seemed to Harry that he had wasted so
many opportunities when Dumbledore had been alive, to find out more…
to find out everything…
The silence was shattered as the
bedroom door flew open with a wall-shaking crash. Hermione shrieked
and dropped Secrets of the Darkest Art; Crookshanks streaked under
the bed, hissing indignantly; Ron jumped off the bed, skidded on a
discarded Chocolate Frog wrapper, and smacked his head on the
opposite wall; and Harry instinctively dived for his wand before
realizing that he was looking up at Mrs. Weasley, whose hair was
disheveled and whose face was contorted with rage.
“I’m so sorry to break up this cozy
little gathering,” she said, her voice trembling. “I’m sure you
all need your rest… but there are wedding presents stacked in my
room that need sorting out and I was under the impression that you
had agreed to help.”
“Oh yes,” said Hermione, looking
terrified as she leapt to her feet, sending books flying in every
direction, “we will… we’re sorry…”
With an anguished look at Harry and
Ron, Hermione hurried out of the room after Mrs. Weasley.
“It’s like being a house-elf,”
complained Ron in an undertone, still massaging his head as he and
Harry followed. “Except without the job satisfaction. The sooner
this wedding’s over, the happier I’ll be.”
“Yeah,” said Harry, “then we’ll
have nothing to do except find Horcruxes… It’ll be like a
holiday, won’t it?”
Ron started to laugh, but at the sight
of the enormous pile of wedding presents waiting for them in Mrs.
Weasley’s room, stopped quite abruptly.
The Delacours arrived the following
morning at eleven o’clock. Harry, Ron, Hermione, and Ginny were
feeling quite resentful toward Fleur’s family by this time, and it
was with ill grace that Ron stumped back upstairs to put on matching
socks, and Harry attempted to flatten his hair. Once they had all
been deemed smart enough, they trooped out into the sunny backyard to
await the visitors.
Harry had never seen the place looking
so tidy. The rusty cauldrons and old Wellington boots that usually
littered the steps by the back door were gone, replaced by two new
Flutterby bushes standing either side of the door in large pots;
though there was no breeze, the leaves waved lazily, giving an
attractive rippling effect. The chickens had been shut away, the yard
had been swept, and the nearby garden had been pruned, plucked, and
generally spruced up, although Harry, who liked it in its overgrown
state, thought that it looked rather forlorn without its usual
contingent of capering gnomes.
He had lost track of how many security
enchantments had been placed upon the Burrow by both the Order and
the Ministry; all he knew was that it was no longer possible for
anybody to travel by magic directly into the place. Mr. Weasley had
therefore gone to meet the Delacours on top of a nearby hill, where
they were to arrive by Portkey. The first sound of their approach was
an unusually high-pitched laugh, which turned out to be coming from
Mr. Weasley, who appeared at the gate moments later, laden with
luggage and leading a beautiful blonde woman in long, leaf-green
robes, who could only be Fleur’s mother.
“Maman!” cried Fleur, rushing
forward to embrace her. “Papa!”
Monsieur Delacour was nowhere near as
attractive as his wife; he was a head shorter and extremely plump,
with a little, pointed black beard. However, he looked good-natured.
Bouncing toward Mrs. Weasley on high-heeled boots, he kissed her
twice on each cheek, leaving her flustered.
“You ’ave been to much trouble,”
he said in a deep voice. “Fleur tells us you ’ave been working
very ’ard.”
“Oh, it’s been nothing, nothing!”
trilled Mrs. Weasley. “No trouble at all!”
Ron relieved his feelings by aiming a
kick at a gnome who was peering out from behind one of the new
Flutterby bushes.
“Dear lady!” said Monsieur
Delacour, still holding Mrs. Weasley’s hand between his own two
plump ones and beaming. “We are most honored at the approaching
union of our two families! Let me present my wife, Apolline.”
Madame Delacour glided forward and
stooped to kiss Mrs. Weasley too.
“Enchantée,” she said. “Your
’usband ’as been telling us such amusing stories!”
Mr. Weasley gave a maniacal laugh; Mrs.
Weasley threw him a look, upon which he became immediately silent and
assumed an expression appropriate to the sickbed of a close friend.
“And, of course, you ’ave met my
leetle daughter, Gabrielle!” said Monsieur Delacour. Gabrielle was
Fleur in miniature; eleven years old, with waist-length hair of pure,
silvery blonde, she gave Mrs. Weasley a dazzling smile and hugged
her, then threw Harry a glowing look, batting her eyelashes. Ginny
cleared her throat loudly.
“Well, come in, do!” said Mrs.
Weasley brightly, and she ushered the Delacours into the house, with
many “No, please!”s and “After you!”s and “Not at all!”s.
The Delacours, it soon transpired, were
helpful, pleasant guests. They were pleased with everything and keen
to assist with the preparations for the wedding. Monsieur Delacour
pronounced everything from the seating plan to the bridesmaids’
shoes “Charmant!” Madame Delacour was most accomplished at
household spells and had the oven properly cleaned in a trice;
Gabrielle followed her elder sister around, trying to assist in any
way she could and jabbering away in rapid French.
On the downside, the Burrow was not
built to accommodate so many people. Mr. and Mrs. Weasley were now
sleeping in the sitting room, having shouted down Monsieur and Madame
Delacour’s protests and insisted they take their bedroom. Gabrielle
was sleeping with Fleur in Percy’s old room, and Bill would be
sharing with Charlie, his best man, once Charlie arrived from
Romania. Opportunities to make plans together became virtually
nonexistent, and it was in desperation that Harry, Ron, and Hermione
took to volunteering to feed the chickens just to escape the
overcrowded house.
“But she still won’t leave us
alone!” snarled Ron, as their second attempt at a meeting in the
yard was foiled by the appearance of Mrs. Weasley carrying a large
basket of laundry in her arms.
“Oh, good, you’ve fed the
chickens,” she called as she approached them. “We’d better shut
them away again before the men arrive tomorrow… to put up the tent
for the wedding,” she explained, pausing to lean against the
henhouse. She looked exhausted. “Millamant’s Magic Marquees…
they’re very good, Bill’s escorting them… You’d better stay
inside while they’re here, Harry. I must say it does complicate
organizing a wedding, having all these security spells around the
place.”
“I’m sorry,” said Harry humbly.
“Oh, don’t be silly, dear!” said
Mrs. Weasley at once. “I didn’t mean—well, your safety’s much
more important! Actually, I’ve been wanting to ask you how you want
to celebrate your birthday, Harry. Seventeen, after all, it’s an
important day…”
“I don’t want a fuss,” said Harry
quickly, envisaging the additional strain this would put on them all.
“Really, Mrs. Weasley, just a normal dinner would be fine… It’s
the day before the wedding…”
“Oh, well, if you’re sure, dear.
I’ll invite Remus and Tonks, shall I? And how about Hagrid?”
“That’d be great,” said Harry.
“But please don’t go to loads of trouble.”
“Not at all, not at all… It’s no
trouble…”
She looked at him, a long, searching
look, then smiled a little sadly, straightened up, and walked away.
Harry watched as she waved her wand near the washing line, and the
damp clothes rose into the air to hang themselves up, and suddenly he
felt a great wave of remorse for the inconvenience and the pain he
was giving her.
Chapter 7
The Will of Albus Dumbledore
He was walking along a mountain road in
the cool blue light of dawn. Far below, swathed in mist, was the
shadow of a small town. Was the man he sought down there, the man he
needed so badly he could think of little else, the man who held the
answer, the answer to his problem…?
“Oi, wake up.”
Harry opened his eyes. He was lying
again on the camp bed in Ron’s dingy attic room. The sun had not
yet risen and the room was still shadowy. Pigwidgeon was asleep with
his head under his tiny wing. The scar on Harry’s forehead was
prickling.
“You were muttering in your sleep.”
“Was I?”
“Yeah. ‘Gregorovitch.’ You kept
saying ‘Gregorovitch.’”
Harry was not wearing his glasses;
Ron’s face appeared slightly blurred.
“Who’s Gregorovitch?”
“I dunno, do I? You were the one
saying it.”
Harry rubbed his forehead, thinking. He
had a vague idea he had heard the name before, but he could not think
where.
“I think Voldemort’s looking for
him.”
“Poor bloke,” said Ron fervently.
Harry sat up, still rubbing his scar,
now wide awake. He tried to remember exactly what he had seen in the
dream, but all that came back was a mountainous horizon and the
outline of the little village cradled in a deep valley.
“I think he’s abroad.”
“Who, Gregorovitch?”
“Voldemort. I think he’s somewhere
abroad, looking for Gregorovitch. It didn’t look like anywhere in
Britain.”
“You reckon you were seeing into his
mind again?”
Ron sounded worried.
“Do me a favor and don’t tell
Hermione,” said Harry. “Although how she expects me to stop
seeing stuff in my sleep…”
He gazed up at little Pigwidgeon’s
cage, thinking… Why was the name “Gregorovitch” familiar?
“I think,” he said slowly, “he’s
got something to do with Quidditch. There’s some connection, but I
can’t—I can’t think what it is.”
“Quidditch?” said Ron. “Sure
you’re not thinking of Gorgovitch?”
“Who?”
“Dragomir Gorgovitch, Chaser,
transferred to the Chudley Cannons for a record fee two years ago.
Record holder for most Quaffle drops in a season.”
“No,” said Harry. “I’m
definitely not thinking of Gorgovitch.”
“I try not to either,” said Ron.
“Well, happy birthday anyway.”
“Wow—that’s right, I forgot! I’m
seventeen!”
Harry seized the wand lying beside his
camp bed, pointed it at the cluttered desk where he had left his
glasses, and said, “Accio Glasses!” Although they were only
around a foot away, there was something immensely satisfying about
seeing them zoom toward him, at least until they poked him in the
eye.
“Slick,” snorted Ron.
Reveling in the removal of his Trace,
Harry sent Ron’s possessions flying around the room, causing
Pigwidgeon to wake up and flutter excitedly around his cage. Harry
also tried tying the laces of his trainers by magic (the resultant
knot took several minutes to untie by hand) and, purely for the
pleasure of it, turned the orange robes on Ron’s Chudley Cannons
posters bright blue.
“I’d do your fly by hand, though,”
Ron advised Harry, sniggering when Harry immediately checked it.
“Here’s your present. Unwrap it up here, it’s not for my
mother’s eyes.”
“A book?” said Harry as he took the
rectangular parcel. “Bit of a departure from tradition, isn’t
it?”
“This isn’t your average book,”
said Ron. “It’s pure gold: Twelve Fail-Safe Ways to Charm
Witches. Explains everything you need to know about girls. If only
I’d had this last year I’d have known exactly how to get rid of
Lavender and I would’ve known how to get going with… Well, Fred
and George gave me a copy, and I’ve learned a lot. You’d be
surprised, it’s not all about wandwork, either.”
When they arrived in the kitchen they
found a pile of presents waiting on the table. Bill and Monsieur
Delacour were finishing their breakfasts, while Mrs. Weasley stood
chatting to them over the frying pan.
“Arthur told me to wish you a happy
seventeenth, Harry,” said Mrs. Weasley, beaming at him. “He had
to leave early for work, but he’ll be back for dinner. That’s our
present on top.”
Harry sat down, took the square parcel
she had indicated, and unwrapped it. Inside was a watch very like the
one Mr. and Mrs. Weasley had given Ron for his seventeenth; it was
gold, with stars circling around the face instead of hands.
“It’s traditional to give a wizard
a watch when he comes of age,” said Mrs. Weasley, watching him
anxiously from beside the cooker. “I’m afraid that one isn’t
new like Ron’s, it was actually my brother Fabian’s and he wasn’t
terribly careful with his possessions, it’s a bit dented on the
back, but—”
The rest of her speech was lost; Harry
had got up and hugged her. He tried to put a lot of unsaid things
into the hug and perhaps she understood them, because she patted his
cheek clumsily when he released her, then waved her wand in a
slightly random way, causing half a pack of bacon to flop out of the
frying pan onto the floor.
“Happy birthday, Harry!” said
Hermione, hurrying into the kitchen and adding her own present to the
top of the pile. “It’s not much, but I hope you like it. What did
you get him?” she added to Ron, who seemed not to hear her.
“Come on, then, open Hermione’s!”
said Ron.
She had bought him a new Sneakoscope.
The other packages contained an enchanted razor from Bill and Fleur
(“Ah yes, zis will give you ze smoothest shave you will ever ’ave,”
Monsieur Delacour assured him, “but you must tell it clearly what
you want… ozzerwise you might find you ’ave a leetle less hair
zan you would like…”), chocolates from the Delacours, and an
enormous box of the latest Weasleys’ Wizard Wheezes merchandise
from Fred and George.
Harry, Ron, and Hermione did not linger
at the table, as the arrival of Madame Delacour, Fleur, and Gabrielle
made the kitchen uncomfortably crowded.
“I’ll pack these for you,”
Hermione said brightly, taking Harry’s presents out of his arms as
the three of them headed back upstairs. “I’m nearly done, I’m
just waiting for the rest of your underpants to come out of the wash,
Ron—”
Ron’s splutter was interrupted by the
opening of a door on the first-floor landing.
“Harry, will you come in here a
moment?”
It was Ginny. Ron came to an abrupt
halt, but Hermione took him by the elbow and tugged him on up the
stairs. Feeling nervous, Harry followed Ginny into her room.
He had never been inside it before. It
was small, but bright. There was a large poster of the Wizarding band
the Weird Sisters on one wall, and a picture of Gwenog Jones, Captain
of the all-witch Quidditch team the Holyhead Harpies, on the other. A
desk stood facing the open window, which looked out over the orchard
where he and Ginny had once played two-a-side Quidditch with Ron and
Hermione, and which now housed a large, pearly white marquee. The
golden flag on top was level with Ginny’s window.
Ginny looked up into Harry’s face,
took a deep breath, and said, “Happy seventeenth.”
“Yeah… thanks.”
She was looking at him steadily; he,
however, found it difficult to look back at her; it was like gazing
into a brilliant light.
“Nice view,” he said feebly,
pointing toward the window.
She ignored this. He could not blame
her.
“I couldn’t think what to get you,”
she said.
“You didn’t have to get me
anything.”
She disregarded this too.
“I didn’t know what would be
useful. Nothing too big, because you wouldn’t be able to take it
with you.”
He chanced a glance at her. She was not
tearful; that was one of the many wonderful things about Ginny, she
was rarely weepy. He had sometimes thought that having six brothers
must have toughened her up.
She took a step closer to him.
“So then I thought, I’d like you to
have something to remember me by, you know, if you meet some veela
when you’re off doing whatever you’re doing.”
“I think dating opportunities are
going to be pretty thin on the ground, to be honest.”
“There’s the silver lining I’ve
been looking for,” she whispered, and then she was kissing him as
she had never kissed him before, and Harry was kissing her back, and
it was blissful oblivion, better than firewhisky; she was the only
real thing in the world, Ginny, the feel of her, one hand at her back
and one in her long, sweet-smelling hair—
The door banged open behind them and
they jumped apart.
“Oh,” said Ron pointedly. “Sorry.”
“Ron!” Hermione was just behind
him, slightly out of breath. There was a strained silence, then Ginny
said in a flat little voice,
“Well, happy birthday anyway, Harry.”
Ron’s ears were scarlet; Hermione
looked nervous. Harry wanted to slam the door in their faces, but it
felt as though a cold draft had entered the room when the door
opened, and his shining moment had popped like a soap bubble. All the
reasons for ending his relationship with Ginny, for staying well away
from her, seemed to have slunk inside the room with Ron, and all
happy forgetfulness was gone.
He looked at Ginny, wanting to say
something, though he hardly knew what, but she had turned her back on
him. He thought that she might have succumbed, for once, to tears. He
could not do anything to comfort her in front of Ron.
“I’ll see you later,” he said,
and followed the other two out of the bedroom.
Ron marched downstairs, through the
still-crowded kitchen and into the yard, and Harry kept pace with him
all the way, Hermione trotting along behind them looking scared.
Once he reached the seclusion of the
freshly mown lawn, Ron rounded on Harry.
“You ditched her. What are you doing
now, messing her around?”
“I’m not messing her around,”
said Harry, as Hermione caught up with them.
“Ron—”
But Ron held up a hand to silence her.
“She was really cut up when you ended
it—”
“So was I. You know why I stopped it,
and it wasn’t because I wanted to.”
“Yeah, but you go snogging her now
and she’s just going to get her hopes up again—”
“She’s not an idiot, she knows it
can’t happen, she’s not expecting us to—to end up married, or—”
As he said it, a vivid picture formed
in Harry’s mind of Ginny in a white dress, marrying a tall,
faceless, and unpleasant stranger. In one spiraling moment it seemed
to hit him: Her future was free and unencumbered, whereas his… he
could see nothing but Voldemort ahead.
“If you keep groping her every chance
you get—”
“It won’t happen again,” said
Harry harshly. The day was cloudless, but he felt as though the sun
had gone in. “Okay?”
Ron looked half resentful, half
sheepish; he rocked backward and forward on his feet for a moment,
then said, “Right then, well, that’s… yeah.”
Ginny did not seek another one-to-one
meeting with Harry for the rest of the day, nor by any look or
gesture did she show that they had shared more than polite
conversation in her room. Nevertheless, Charlie’s arrival came as a
relief to Harry. It provided a distraction, watching Mrs. Weasley
force Charlie into a chair, raise her wand threateningly, and
announce that he was about to get a proper haircut.
As Harry’s birthday dinner would have
stretched the Burrow’s kitchen to breaking point even before the
arrival of Charlie, Lupin, Tonks, and Hagrid, several tables were
placed end to end in the garden. Fred and George bewitched a number
of purple lanterns, all emblazoned with a large number 17, to hang in
midair over the guests. Thanks to Mrs. Weasley’s ministrations,
George’s wound was neat and clean, but Harry was not yet used to
the dark hole in the side of his head, despite the twins’ many
jokes about it.
Hermione made purple and gold streamers
erupt from the end of her wand and drape themselves artistically over
the trees and bushes.
“Nice,” said Ron, as with one final
flourish of her wand, Hermione turned the leaves on the crabapple
tree to gold. “You’ve really got an eye for that sort of thing.”
“Thank you, Ron!” said Hermione,
looking both pleased and a little confused. Harry turned away,
smiling to himself. He had a funny notion that he would find a
chapter on compliments when he found time to peruse his copy of
Twelve Fail-Safe Ways to Charm Witches; he caught Ginny’s eye and
grinned at her before remembering his promise to Ron and hurriedly
striking up a conversation with Monsieur Delacour.
“Out of the way, out of the way!”
sang Mrs. Weasley, coming through the gate with what appeared to be a
giant, beach-ball-sized Snitch floating in front of her. Seconds
later Harry realized that it was his birthday cake, which Mrs.
Weasley was suspending with her wand, rather than risk carrying it
over the uneven ground. When the cake had finally landed in the
middle of the table, Harry said, “That looks amazing, Mrs.
Weasley.”
“Oh, it’s nothing, dear,” she
said fondly. Over her shoulder, Ron gave Harry the thumbs-up and
mouthed, Good one.
By seven o’clock all the guests had
arrived, led into the house by Fred and George, who had waited for
them at the end of the lane. Hagrid had honored the occasion by
wearing his best, and horrible, hairy brown suit. Although Lupin
smiled as he shook Harry’s hand, Harry thought he looked rather
unhappy. It was all very odd; Tonks, beside him, looked simply
radiant.
“Happy birthday, Harry,” she said,
hugging him tightly.
“Seventeen, eh!” said Hagrid as he
accepted a bucket-sized glass of wine from Fred. “Six years ter the
day since we met, Harry, d’yeh remember it?”
“Vaguely,” said Harry, grinning up
at him. “Didn’t you smash down the front door, give Dudley a
pig’s tail, and tell me I was a wizard?”
“I forge’ the details,” Hagrid
chortled. “All righ’, Ron, Hermione?”
“We’re fine,” said Hermione. “How
are you?”
“Ar, not bad. Bin busy, we got some
newborn unicorns, I’ll show yeh when yeh get back—” Harry
avoided Ron’s and Hermione’s gazes as Hagrid rummaged in his
pocket. “Here, Harry—couldn’ think what ter get yeh, but then I
remembered this.” He pulled out a small, slightly furry drawstring
pouch with a long string, evidently intended to be worn around the
neck. “Mokeskin. Hide anythin’ in there an’ no one but the
owner can get it out. They’re rare, them.”
“Hagrid, thanks!”
“’S’nothin’,” said Hagrid
with a wave of a dustbin-lid-sized hand. “An’ there’s Charlie!
Always liked him—hey! Charlie!”
Charlie approached, running his hand
slightly ruefully over his new, brutally short haircut. He was
shorter than Ron, thickset, with a number of burns and scratches up
his muscley arms.
“Hi, Hagrid, how’s it going?”
“Bin meanin’ ter write fer ages.
How’s Norbert doin’?”
“Norbert?” Charlie laughed. “The
Norwegian Ridgeback? We call her Norberta now.”
“Wha—Norbert’s a girl?”
“Oh yeah,” said Charlie.
“How can you tell?” asked Hermione.
“They’re a lot more vicious,”
said Charlie. He looked over his shoulder and dropped his voice.
“Wish Dad would hurry up and get here. Mum’s getting edgy.”
They all looked over at Mrs. Weasley.
She was trying to talk to Madame Delacour while glancing repeatedly
at the gate.
“I think we’d better start without
Arthur,” she called to the garden at large after a moment or two.
“He must have been held up at—oh!”
They all saw it at the same time: a
streak of light that came flying across the yard and onto the table,
where it resolved itself into a bright silver weasel, which stood on
its hind legs and spoke with Mr. Weasley’s voice.
“Minister of Magic coming with me.”
The Patronus dissolved into thin air,
leaving Fleur’s family peering in astonishment at the place where
it had vanished.
“We shouldn’t be here,” said
Lupin at once. “Harry—I’m sorry—I’ll explain another time—”
He seized Tonks’s wrist and pulled
her away; they reached the fence, climbed over it, and vanished from
sight. Mrs. Weasley looked bewildered.
“The Minister—but why—? I don’t
understand—”
But there was no time to discuss the
matter; a second later, Mr. Weasley had appeared out of thin air at
the gate, accompanied by Rufus Scrimgeour, instantly recognizable by
his mane of grizzled hair.
The two newcomers marched across the
yard toward the garden and the lantern-lit table, where everybody sat
in silence, watching them draw closer. As Scrimgeour came within
range of the lantern light, Harry saw that he looked much older than
the last time they had met, scraggy and grim.
“Sorry to intrude,” said
Scrimgeour, as he limped to a halt before the table. “Especially as
I can see that I am gate-crashing a party.”
His eyes lingered for a moment on the
giant Snitch cake.
“Many happy returns.”
“Thanks,” said Harry.
“I require a private word with you,”
Scrimgeour went on. “Also with Mr. Ronald Weasley and Miss Hermione
Granger.”
“Us?” said Ron, sounding surprised.
“Why us?”
“I shall tell you that when we are
somewhere more private,” said Scrimgeour. “Is there such a
place?” he demanded of Mr. Weasley.
“Yes, of course,” said Mr. Weasley,
who looked nervous. “The, er, sitting room, why don’t you use
that?”
“You can lead the way,” Scrimgeour
said to Ron. “There will be no need for you to accompany us,
Arthur.”
Harry saw Mr. Weasley exchange a
worried look with Mrs. Weasley as he, Ron, and Hermione stood up. As
they led the way back to the house in silence, Harry knew that the
other two were thinking the same as he was: Scrimgeour must, somehow,
have learned that the three of them were planning to drop out of
Hogwarts.
Scrimgeour did not speak as they all
passed through the messy kitchen and into the Burrow’s sitting
room. Although the garden had been full of soft golden evening light,
it was already dark in here: Harry flicked his wand at the oil lamps
as he entered and they illuminated the shabby but cozy room.
Scrimgeour sat himself in the sagging armchair that Mr. Weasley
normally occupied, leaving Harry, Ron, and Hermione to squeeze side
by side onto the sofa. Once they had done so, Scrimgeour spoke.
“I have some questions for the three
of you, and I think it will be best if we do it individually. If you
two”—he pointed at Harry and Hermione—“can wait upstairs, I
will start with Ronald.”
“We’re not going anywhere,” said
Harry, while Hermione nodded vigorously. “You can speak to us
together, or not at all.”
Scrimgeour gave Harry a cold,
appraising look. Harry had the impression that the Minister was
wondering whether it was worthwhile opening hostilities this early.
“Very well then, together,” he
said, shrugging. He cleared his throat. “I am here, as I’m sure
you know, because of Albus Dumbledore’s will.”
Harry, Ron, and Hermione looked at one
another.
“A surprise, apparently! You were not
aware then that Dumbledore had left you anything?”
“A-all of us?” said Ron. “Me and
Hermione too?”
“Yes, all of—”
But Harry interrupted.
“Dumbledore died over a month ago.
Why has it taken this long to give us what he left us?”
“Isn’t it obvious?” said
Hermione, before Scrimgeour could answer. “They wanted to examine
whatever he’s left us. You had no right to do that!” she said,
and her voice trembled slightly.
“I had every right,” said
Scrimgeour dismissively. “The Decree for Justifiable Confiscation
gives the Ministry the power to confiscate the contents of a will—”
“That law was created to stop wizards
passing on Dark artifacts,” said Hermione, “and the Ministry is
supposed to have powerful evidence that the deceased’s possessions
are illegal before seizing them! Are you telling me that you thought
Dumbledore was trying to pass us something cursed?”
“Are you planning to follow a career
in Magical Law, Miss Granger?” asked Scrimgeour.
“No, I’m not,” retorted Hermione.
“I’m hoping to do some good in the world!”
Ron laughed. Scrimgeour’s eyes
flickered toward him and away again as Harry spoke.
“So why have you decided to let us
have our things now? Can’t think of a pretext to keep them?”
“No, it’ll be because the
thirty-one days are up,” said Hermione at once. “They can’t
keep the objects longer than that unless they can prove they’re
dangerous. Right?”
“Would you say you were close to
Dumbledore, Ronald?” asked Scrimgeour, ignoring Hermione. Ron
looked startled.
“Me? Not—not really… It was
always Harry who…”
Ron looked around at Harry and
Hermione, to see Hermione giving him a stop-talking-now! sort of
look, but the damage was done: Scrimgeour looked as though he had
heard exactly what he had expected, and wanted, to hear. He swooped
like a bird of prey upon Ron’s answer.
“If you were not very close to
Dumbledore, how do you account for the fact that he remembered you in
his will? He made exceptionally few personal bequests. The vast
majority of his possessions—his private library, his magical
instruments, and other personal effects—were left to Hogwarts. Why
do you think you were singled out?”
“I… dunno,” said Ron. “I…
when I say we weren’t close… I mean, I think he liked me…”
“You’re being modest, Ron,” said
Hermione. “Dumbledore was very fond of you.”
This was stretching the truth to
breaking point; as far as Harry knew, Ron and Dumbledore had never
been alone together, and direct contact between them had been
negligible. However, Scrimgeour did not seem to be listening. He put
his hand inside his cloak and drew out a drawstring pouch much larger
than the one Hagrid had given Harry. From it, he removed a scroll of
parchment which he unrolled and read aloud.
“‘The Last Will and Testament of
Albus Percival Wulfric Brian Dumbledore’… Yes, here we are…‘To
Ronald Bilius Weasley, I leave my Deluminator, in the hope that he
will remember me when he uses it.’”
Scrimgeour took from the bag an object
that Harry had seen before: It looked something like a silver
cigarette lighter, but it had, he knew, the power to suck all light
from a place, and restore it, with a simple click. Scrimgeour leaned
forward and passed the Deluminator to Ron, who took it and turned it
over in his fingers, looking stunned.
“That is a valuable object,” said
Scrimgeour, watching Ron. “It may even be unique. Certainly it is
of Dumbledore’s own design. Why would he have left you an item so
rare?”
Ron shook his head, looking bewildered.
“Dumbledore must have taught
thousands of students,” Scrimgeour persevered. “Yet the only ones
he remembered in his will are you three. Why is that? To what use did
he think you would put his Deluminator, Mr. Weasley?”
“Put out lights, I s’pose,”
mumbled Ron. “What else could I do with it?”
Evidently Scrimgeour had no
suggestions. After squinting at Ron for a moment or two, he turned
back to Dumbledore’s will.
“‘To Miss Hermione Jean Granger, I
leave my copy of The Tales of Beedle the Bard, in the hope that she
will find it entertaining and instructive.’”
Scrimgeour now pulled out of the bag a
small book that looked as ancient as the copy of Secrets of the
Darkest Art upstairs. Its binding was stained and peeling in places.
Hermione took it from Scrimgeour without a word. She held the book in
her lap and gazed at it. Harry saw that the title was in runes; he
had never learned to read them. As he looked, a tear splashed onto
the embossed symbols.
“Why do you think Dumbledore left you
that book, Miss Granger?” asked Scrimgeour.
“He… he knew I liked books,” said
Hermione in a thick voice, mopping her eyes with her sleeve.
“But why that particular book?”
“I don’t know. He must have thought
I’d enjoy it.”
“Did you ever discuss codes, or any
means of passing secret messages, with Dumbledore?”
“No, I didn’t,” said Hermione,
still wiping her eyes on her sleeve. “And if the Ministry hasn’t
found any hidden codes in this book in thirty-one days, I doubt that
I will.”
She suppressed a sob. They were wedged
together so tightly that Ron had difficulty extracting his arm to put
it around Hermione’s shoulders. Scrimgeour turned back to the will.
“‘To Harry James Potter,’” he
read, and Harry’s insides contracted with a sudden excitement, “‘I
leave the Snitch he caught in his first Quidditch match at Hogwarts,
as a reminder of the rewards of perseverance and skill.’”
As Scrimgeour pulled out the tiny,
walnut-sized golden ball, its silver wings fluttered rather feebly,
and Harry could not help feeling a definite sense of anticlimax.
“Why did Dumbledore leave you this
Snitch?” asked Scrimgeour.
“No idea,” said Harry. “For the
reasons you just read out, I suppose… to remind me what you can get
if you… persevere and whatever it was.”
“You think this a mere symbolic
keepsake, then?”
“I suppose so,” said Harry. “What
else could it be?”
“I’m asking the questions,” said
Scrimgeour, shifting his chair a little closer to the sofa. Dusk was
really falling outside now; the marquee beyond the windows towered
ghostly white over the hedge.
“I notice that your birthday cake is
in the shape of a Snitch,” Scrimgeour said to Harry. “Why is
that?”
Hermione laughed derisively.
“Oh, it can’t be a reference to the
fact Harry’s a great Seeker, that’s way too obvious,” she said.
“There must be a secret message from Dumbledore hidden in the
icing!”
“I don’t think there’s anything
hidden in the icing,” said Scrimgeour, “but a Snitch would be a
very good hiding place for a small object. You know why, I’m sure?”
Harry shrugged. Hermione, however,
answered: Harry thought that answering questions correctly was such a
deeply ingrained habit she could not suppress the urge.
“Because Snitches have flesh
memories,” she said.
“What?” said Harry and Ron
together; both considered Hermione’s Quidditch knowledge
negligible.
“Correct,” said Scrimgeour. “A
Snitch is not touched by bare skin before it is released, not even by
the maker, who wears gloves. It carries an enchantment by which it
can identify the first human to lay hands upon it, in case of a
disputed capture. This Snitch”—he held up the tiny golden
ball—“will remember your touch, Potter. It occurs to me that
Dumbledore, who had prodigious magical skill, whatever his other
faults, might have enchanted this Snitch so that it will open only
for you.”
Harry’s heart was beating rather
fast. He was sure that Scrimgeour was right. How could he avoid
taking the Snitch with his bare hand in front of the Minister?
“You don’t say anything,” said
Scrimgeour. “Perhaps you already know what the Snitch contains?”
“No,” said Harry, still wondering
how he could appear to touch the Snitch without really doing so. If
only he knew Legilimency, really knew it, and could read Hermione’s
mind; he could practically hear her brain whirring beside him.
“Take it,” said Scrimgeour quietly.
Harry met the Minister’s yellow eyes
and knew he had no option but to obey. He held out his hand, and
Scrimgeour leaned forward again and placed the Snitch, slowly and
deliberately, into Harry’s palm.
Nothing happened. As Harry’s fingers
closed around the Snitch, its tired wings fluttered and were still.
Scrimgeour, Ron, and Hermione continued to gaze avidly at the now
partially concealed ball, as if still hoping it might transform in
some way.
“That was dramatic,” said Harry
coolly. Both Ron and Hermione laughed.
“That’s all, then, is it?” asked
Hermione, making to prise herself off the sofa.
“Not quite,” said Scrimgeour, who
looked bad-tempered now. “Dumbledore left you a second bequest,
Potter.”
“What is it?” asked Harry,
excitement rekindling.
Scrimgeour did not bother to read from
the will this time.
“The sword of Godric Gryffindor,”
he said.
Hermione and Ron both stiffened. Harry
looked around for a sign of the ruby-encrusted hilt, but Scrimgeour
did not pull the sword from the leather pouch, which in any case
looked much too small to contain it.
“So where is it?” Harry asked
suspiciously.
“Unfortunately,” said Scrimgeour,
“that sword was not Dumbledore’s to give away. The sword of
Godric Gryffindor is an important historical artifact, and as such,
belongs—”
“It belongs to Harry!” said
Hermione hotly. “It chose him, he was the one who found it, it came
to him out of the Sorting Hat—”
“According to reliable historical
sources, the sword may present itself to any worthy Gryffindor,”
said Scrimgeour. “That does not make it the exclusive property of
Mr. Potter, whatever Dumbledore may have decided.” Scrimgeour
scratched his badly shaven cheek, scrutinizing Harry. “Why do you
think—?”
“—Dumbledore wanted to give me the
sword?” said Harry, struggling to keep his temper. “Maybe he
thought it would look nice on my wall.”
“This is not a joke, Potter!”
growled Scrimgeour. “Was it because Dumbledore believed that only
the sword of Godric Gryffindor could defeat the Heir of Slytherin?
Did he wish to give you that sword, Potter, because he believed, as
do many, that you are the one destined to destroy
He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named?”
“Interesting theory,” said Harry.
“Has anyone ever tried sticking a sword in Voldemort? Maybe the
Ministry should put some people onto that, instead of wasting their
time stripping down Deluminators or covering up breakouts from
Azkaban. So is this what you’ve been doing, Minister, shut up in
your office, trying to break open a Snitch? People are dying—I was
nearly one of them—Voldemort chased me across three counties, he
killed Mad-Eye Moody, but there’s been no word about any of that
from the Ministry, has there? And you still expect us to cooperate
with you!”
“You go too far!” shouted
Scrimgeour, standing up; Harry jumped to his feet too. Scrimgeour
limped toward Harry and jabbed him hard in the chest with the point
of his wand: It singed a hole in Harry’s T-shirt like a lit
cigarette.
“Oi!” said Ron, jumping up and
raising his own wand, but Harry said,
“No! D’you want to give him an
excuse to arrest us?”
“Remembered you’re not at school,
have you?” said Scrimgeour, breathing hard into Harry’s face.
“Remembered that I am not Dumbledore, who forgave your insolence
and insubordination? You may wear that scar like a crown, Potter, but
it is not up to a seventeen-year-old boy to tell me how to do my job!
It’s time you learned some respect!”
“It’s time you earned it,” said
Harry.
The floor trembled; there was a sound
of running footsteps, then the door to the sitting room burst open
and Mr. and Mrs. Weasley ran in.
“We—we thought we heard—” began
Mr. Weasley, looking thoroughly alarmed at the sight of Harry and the
Minister virtually nose to nose.
“—raised voices,” panted Mrs.
Weasley.
Scrimgeour took a couple of steps back
from Harry, glancing at the hole he had made in Harry’s T-shirt. He
seemed to regret his loss of temper.
“It—it was nothing,” he growled.
“I… regret your attitude,” he said, looking Harry full in the
face once more. “You seem to think that the Ministry does not
desire what you—what Dumbledore—desired. We ought to be working
together.”
“I don’t like your methods,
Minister,” said Harry. “Remember?”
For the second time, he raised his
right fist and displayed to Scrimgeour the scars that still showed
white on the back of it, spelling I must not tell lies. Scrimgeour’s
expression hardened. He turned away without another word and limped
from the room. Mrs. Weasley hurried after him; Harry heard her stop
at the back door. After a minute or so she called, “He’s gone!”
“What did he want?” Mr. Weasley
asked, looking around at Harry, Ron, and Hermione as Mrs. Weasley
came hurrying back to them.
“To give us what Dumbledore left us,”
said Harry. “They’ve only just released the contents of his
will.”
Outside in the garden, over the dinner
tables, the three objects Scrimgeour had given them were passed from
hand to hand. Everyone exclaimed over the Deluminator and The Tales
of Beedle the Bard and lamented the fact that Scrimgeour had refused
to pass on the sword, but none of them could offer any suggestion as
to why Dumbledore would have left Harry an old Snitch. As Mr. Weasley
examined the Deluminator for the third or fourth time, Mrs. Weasley
said tentatively, “Harry, dear, everyone’s awfully hungry, we
didn’t like to start without you… Shall I serve dinner now?”
They all ate rather hurriedly and then,
after a hasty chorus of “Happy Birthday” and much gulping of
cake, the party broke up. Hagrid, who was invited to the wedding the
following day, but was far too bulky to sleep in the overstretched
Burrow, left to set up a tent for himself in a neighboring field.
“Meet us upstairs,” Harry whispered
to Hermione, while they helped Mrs. Weasley restore the garden to its
normal state. “After everyone’s gone to bed.”
Up in the attic room, Ron examined his
Deluminator, and Harry filled Hagrid’s mokeskin purse, not with
gold, but with those items he most prized, apparently worthless
though some of them were: the Marauder’s Map, the shard of Sirius’s
enchanted mirror, and R.A.B.’s locket. He pulled the strings tight
and slipped the purse around his neck, then sat holding the old
Snitch and watching its wings flutter feebly. At last, Hermione
tapped on the door and tiptoed inside.
“Muffliato,” she whispered, waving
her wand in the direction of the stairs.
“Thought you didn’t approve of that
spell?” said Ron.
“Times change,” said Hermione.
“Now, show us that Deluminator.”
Ron obliged at once. Holding it up in
front of him, he clicked it. The solitary lamp they had lit went out
at once.
“The thing is,” whispered Hermione
through the dark, “we could have achieved that with Peruvian
Instant Darkness Powder.”
There was a small click, and the ball
of light from the lamp flew back to the ceiling and illuminated them
all once more.
“Still, it’s cool,” said Ron, a
little defensively. “And from what they said, Dumbledore invented
it himself!”
“I know, but surely he wouldn’t
have singled you out in his will just to help us turn out the
lights!”
“D’you think he knew the Ministry
would confiscate his will and examine everything he’d left us?”
asked Harry.
“Definitely,” said Hermione. “He
couldn’t tell us in the will why he was leaving us these things,
but that still doesn’t explain…”
“…why he couldn’t have given us a
hint when he was alive?” asked Ron.
“Well, exactly,” said Hermione, now
flicking through The Tales of Beedle the Bard. “If these things are
important enough to pass on right under the nose of the Ministry,
you’d think he’d have let us know why… unless he thought it was
obvious?”
“Thought wrong, then, didn’t he?”
said Ron. “I always said he was mental. Brilliant and everything,
but cracked. Leaving Harry an old Snitch—what the hell was that
about?”
“I’ve no idea,” said Hermione.
“When Scrimgeour made you take it, Harry, I was so sure that
something was going to happen!”
“Yeah, well,” said Harry, his pulse
quickening as he raised the Snitch in his fingers. “I wasn’t
going to try too hard in front of Scrimgeour, was I?”
“What do you mean?” asked Hermione.
“The Snitch I caught in my first ever
Quidditch match?” said Harry. “Don’t you remember?”
Hermione looked simply bemused. Ron,
however, gasped, pointing frantically from Harry to the Snitch and
back again until he found his voice.
“That was the one you nearly
swallowed!”
“Exactly,” said Harry, and with his
heart beating fast, he pressed his mouth to the Snitch.
It did not open. Frustration and bitter
disappointment welled up inside him: He lowered the golden sphere,
but then Hermione cried out.
“Writing! There’s writing on it,
quick, look!”
He nearly dropped the Snitch in
surprise and excitement. Hermione was quite right. Engraved upon the
smooth golden surface, where seconds before there had been nothing,
were five words written in the thin, slanting handwriting that Harry
recognized as Dumbledore’s:
I open at the close.
He had barely read them when the words
vanished again.
“‘I open at the close…’ What’s
that supposed to mean?”
Hermione and Ron shook their heads,
looking blank.
“I open at the close… at the close…
I open at the close…”
But no matter how often they repeated
the words, with many different inflections, they were unable to wring
any more meaning from them.
“And the sword,” said Ron finally,
when they had at last abandoned their attempts to divine meaning in
the Snitch’s inscription. “Why did he want Harry to have the
sword?”
“And why couldn’t he just have told
me?” Harry said quietly. “It was there, it was right there on the
wall of his office during all our talks last year! If he wanted me to
have it, why didn’t he just give it to me then?”
He felt as though he were sitting in an
examination with a question he ought to have been able to answer in
front of him, his brain slow and unresponsive. Was there something he
had missed in the long talks with Dumbledore last year? Ought he to
know what it all meant? Had Dumbledore expected him to understand?
“And as for this book,” said
Hermione, “The Tales of Beedle the Bard… I’ve never even heard
of them!”
“You’ve never heard of The Tales of
Beedle the Bard?” said Ron incredulously. “You’re kidding,
right?”
“No, I’m not!” said Hermione in
surprise. “Do you know them, then?”
“Well, of course I do!”
Harry looked up, diverted. The
circumstance of Ron having read a book that Hermione had not was
unprecedented. Ron, however, looked bemused by their surprise.
“Oh come on! All the old kids’
stories are supposed to be Beedle’s, aren’t they? ‘The Fountain
of Fair Fortune’…‘The Wizard and the Hopping Pot’…‘Babbitty
Rabbitty and her Cackling Stump’…”
“Excuse me?” said Hermione,
giggling. “What was that last one?
“Come off it!” said Ron, looking in
disbelief from Harry to Hermione. “You must’ve heard of Babbitty
Rabbitty—”
“Ron, you know full well Harry and I
were brought up by Muggles!” said Hermione. “We didn’t hear
stories like that when we were little, we heard ‘Snow White and the
Seven Dwarfs’ and ‘Cinderella’—”
“What’s that, an illness?” asked
Ron.
“So these are children’s stories?”
asked Hermione, bending again over the runes.
“Yeah,” said Ron uncertainly, “I
mean, that’s just what you hear, you know, that all these old
stories came from Beedle. I dunno what they’re like in the original
versions.”
“But I wonder why Dumbledore thought
I should read them?”
Something creaked downstairs.
“Probably just Charlie, now Mum’s
asleep, sneaking off to regrow his hair,” said Ron nervously.
“All the same, we should get to bed,”
whispered Hermione. “It wouldn’t do to oversleep tomorrow.”
“No,” agreed Ron. “A brutal
triple murder by the bridegroom’s mother might put a bit of a
damper on the wedding. I’ll get the lights.”
And he clicked the Deluminator once
more as Hermione left the room.
Chapter 8
The Wedding
Three o’clock on the following
afternoon found Harry, Ron, Fred, and George standing outside the
great white marquee in the orchard, awaiting the arrival of the
wedding guests. Harry had taken a large dose of Polyjuice Potion and
was now the double of a redheaded Muggle boy from the local village,
Ottery St. Catchpole, from whom Fred had stolen hairs using a
Summoning Charm. The plan was to introduce Harry as “Cousin Barny”
and trust to the great number of Weasley relatives to camouflage him.
All four of them were clutching seating
plans, so that they could help show people to the right seats. A host
of white-robed waiters had arrived an hour earlier, along with a
golden-jacketed band, and all of these wizards were currently sitting
a short distance away under a tree; Harry could see a blue haze of
pipe smoke issuing from the spot.
Behind Harry, the entrance to the
marquee revealed rows and rows of fragile golden chairs set on either
side of a long purple carpet. The supporting poles were entwined with
white and gold flowers. Fred and George had fastened an enormous
bunch of golden balloons over the exact point where Bill and Fleur
would shortly become husband and wife. Outside, butterflies and bees
were hovering lazily over the grass and hedgerow. Harry was rather
uncomfortable. The Muggle boy whose appearance he was affecting was
slightly fatter than him, and his dress robes felt hot and tight in
the full glare of a summer’s day.
“When I get married,” said Fred,
tugging at the collar of his own robes, “I won’t be bothering
with any of this nonsense. You can all wear what you like, and I’ll
put a full Body-Bind Curse on Mum until it’s all over.”
“She wasn’t too bad this morning,
considering,” said George. “Cried a bit about Percy not being
here, but who wants him? Oh blimey, brace yourselves—here they
come, look.”
Brightly colored figures were
appearing, one by one, out of nowhere at the distant boundary of the
yard. Within minutes a procession had formed, which began to snake
its way up through the garden toward the marquee. Exotic flowers and
bewitched birds fluttered on the witches’ hats, while precious gems
glittered from many of the wizards’ cravats; a hum of excited
chatter grew louder and louder, drowning the sound of the bees as the
crowd approached the tent.
“Excellent, I think I see a few veela
cousins,” said George, craning his neck for a better look. “They’ll
need help understanding our English customs, I’ll look after them…”
“Not so fast, Your Holeyness,” said
Fred, and darting past the gaggle of middle-aged witches heading the
procession, he said, “Here—permettez-moi to assister vous,” to
a pair of pretty French girls, who giggled and allowed him to escort
them inside. George was left to deal with the middle-aged witches and
Ron took charge of Mr. Weasley’s old Ministry colleague Perkins,
while a rather deaf old couple fell to Harry’s lot.
“Wotcher,” said a familiar voice as
he came out of the marquee again and found Tonks and Lupin at the
front of the queue. She had turned blonde for the occasion. “Arthur
told us you were the one with the curly hair. Sorry about last
night,” she added in a whisper as Harry led them up the aisle. “The
Ministry’s being very anti-werewolf at the moment and we thought
our presence might not do you any favors.”
“It’s fine, I understand,” said
Harry, speaking more to Lupin than Tonks. Lupin gave him a swift
smile, but as they turned away, Harry saw Lupin’s face fall again
into lines of misery. He did not understand it, but there was no time
to dwell on the matter: Hagrid was causing a certain amount of
disruption. Having misunderstood Fred’s directions he had sat
himself, not upon the magically enlarged and reinforced seat set
aside for him in the back row, but on five seats that now resembled a
large pile of golden matchsticks.
While Mr. Weasley repaired the damage
and Hagrid shouted apologies to anybody who would listen, Harry
hurried back to the entrance to find Ron face-to-face with a most
eccentric-looking wizard. Slightly cross-eyed, with shoulder-length
white hair the texture of candyfloss, he wore a cap whose tassel
dangled in front of his nose and robes of an eye-watering shade of
egg-yolk yellow. An odd symbol, rather like a triangular eye,
glistened from a golden chain around his neck.
“Xenophilius Lovegood,” he said,
extending a hand to Harry, “my daughter and I live just over the
hill, so kind of the good Weasleys to invite us. But I think you know
my Luna?” he added to Ron.
“Yes,” said Ron. “Isn’t she
with you?”
“She lingered in that charming little
garden to say hello to the gnomes, such a glorious infestation! How
few wizards realize just how much we can learn from the wise little
gnomes—or, to give them their correct name, the Gernumbli
gardensi.”
“Ours do know a lot of excellent
swear words,” said Ron, “but I think Fred and George taught them
those.”
He led a party of warlocks into the
marquee as Luna rushed up.
“Hello, Harry!” she said.
“Er—my name’s Barny,” said
Harry, flummoxed.
“Oh, have you changed that too?”
she asked brightly.
“How did you know—?”
“Oh, just your expression,” she
said.
Like her father, Luna was wearing
bright yellow robes, which she had accessorized with a large
sunflower in her hair. Once you got over the brightness of it all,
the general effect was quite pleasant. At least there were no
radishes dangling from her ears.
Xenophilius, who was deep in
conversation with an acquaintance, had missed the exchange between
Luna and Harry. Bidding the wizard farewell, he turned to his
daughter, who held up her finger and said, “Daddy, look—one of
the gnomes actually bit me!”
“How wonderful! Gnome saliva is
enormously beneficial!” said Mr. Lovegood, seizing Luna’s
outstretched finger and examining the bleeding puncture marks. “Luna,
my love, if you should feel any burgeoning talent today—perhaps an
unexpected urge to sing opera or to declaim in Mermish—do not
repress it! You may have been gifted by the Gernumblies!”
Ron, passing them in the opposite
direction, let out a loud snort.
“Ron can laugh,” said Luna serenely
as Harry led her and Xenophilius toward their seats, “but my father
has done a lot of research on Gernumbli magic.”
“Really?” said Harry, who had long
since decided not to challenge Luna or her father’s peculiar views.
“Are you sure you don’t want to put anything on that bite,
though?”
“Oh, it’s fine,” said Luna,
sucking her finger in a dreamy fashion and looking Harry up and down.
“You look smart. I told Daddy most people would probably wear dress
robes, but he believes you ought to wear sun colors to a wedding, for
luck, you know.”
As she drifted off after her father,
Ron reappeared with an elderly witch clutching his arm. Her beaky
nose, red-rimmed eyes, and feathery pink hat gave her the look of a
bad-tempered flamingo.
“…and your hair’s much too long,
Ronald, for a moment I thought you were Ginevra. Merlin’s beard,
what is Xenophilius Lovegood wearing? He looks like an omelet. And
who are you?” she barked at Harry.
“Oh yeah, Auntie Muriel, this is our
cousin Barny.”
“Another Weasley? You breed like
gnomes. Isn’t Harry Potter here? I was hoping to meet him. I
thought he was a friend of yours, Ronald, or have you merely been
boasting?”
“No—he couldn’t come—”
“Hmm. Made an excuse, did he? Not as
gormless as he looks in press photographs, then. I’ve just been
instructing the bride on how best to wear my tiara,” she shouted at
Harry. “Goblin-made, you know, and been in my family for centuries.
She’s a good-looking girl, but still—French. Well, well, find me
a good seat, Ronald, I am a hundred and seven and I ought not to be
on my feet too long.”
Ron gave Harry a meaningful look as he
passed and did not reappear for some time: When next they met at the
entrance, Harry had shown a dozen more people to their places. The
marquee was nearly full now, and for the first time there was no
queue outside.
“Nightmare, Muriel is,” said Ron,
mopping his forehead on his sleeve. “She used to come for Christmas
every year, then, thank God, she took offense because Fred and George
set off a Dung-bomb under her chair at dinner. Dad always says she’ll
have written them out of her will—like they care, they’re going
to end up richer than anyone in the family, rate they’re going…
Wow,” he added, blinking rather rapidly as Hermione came hurrying
toward them. “You look great!”
“Always the tone of surprise,” said
Hermione, though she smiled. She was wearing a floaty, lilac-colored
dress with matching high heels; her hair was sleek and shiny. “Your
Great-Aunt Muriel doesn’t agree, I just met her upstairs while she
was giving Fleur the tiara. She said, ‘Oh dear, is this the
Muggle-born?’ and then, ‘Bad posture and skinny ankles.’”
“Don’t take it personally, she’s
rude to everyone,” said Ron.
“Talking about Muriel?” inquired
George, reemerging from the marquee with Fred. “Yeah, she’s just
told me my ears are lopsided. Old bat. I wish old Uncle Bilius was
still with us, though; he was a right laugh at weddings.”
“Wasn’t he the one who saw a Grim
and died twenty-four hours later?” asked Hermione.
“Well, yeah, he went a bit odd toward
the end,” conceded George.
“But before he went loopy he was the
life and soul of the party,” said Fred. “He used to down an
entire bottle of firewhisky, then run onto the dance floor, hoist up
his robes, and start pulling bunches of flowers out of his—”
“Yes, he sounds a real charmer,”
said Hermione, while Harry roared with laughter.
“Never married, for some reason,”
said Ron.
“You amaze me,” said Hermione.
They were all laughing so much that
none of them noticed the latecomer, a dark-haired young man with a
large, curved nose and thick black eyebrows, until he held out his
invitation to Ron and said, with his eyes on Hermione, “You look
vunderful.”
“Viktor!” she shrieked, and dropped
her small beaded bag, which made a loud thump quite disproportionate
to its size. As she scrambled, blushing, to pick it up, she said, “I
didn’t know you were—goodness—it’s lovely to see—how are
you?”
Ron’s ears had turned bright red
again. After glancing at Krum’s invitation as if he did not believe
a word of it, he said, much too loudly, “How come you’re here?”
“Fleur invited me,” said Krum,
eyebrows raised.
Harry, who had no grudge against Krum,
shook hands; then, feeling that it would be prudent to remove Krum
from Ron’s vicinity, offered to show him his seat.
“Your friend is not pleased to see
me,” said Krum as they entered the now packed marquee. “Or is he
a relative?” he added with a glance at Harry’s red curly hair.
“Cousin,” Harry muttered, but Krum
was not really listening. His appearance was causing a stir,
particularly amongst the veela cousins: He was, after all, a famous
Quidditch player. While people were still craning their necks to get
a good look at him, Ron, Hermione, Fred, and George came hurrying
down the aisle.
“Time to sit down,” Fred told
Harry, “or we’re going to get run over by the bride.”
Harry, Ron, and Hermione took their
seats in the second row behind Fred and George. Hermione looked
rather pink and Ron’s ears were still scarlet. After a few moments
he muttered to Harry, “Did you see he’s grown a stupid little
beard?”
Harry gave a noncommittal grunt.
A sense of jittery anticipation had
filled the warm tent, the general murmuring broken by occasional
spurts of excited laughter. Mr. and Mrs. Weasley strolled up the
aisle, smiling and waving at relatives; Mrs. Weasley was wearing a
brand-new set of amethyst-colored robes with a matching hat.
A moment later Bill and Charlie stood
up at the front of the marquee, both wearing dress robes, with large
white roses in their buttonholes; Fred wolf-whistled and there was an
outbreak of giggling from the veela cousins. Then the crowd fell
silent as music swelled from what seemed to be the golden balloons.
“Ooooh!” said Hermione, swiveling
around in her seat to look at the entrance.
A great collective sigh issued from the
assembled witches and wizards as Monsieur Delacour and Fleur came
walking up the aisle, Fleur gliding, Monsieur Delacour bouncing and
beaming. Fleur was wearing a very simple white dress and seemed to be
emitting a strong, silvery glow. While her radiance usually dimmed
everyone else by comparison, today it beautified everybody it fell
upon. Ginny and Gabrielle, both wearing golden dresses, looked even
prettier than usual, and once Fleur had reached him, Bill did not
look as though he had ever met Fenrir Greyback.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” said a
slightly singsong voice, and with a slight shock, Harry saw the same
small, tufty-haired wizard who had presided at Dumbledore’s
funeral, now standing in front of Bill and Fleur. “We are gathered
here today to celebrate the union of two faithful souls…”
“Yes, my tiara sets off the whole
thing nicely,” said Auntie Muriel in a rather carrying whisper.
“But I must say, Ginevra’s dress is far too low cut.”
Ginny glanced around, grinning, winked
at Harry, then quickly faced the front again. Harry’s mind wandered
a long way from the marquee, back to afternoons spent alone with
Ginny in lonely parts of the school grounds. They seemed so long ago;
they had always seemed too good to be true, as though he had been
stealing shining hours from a normal person’s life, a person
without a lightning-shaped scar on his forehead…
“Do you, William Arthur, take Fleur
Isabelle…?”
In the front row, Mrs. Weasley and
Madame Delacour were both sobbing quietly into scraps of lace.
Trumpetlike sounds from the back of the marquee told everyone that
Hagrid had taken out one of his own tablecloth-sized handkerchiefs.
Hermione turned and beamed at Harry; her eyes too were full of tears.
“…then I declare you bonded for
life.”
The tufty-haired wizard waved his wand
high over the heads of Bill and Fleur and a shower of silver stars
fell upon them, spiraling around their now entwined figures. As Fred
and George led a round of applause, the golden balloons overhead
burst: Birds of paradise and tiny golden bells flew and floated out
of them, adding their songs and chimes to the din.
“Ladies and gentlemen!” called the
tufty-haired wizard. “If you would please stand up!”
They all did so, Auntie Muriel
grumbling audibly; he waved his wand again. The seats on which they
had been sitting rose gracefully into the air as the canvas walls of
the marquee vanished, so that they stood beneath a canopy supported
by golden poles, with a glorious view of the sunlit orchard and
surrounding countryside. Next, a pool of molten gold spread from the
center of the tent to form a gleaming dance floor; the hovering
chairs grouped themselves around small, white-clothed tables, which
all floated gracefully back to earth around it, and the
golden-jacketed band trooped toward a podium.
“Smooth,” said Ron approvingly as
the waiters popped up on all sides, some bearing silver trays of
pumpkin juice, butterbeer, and firewhisky, others tottering piles of
tarts and sandwiches.
“We should go and congratulate them!”
said Hermione, standing on tiptoe to see the place where Bill and
Fleur had vanished amid a crowd of well-wishers.
“We’ll have time later,” shrugged
Ron, snatching three butter-beers from a passing tray and handing one
to Harry. “Hermione, cop hold, let’s grab a table… Not there!
Nowhere near Muriel—”
Ron led the way across the empty dance
floor, glancing left and right as he went: Harry felt sure that he
was keeping an eye out for Krum. By the time they had reached the
other side of the marquee, most of the tables were occupied: The
emptiest was the one where Luna sat alone.
“All right if we join you?” asked
Ron.
“Oh yes,” she said happily.
“Daddy’s just gone to give Bill and Fleur our present.”
“What is it, a lifetime’s supply of
Gurdyroots?” asked Ron.
Hermione aimed a kick at him under the
table, but caught Harry instead. Eyes watering in pain, Harry lost
track of the conversation for a few moments.
The band had begun to play. Bill and
Fleur took to the dance floor first, to great applause; after a
while, Mr. Weasley led Madame Delacour onto the floor, followed by
Mrs. Weasley and Fleur’s father.
“I like this song,” said Luna,
swaying in time to the waltzlike tune, and a few seconds later she
stood up and glided onto the dance floor, where she revolved on the
spot, quite alone, eyes closed and waving her arms.
“She’s great, isn’t she?” said
Ron admiringly. “Always good value.”
But the smile vanished from his face at
once: Viktor Krum had dropped into Luna’s vacant seat. Hermione
looked pleasurably flustered, but this time Krum had not come to
compliment her. With a scowl on his face he said, “Who is that man
in the yellow?”
“That’s Xenophilius Lovegood, he’s
the father of a friend of ours,” said Ron. His pugnacious tone
indicated that they were not about to laugh at Xenophilius, despite
the clear provocation. “Come and dance,” he added abruptly to
Hermione.
She looked taken aback, but pleased
too, and got up. They vanished together into the growing throng on
the dance floor.
“Ah, they are together now?” asked
Krum, momentarily distracted.
“Er—sort of,” said Harry.
“Who are you?” Krum asked.
“Barny Weasley.”
They shook hands.
“You, Barny—you know this man
Lovegood vell?”
“No, I only met him today. Why?”
Krum glowered over the top of his
drink, watching Xenophilius, who was chatting to several warlocks on
the other side of the dance floor.
“Because,” said Krum, “if he vos
not a guest of Fleur’s, I vould duel him, here and now, for vearing
that filthy sign upon his chest.”
“Sign?” said Harry, looking over at
Xenophilius too. The strange triangular eye was gleaming on his
chest. “Why? What’s wrong with it?”
“Grindelvald. That is Grindelvald’s
sign.”
“Grindelwald… the Dark wizard
Dumbledore defeated?”
“Exactly.”
Krum’s jaw muscles worked as if he
were chewing, then he said, “Grindelvald killed many people, my
grandfather, for instance. Of course, he vos never poverful in this
country, they said he feared Dumbledore—and rightly, seeing how he
vos finished. But this”—he pointed a finger at Xenophilius—“this
is his symbol, I recognized it at vunce: Grindelvald carved it into a
vall at Durmstrang ven he vos a pupil there. Some idiots copied it
onto their books and clothes, thinking to shock, make themselves
impressive—until those of us who had lost family members to
Grindelvald taught them better.”
Krum cracked his knuckles menacingly
and glowered at Xenophilius. Harry felt perplexed. It seemed
incredibly unlikely that Luna’s father was a supporter of the Dark
Arts, and nobody else in the tent seemed to have recognized the
triangular, runelike shape.
“Are you—er—quite sure it’s
Grindelwald’s—?”
“I am not mistaken,” said Krum
coldly. “I valked past that sign for several years, I know it
vell.”
“Well, there’s a chance,” said
Harry, “that Xenophilius doesn’t actually know what the symbol
means. The Lovegoods are quite… unusual. He could easily have
picked it up somewhere and think it’s a cross section of the head
of a Crumple-Horned Snorkack or something.”
“The cross section of a vot?”
“Well, I don’t know what they are,
but apparently he and his daughter go on holiday looking for them…”
Harry felt he was doing a bad job
explaining Luna and her father.
“That’s her,” he said, pointing
at Luna, who was still dancing alone, waving her arms around her head
like someone attempting to beat off midges.
“Vy is she doing that?” asked Krum.
“Probably trying to get rid of a
Wrackspurt,” said Harry, who recognized the symptoms.
Krum did not seem to know whether or
not Harry was making fun of him. He drew his wand from inside his
robes and tapped it menacingly on his thigh; sparks flew out of the
end.
“Gregorovitch!” said Harry loudly,
and Krum started, but Harry was too excited to care; the memory had
come back to him at the sight of Krum’s wand: Ollivander taking it
and examining it carefully before the Triwizard Tournament.
“Vot about him?” asked Krum
suspiciously.
“He’s a wandmaker!”
“I know that,” said Krum.
“He made your wand! That’s why I
thought—Quidditch—”
Krum was looking more and more
suspicious.
“How do you know Gregorovitch made my
vand?”
“I… I read it somewhere, I think,”
said Harry. “In a—a fan magazine,” he improvised wildly and
Krum looked mollified.
“I had not realized I ever discussed
my vand with fans,” he said.
“So… er… where is Gregorovitch
these days?”
Krum looked puzzled.
“He retired several years ago. I vos
one of the last to purchase a Gregorovitch vand. They are the
best—although I know, of course, that you Britons set much store by
Ollivander.”
Harry did not answer. He pretended to
watch the dancers, like Krum, but he was thinking hard. So Voldemort
was looking for a celebrated wandmaker, and Harry did not have to
search far for a reason: It was surely because of what Harry’s wand
had done on the night that Voldemort had pursued him across the
skies. The holly and phoenix feather wand had conquered the borrowed
wand, something that Ollivander had not anticipated or understood.
Would Gregorovitch know better? Was he truly more skilled than
Ollivander, did he know secrets of wands that Ollivander did not?
“This girl is very nice-looking,”
Krum said, recalling Harry to his surroundings. Krum was pointing at
Ginny, who had just joined Luna. “She is also a relative of yours?”
“Yeah,” said Harry, suddenly
irritated, “and she’s seeing someone. Jealous type. Big bloke.
You wouldn’t want to cross him.”
Krum grunted.
“Vot,” he said, draining his goblet
and getting to his feet again, “is the point of being an
international Quidditch player if all the good-looking girls are
taken?”
And he strode off, leaving Harry to
take a sandwich from a passing waiter and make his way around the
edge of the crowded dance floor. He wanted to find Ron, to tell him
about Gregorovitch, but Ron was dancing with Hermione out in the
middle of the floor. Harry leaned up against one of the golden
pillars and watched Ginny, who was now dancing with Fred and George’s
friend Lee Jordan, trying not to feel resentful about the promise he
had given Ron.
He had never been to a wedding before,
so he could not judge how Wizarding celebrations differed from Muggle
ones, though he was pretty sure that the latter would not involve a
wedding cake topped with two model phoenixes that took flight when
the cake was cut, or bottles of champagne that floated unsupported
through the crowd. As evening drew in, and moths began to swoop under
the canopy, now lit with floating golden lanterns, the revelry became
more and more uncontained. Fred and George had long since disappeared
into the darkness with a pair of Fleur’s cousins; Charlie, Hagrid,
and a squat wizard in a purple porkpie hat were singing “Odo the
Hero” in a corner.
Wandering through the crowd so as to
escape a drunken uncle of Ron’s who seemed unsure whether or not
Harry was his son, Harry spotted an old wizard sitting alone at a
table. His cloud of white hair made him look rather like an aged
dandelion clock and was topped by a moth-eaten fez. He was vaguely
familiar: Racking his brains, Harry suddenly realized that this was
Elphias Doge, member of the Order of the Phoenix and the writer of
Dumbledore’s obituary.
Harry approached him.
“May I sit down?”
“Of course, of course,” said Doge;
he had a rather high-pitched, wheezy voice.
Harry leaned in.
“Mr. Doge, I’m Harry Potter.”
Doge gasped.
“My dear boy! Arthur told me you were
here, disguised… I am so glad, so honored!”
In a flutter of nervous pleasure Doge
poured Harry a goblet of champagne.
“I thought of writing to you,” he
whispered, “after Dumbledore… the shock… and for you, I am
sure…”
Doge’s tiny eyes filled with sudden
tears.
“I saw the obituary you wrote for the
Daily Prophet,’’ said Harry. “I didn’t realize you knew
Professor Dumbledore so well.”
“As well as anyone,” said Doge,
dabbing his eyes with a napkin. “Certainly I knew him longest, if
you don’t count Aberforth—and somehow, people never do seem to
count Aberforth.”
“Speaking of the Daily Prophet… I
don’t know whether you saw, Mr. Doge—?”
“Oh, please call me Elphias, dear
boy.”
“Elphias, I don’t know whether you
saw the interview Rita Skeeter gave about Dumbledore?”
Doge’s face flooded with angry color.
“Oh yes, Harry, I saw it. That woman,
or vulture might be a more accurate term, positively pestered me to
talk to her. I am ashamed to say that I became rather rude, called
her an interfering trout, which resulted, as you may have seen, in
aspersions cast upon my sanity.”
“Well, in that interview,” Harry
went on, “Rita Skeeter hinted that Professor Dumbledore was
involved in the Dark Arts when he was young.”
“Don’t believe a word of it!”
said Doge at once. “Not a word, Harry! Let nothing tarnish your
memories of Albus Dumbledore!”
Harry looked into Doge’s earnest,
pained face and felt, not reassured, but frustrated. Did Doge really
think it was that easy, that Harry could simply choose not to
believe? Didn’t Doge understand Harry’s need to be sure, to know
everything?
Perhaps Doge suspected Harry’s
feelings, for he looked concerned and hurried on, “Harry, Rita
Skeeter is a dreadful—”
But he was interrupted by a shrill
cackle.
“Rita Skeeter? Oh, I love her, always
read her!”
Harry and Doge looked up to see Auntie
Muriel standing there, the plumes dancing on her hat, a goblet of
champagne in her hand. “She’s written a book about Dumbledore,
you know!”
“Hello, Muriel,” said Doge. “Yes,
we were just discussing—”
“You there! Give me your chair, I’m
a hundred and seven!”
Another redheaded Weasley cousin jumped
off his seat, looking alarmed, and Auntie Muriel swung it around with
surprising strength and plopped herself down upon it between Doge and
Harry.
“Hello again, Barry, or whatever your
name is,” she said to Harry. “Now, what were you saying about
Rita Skeeter, Elphias? You know she’s written a biography of
Dumbledore? I can’t wait to read it, I must remember to place an
order at Flourish and Blotts!”
Doge looked stiff and solemn at this,
but Auntie Muriel drained her goblet and clicked her bony fingers at
a passing waiter for a replacement. She took another large gulp of
champagne, belched, and then said, “There’s no need to look like
a pair of stuffed frogs! Before he became so respected and
respectable and all that tosh, there were some mighty funny rumors
about Albus!”
“Ill-informed sniping,” said Doge,
turning radish-colored again.
“You would say that, Elphias,”
cackled Auntie Muriel. “I noticed how you skated over the sticky
patches in that obituary of yours!”
“I’m sorry you think so,” said
Doge, more coldly still. “I assure you I was writing from the
heart.”
“Oh, we all know you worshipped
Dumbledore; I daresay you’ll still think he was a saint even if it
does turn out that he did away with his Squib sister!”
“Muriel!” exclaimed Doge.
A chill that had nothing to do with the
iced champagne was stealing through Harry’s chest.
“What do you mean?” he asked
Muriel. “Who said his sister was a Squib? I thought she was ill?”
“Thought wrong, then, didn’t you,
Barry!” said Auntie Muriel, looking delighted at the effect she had
produced. “Anyway, how could you expect to know anything about it?
It all happened years and years before you were even thought of, my
dear, and the truth is that those of us who were alive then never
knew what really happened. That’s why I can’t wait to find out
what Skeeter’s unearthed! Dumbledore kept that sister of his quiet
for a long time!”
“Untrue!” wheezed Doge. “Absolutely
untrue!”
“He never told me his sister was a
Squib,” said Harry, without thinking, still cold inside.
“And why on earth would he tell you?”
screeched Muriel, swaying a little in her seat as she attempted to
focus upon Harry.
“The reason Albus never spoke about
Ariana,” began Elphias in a voice stiff with emotion, “is, I
should have thought, quite clear. He was so devastated by her death—”
“Why did nobody ever see her,
Elphias?” squawked Muriel. “Why did half of us never even know
she existed, until they carried the coffin out of the house and held
a funeral for her? Where was saintly Albus while Ariana was locked in
the cellar? Off being brilliant at Hogwarts, and never mind what was
going on in his own house!”
“What d’you mean, locked in the
cellar?” asked Harry. “What is this?”
Doge looked wretched. Auntie Muriel
cackled again and answered Harry.
“Dumbledore’s mother was a
terrifying woman, simply terrifying. Muggle-born, though I heard she
pretended otherwise—”
“She never pretended anything of the
sort! Kendra was a fine woman,” whispered Doge miserably, but
Auntie Muriel ignored him.
“—proud and very domineering, the
sort of witch who would have been mortified to produce a Squib—”
“Ariana was not a Squib!” wheezed
Doge.
“So you say, Elphias, but explain,
then, why she never attended Hogwarts!” said Auntie Muriel. She
turned back to Harry. “In our day, Squibs were often hushed up,
though to take it to the extreme of actually imprisoning a little
girl in the house and pretending she didn’t exist—”
“I tell you, that’s not what
happened!” said Doge, but Auntie Muriel steamrollered on, still
addressing Harry.
“Squibs were usually shipped off to
Muggle schools and encouraged to integrate into the Muggle community…
much kinder than trying to find them a place in the Wizarding world,
where they must always be second class; but naturally Kendra
Dumbledore wouldn’t have dreamed of letting her daughter go to a
Muggle school—”
“Ariana was delicate!” said Doge
desperately. “Her health was always too poor to permit her—”
“—to permit her to leave the
house?” cackled Muriel. “And yet she was never taken to St.
Mungo’s and no Healer was ever summoned to see her!”
“Really, Muriel, how you can possibly
know whether—”
“For your information, Elphias, my
cousin Lancelot was a Healer at St. Mungo’s at the time, and he
told my family in strictest confidence that Ariana had never been
seen there. All most suspicious, Lancelot thought!”
Doge looked to be on the verge of
tears. Auntie Muriel, who seemed to be enjoying herself hugely,
snapped her fingers for more champagne. Numbly Harry thought of how
the Dursleys had once shut him up, locked him away, kept him out of
sight, all for the crime of being a wizard. Had Dumbledore’s sister
suffered the same fate in reverse: imprisoned for her lack of magic?
And had Dumbledore truly left her to her fate while he went off to
Hogwarts, to prove himself brilliant and talented?
“Now, if Kendra hadn’t died first,”
Muriel resumed, “I’d have said that it was she who finished off
Ariana—”
“How can you, Muriel?” groaned
Doge. “A mother kill her own daughter? Think what you are saying!”
“If the mother in question was
capable of imprisoning her daughter for years on end, why not?”
shrugged Auntie Muriel. “But as I say, it doesn’t fit, because
Kendra died before Ariana—of what, nobody ever seemed sure—”
“Oh, no doubt Ariana murdered her,”
said Doge with a brave attempt at scorn. “Why not?”
“Yes, Ariana might have made a
desperate bid for freedom and killed Kendra in the struggle,” said
Auntie Muriel thoughtfully. “Shake your head all you like, Elphias!
You were at Ariana’s funeral, were you not?”
“Yes I was,” said Doge, through
trembling lips. “And a more desperately sad occasion I cannot
remember. Albus was heartbroken—”
“His heart wasn’t the only thing.
Didn’t Aberforth break Albus’s nose halfway through the service?”
If Doge had looked horrified before
this, it was nothing to how he looked now. Muriel might have stabbed
him. She cackled loudly and took another swig of champagne, which
dribbled down her chin.
“How do you—?” croaked Doge.
“My mother was friendly with old
Bathilda Bagshot,” said Auntie Muriel happily. “Bathilda
described the whole thing to Mother while I was listening at the
door. A coffin-side brawl! The way Bathilda told it, Aberforth
shouted that it was all Albus’s fault that Ariana was dead and then
punched him in the face. According to Bathilda, Albus did not even
defend himself, and that’s odd enough in itself, Albus could have
destroyed Aberforth in a duel with both hands tied behind his back.”
Muriel swigged yet more champagne. The
recitation of these old scandals seemed to elate her as much as they
horrified Doge. Harry did not know what to think, what to believe: He
wanted the truth, and yet all Doge did was sit there and bleat feebly
that Ariana had been ill. Harry could hardly believe that Dumbledore
would not have intervened if such cruelty was happening inside his
own house, and yet there was undoubtedly something odd about the
story.
“And I’ll tell you something else,”
Muriel said, hiccuping slightly as she lowered her goblet. “I think
Bathilda has spilled the beans to Rita Skeeter. All those hints in
Skeeter’s interview about an important source close to the
Dumbledores—goodness knows she was there all through the Ariana
business, and it would fit!”
“Bathilda would never talk to Rita
Skeeter!” whispered Doge.
“Bathilda Bagshot?” Harry said.
“The author of A History of Magic?”
The name was printed on the front of
one of Harry’s textbooks, though admittedly not one of the ones he
had read most attentively.
“Yes,” said Doge, clutching at
Harry’s question like a drowning man at a life belt. “A most
gifted magical historian and an old friend of Albus’s.”
“Quite gaga these days, I’ve
heard,” said Auntie Muriel cheerfully.
“If that is so, it is even more
dishonorable for Skeeter to have taken advantage of her,” said
Doge, “and no reliance can be placed on anything Bathilda may have
said!”
“Oh, there are ways of bringing back
memories, and I’m sure Rita Skeeter knows them all,” said Auntie
Muriel. “But even if Bathilda’s completely cuckoo, I’m sure
she’d still have old photographs, maybe even letters. She knew the
Dumbledores for years… Well worth a trip to Godric’s Hollow, I’d
have thought.”
Harry, who had been taking a sip of
butterbeer, choked. Doge banged him on the back as Harry coughed,
looking at Auntie Muriel through streaming eyes. Once he had control
of his voice again, he asked, “Bathilda Bagshot lives in Godric’s
Hollow?”
“Oh yes, she’s been there forever!
The Dumbledores moved there after Percival was imprisoned, and she
was their neighbor.”
“The Dumbledores lived in Godric’s
Hollow?”
“Yes, Barry, that’s what I just
said,” said Auntie Muriel testily.
Harry felt drained, empty. Never once,
in six years, had Dumbledore told Harry that they had both lived and
lost loved ones in Godric’s Hollow. Why? Were Lily and James buried
close to Dumbledore’s mother and sister? Had Dumbledore visited
their graves, perhaps walked past Lily’s and James’s to do so?
And he had never once told Harry… never bothered to say…
And why it was so important, Harry
could not explain even to himself, yet he felt it had been tantamount
to a lie not to tell him that they had this place and these
experiences in common. He stared ahead of him, barely noticing what
was going on around him, and did not realize that Hermione had
appeared out of the crowd until she drew up a chair beside him.
“I simply can’t dance anymore,”
she panted, slipping off one of her shoes and rubbing the sole of her
foot. “Ron’s gone looking to find more butterbeers. It’s a bit
odd, I’ve just seen Viktor storming away from Luna’s father, it
looked like they’d been arguing—” She dropped her voice,
staring at him. “Harry, are you okay?”
Harry did not know where to begin, but
it did not matter. At that moment, something large and silver came
falling through the canopy over the dance floor. Graceful and
gleaming, the lynx landed lightly in the middle of the astonished
dancers. Heads turned, as those nearest it froze absurdly in
mid-dance. Then the Patronus’s mouth opened wide and it spoke in
the loud, deep, slow voice of Kingsley Shacklebolt.
“The Ministry has fallen. Scrimgeour
is dead. They are coming.”
Chapter 9
A Place to Hide
Everything seemed fuzzy, slow. Harry
and Hermione jumped to their feet and drew their wands. Many people
were only just realizing that something strange had happened; heads
were still turning toward the silver cat as it vanished. Silence
spread outward in cold ripples from the place where the Patronus had
landed. Then somebody screamed.
Harry and Hermione threw themselves
into the panicking crowd. Guests were sprinting in all directions;
many were Disapparating; the protective enchantments around the
Burrow had broken.
“Ron!” Hermione cried. “Ron,
where are you?”
As they pushed their way across the
dance floor, Harry saw cloaked and masked figures appearing in the
crowd; then he saw Lupin and Tonks, their wands raised, and heard
both of them shout, “Protego!”, a cry that was echoed on all
sides—
“Ron! Ron!” Hermione called, half
sobbing as she and Harry were buffeted by terrified guests: Harry
seized her hand to make sure they weren’t separated as a streak of
light whizzed over their heads, whether a protective charm or
something more sinister he did not know—
And then Ron was there. He caught hold
of Hermione’s free arm, and Harry felt her turn on the spot; sight
and sound were extinguished as darkness pressed in upon him; all he
could feel was Hermione’s hand as he was squeezed through space and
time, away from the Burrow, away from the descending Death Eaters,
away, perhaps, from Voldemort himself…
“Where are we?” said Ron’s voice.
Harry opened his eyes. For a moment he
thought they had not left the wedding after all: They still seemed to
be surrounded by people.
“Tottenham Court Road,” panted
Hermione. “Walk, just walk, we need to find somewhere for you to
change.”
Harry did as she asked. They half
walked, half ran up the wide dark street thronged with late-night
revelers and lined with closed shops, stars twinkling above them. A
double-decker bus rumbled by and a group of merry pub-goers ogled
them as they passed; Harry and Ron were still wearing dress robes.
“Hermione, we haven’t got anything
to change into,” Ron told her, as a young woman burst into raucous
giggles at the sight of him.
“Why didn’t I make sure I had the
Invisibility Cloak with me?” said Harry, inwardly cursing his own
stupidity. “All last year I kept it on me and—”
“It’s okay, I’ve got the Cloak,
I’ve got clothes for both of you,” said Hermione. “Just try and
act naturally until—this will do.”
She led them down a side street, then
into the shelter of a shadowy alleyway.
“When you say you’ve got the Cloak,
and clothes…” said Harry, frowning at Hermione, who was carrying
nothing except her small beaded handbag, in which she was now
rummaging.
“Yes, they’re here,” said
Hermione, and to Harry and Ron’s utter astonishment, she pulled out
a pair of jeans, a sweatshirt, some maroon socks, and finally the
silvery Invisibility Cloak.
“How the ruddy hell—?”
“Undetectable Extension Charm,”
said Hermione. “Tricky, but I think I’ve done it okay; anyway, I
managed to fit everything we need in here.” She gave the
fragile-looking bag a little shake and it echoed like a cargo hold as
a number of heavy objects rolled around inside it. “Oh, damn,
that’ll be the books,” she said, peering into it, “and I had
them all stacked by subject… Oh well… Harry, you’d better take
the Invisibility Cloak. Ron, hurry up and change…”
“When did you do all this?” Harry
asked as Ron stripped off his robes.
“I told you at the Burrow, I’ve had
the essentials packed for days, you know, in case we needed to make a
quick getaway. I packed your rucksack this morning, Harry, after you
changed, and put it in here… I just had a feeling…”
“You’re amazing, you are,” said
Ron, handing her his bundled-up robes.
“Thank you,” said Hermione,
managing a small smile as she pushed the robes into the bag. “Please,
Harry, get that Cloak on!”
Harry threw the Invisibility Cloak
around his shoulders and pulled it up over his head, vanishing from
sight. He was only just beginning to appreciate what had happened.
“The others—everyone at the
wedding—”
“We can’t worry about that now,”
whispered Hermione. “It’s you they’re after, Harry, and we’ll
just put everyone in even more danger by going back.”
“She’s right,” said Ron, who
seemed to know that Harry was about to argue, even if he could not
see his face. “Most of the Order was there, they’ll look after
everyone.”
Harry nodded, then remembered that they
could not see him, and said, “Yeah.” But he thought of Ginny, and
fear bubbled like acid in his stomach.
“Come on, I think we ought to keep
moving,” said Hermione.
They moved back up the side street and
onto the main road again, where a group of men on the opposite side
was singing and weaving across the pavement.
“Just as a matter of interest, why
Tottenham Court Road?” Ron asked Hermione.
“I’ve no idea, it just popped into
my head, but I’m sure we’re safer out in the Muggle world, it’s
not where they’ll expect us to be.”
“True,” said Ron, looking around,
“but don’t you feel a bit—exposed?”
“Where else is there?” asked
Hermione, cringing as the men on the other side of the road started
wolf-whistling at her. “We can hardly book rooms at the Leaky
Cauldron, can we? And Grimmauld Place is out if Snape can get in
there… I suppose we could try my parents’ house, though I think
there’s a chance they might check there… Oh, I wish they’d shut
up!”
“All right, darling?” the drunkest
of the men on the other pavement was yelling. “Fancy a drink? Ditch
ginger and come and have a pint!”
“Let’s sit down somewhere,”
Hermione said hastily as Ron opened his mouth to shout back across
the road. “Look, this will do, in here!”
It was a small and shabby all-night
café. A light layer of grease lay on all the Formica-topped tables,
but it was at least empty. Harry slipped into a booth first and Ron
sat next to him opposite Hermione, who had her back to the entrance
and did not like it: She glanced over her shoulder so frequently she
appeared to have a twitch. Harry did not like being stationary;
walking had given the illusion that they had a goal. Beneath the
Cloak he could feel the last vestiges of Polyjuice leaving him, his
hands returning to their usual length and shape. He pulled his
glasses out of his pocket and put them on again.
After a minute or two, Ron said, “You
know, we’re not far from the Leaky Cauldron here, it’s only in
Charing Cross—”
“Ron, we can’t!” said Hermione at
once.
“Not to stay there, but to find out
what’s going on!”
“We know what’s going on!
Voldemort’s taken over the Ministry, what else do we need to know?”
“Okay, okay, it was just an idea!”
They relapsed into a prickly silence.
The gum-chewing waitress shuffled over and Hermione ordered two
cappuccinos: As Harry was invisible, it would have looked odd to
order him one. A pair of burly workmen entered the café and squeezed
into the next booth. Hermione dropped her voice to a whisper.
“I say we find a quiet place to
Disapparate and head for the countryside. Once we’re there, we
could send a message to the Order.”
“Can you do that talking Patronus
thing, then?” asked Ron.
“I’ve been practicing and I think
so,” said Hermione.
“Well, as long as it doesn’t get
them into trouble, though they might’ve been arrested already. God,
that’s revolting,” Ron added after one sip of the foamy, grayish
coffee. The waitress had heard; she shot Ron a nasty look as she
shuffled off to take the new customers’ orders. The larger of the
two workmen, who was blond and quite huge, now that Harry came to
look at him, waved her away. She stared, affronted.
“Let’s get going, then, I don’t
want to drink this muck,” said Ron. “Hermione, have you got
Muggle money to pay for this?”
“Yes, I took out all my Building
Society savings before I came to the Burrow. I’ll bet all the
change is at the bottom,” sighed Hermione, reaching for her beaded
bag.
The two workmen made identical
movements, and Harry mirrored them without conscious thought: All
three of them drew their wands. Ron, a few seconds late in realizing
what was going on, lunged across the table, pushing Hermione sideways
onto her bench. The force of the Death Eaters’ spells shattered the
tiled wall where Ron’s head had just been, as Harry, still
invisible, yelled, “Stupefy!”
The great blond Death Eater was hit in
the face by a jet of red light: He slumped sideways, unconscious. His
companion, unable to see who had cast the spell, fired another at
Ron: Shining black ropes flew from his wand-tip and bound Ron head to
foot—the waitress screamed and ran for the door—Harry sent
another Stunning Spell at the Death Eater with the twisted face who
had tied up Ron, but the spell missed, rebounded on the window, and
hit the waitress, who collapsed in front of the door.
“Expulso!” bellowed the Death
Eater, and the table behind which Harry was standing blew up: The
force of the explosion slammed him into the wall and he felt his wand
leave his hand as the Cloak slipped off him.
“Petrificus Totalus!” screamed
Hermione from out of sight, and the Death Eater fell forward like a
statue to land with a crunching thud on the mess of broken china,
table, and coffee. Hermione crawled out from underneath the bench,
shaking bits of glass ashtray out of her hair and trembling all over.
“D-diffindo,” she said, pointing
her wand at Ron, who roared in pain as she slashed open the knee of
his jeans, leaving a deep cut. “Oh, I’m so sorry, Ron, my hand’s
shaking! Diffindo!”
The severed ropes fell away. Ron got to
his feet, shaking his arms to regain feeling in them. Harry picked up
his wand and climbed over all the debris to where the large blond
Death Eater was sprawled across the bench.
“I should’ve recognized him, he was
there the night Dumbledore died,” he said. He turned over the
darker Death Eater with his foot; the man’s eyes moved rapidly
between Harry, Ron, and Hermione.
“That’s Dolohov,” said Ron. “I
recognize him from the old wanted posters. I think the big one’s
Thorfinn Rowle.”
“Never mind what they’re called!”
said Hermione a little hysterically. “How did they find us? What
are we going to do?”
Somehow her panic seemed to clear
Harry’s head.
“Lock the door,” he told her, “and
Ron, turn out the lights.”
He looked down at the paralyzed
Dolohov, thinking fast as the lock clicked and Ron used the
Deluminator to plunge the café into darkness. Harry could hear the
men who had jeered at Hermione earlier, yelling at another girl in
the distance.
“What are we going to do with them?”
Ron whispered to Harry through the dark; then, even more quietly,
“Kill them? They’d kill us. They had a good go just now.”
Hermione shuddered and took a step
backward. Harry shook his head.
“We just need to wipe their
memories,” said Harry. “It’s better like that, it’ll throw
them off the scent. If we killed them it’d be obvious we were
here.”
“You’re the boss,” said Ron,
sounding profoundly relieved. “But I’ve never done a Memory
Charm.”
“Nor have I,” said Hermione, “but
I know the theory.”
She took a deep, calming breath, then
pointed her wand at Dolohov’s forehead and said, “Obliviate.”
At once, Dolohov’s eyes became
unfocused and dreamy.
“Brilliant!” said Harry, clapping
her on the back. “Take care of the other one and the waitress while
Ron and I clear up.”
“Clear up?” said Ron, looking
around at the partly destroyed café. “Why?”
“Don’t you think they might wonder
what’s happened if they wake up and find themselves in a place that
looks like it’s just been bombed?”
“Oh right, yeah…”
Ron struggled for a moment before
managing to extract his wand from his pocket.
“It’s no wonder I can’t get it
out, Hermione, you packed my old jeans, they’re tight.”
“Oh, I’m so sorry,” hissed
Hermione, and as she dragged the waitress out of sight of the
windows, Harry heard her mutter a suggestion as to where Ron could
stick his wand instead.
Once the café was restored to its
previous condition, they heaved the Death Eaters back into their
booth and propped them up facing each other.
“But how did they find us?”
Hermione asked, looking from one inert man to the other. “How did
they know where we were?”
She turned to Harry.
“You—you don’t think you’ve
still got your Trace on you, do you, Harry?”
“He can’t have,” said Ron. “The
Trace breaks at seventeen, that’s Wizarding law, you can’t put it
on an adult.”
“As far as you know,” said
Hermione. “What if the Death Eaters have found a way to put it on a
seventeen-year-old?”
“But Harry hasn’t been near a Death
Eater in the last twenty-four hours. Who’s supposed to have put a
Trace back on him?”
Hermione did not reply. Harry felt
contaminated, tainted: Was that really how the Death Eaters had found
them?
“If I can’t use magic, and you
can’t use magic near me, without us giving away our position—”
he began.
“We’re not splitting up!” said
Hermione firmly.
“We need a safe place to hide,”
said Ron. “Give us time to think things through.”
“Grimmauld Place,” said Harry.
The other two gaped.
“Don’t be silly, Harry, Snape can
get in there!”
“Ron’s dad said they’ve put up
jinxes against him—and even if they haven’t worked,” he pressed
on as Hermione began to argue, “so what? I swear, I’d like
nothing better than to meet Snape!”
“But—”
“Hermione, where else is there? It’s
the best chance we’ve got. Snape’s only one Death Eater. If I’ve
still got the Trace on me, we’ll have whole crowds of them on us
wherever else we go.”
She could not argue, though she looked
as if she would have liked to. While she unlocked the café door, Ron
clicked the Deluminator to release the café’s light. Then, on
Harry’s count of three, they reversed the spells upon their three
victims, and before the waitress or either of the Death Eaters could
do more than stir sleepily, Harry, Ron, and Hermione had turned on
the spot and vanished into the compressing darkness once more.
Seconds later Harry’s lungs expanded
gratefully and he opened his eyes: They were now standing in the
middle of a familiar small and shabby square. Tall, dilapidated
houses looked down on them from every side. Number twelve was visible
to them, for they had been told of its existence by Dumbledore, its
Secret-Keeper, and they rushed toward it, checking every few yards
that they were not being followed or observed. They raced up the
stone steps, and Harry tapped the front door once with his wand. They
heard a series of metallic clicks and the clatter of a chain, then
the door swung open with a creak and they hurried over the threshold.
As Harry closed the door behind them,
the old-fashioned gas lamps sprang into life, casting flickering
light along the length of the hallway. It looked just as Harry
remembered it: eerie, cobwebbed, the outlines of the house-elf heads
on the wall throwing odd shadows up the staircase. Long dark curtains
concealed the portrait of Sirius’s mother. The only thing that was
out of place was the troll’s leg umbrella stand, which was lying on
its side as if Tonks had just knocked it over again.
“I think somebody’s been in here,”
Hermione whispered, pointing toward it.
“That could’ve happened as the
Order left,” Ron murmured back.
“So where are these jinxes they put
up against Snape?” Harry asked.
“Maybe they’re only activated if he
shows up?” suggested Ron.
Yet they remained close together on the
doormat, backs against the door, scared to move farther into the
house.
“Well, we can’t stay here forever,”
said Harry, and he took a step forward.
“Severus Snape?”
Mad-Eye Moody’s voice whispered out
of the darkness, making all three of them jump back in fright. “We’re
not Snape!” croaked Harry, before something whooshed over him like
cold air and his tongue curled backward on itself, making it
impossible to speak. Before he had time to feel inside his mouth,
however, his tongue had unraveled again.
The other two seemed to have
experienced the same unpleasant sensation. Ron was making retching
noises; Hermione stammered, “That m-must have b-been the
T-Tongue-Tying Curse Mad-Eye set up for Snape!”
Gingerly Harry took another step
forward. Something shifted in the shadows at the end of the hall, and
before any of them could say another word, a figure had risen up out
of the carpet, tall, dust-colored, and terrible: Hermione screamed
and so did Mrs. Black, her curtains flying open; the gray figure was
gliding toward them, faster and faster, its waist-length hair and
beard streaming behind it, its face sunken, fleshless, with empty eye
sockets: Horribly familiar, dreadfully altered, it raised a wasted
arm, pointing at Harry.
“No!” Harry shouted, and though he
had raised his wand no spell occurred to him. “No! It wasn’t us!
We didn’t kill you—”
On the word kill, the figure exploded
in a great cloud of dust: Coughing, his eyes watering, Harry looked
around to see Hermione crouched on the floor by the door with her
arms over her head, and Ron, who was shaking from head to foot,
patting her clumsily on the shoulder and saying, “It’s all
r-right… It’s g-gone…”
Dust swirled around Harry like mist,
catching the blue gaslight, as Mrs. Black continued to scream.
“Mudbloods, filth, stains of
dishonor, taint of shame on the house of my fathers—”
“SHUT UP!” Harry bellowed,
directing his wand at her, and with a bang and a burst of red sparks,
the curtains swung shut again, silencing her.
“That… that was…” Hermione
whimpered, as Ron helped her to her feet.
“Yeah,” said Harry, “but it
wasn’t really him, was it? Just something to scare Snape.”
Had it worked, Harry wondered, or had
Snape already blasted the horror-figure aside as casually as he had
killed the real Dumbledore? Nerves still tingling, he led the other
two up the hall, half-expecting some new terror to reveal itself, but
nothing moved except for a mouse skittering along the skirting board.
“Before we go any farther, I think
we’d better check,” whispered Hermione, and she raised her wand
and said, “Homenum revelio.”
Nothing happened.
“Well, you’ve just had a big
shock,” said Ron kindly. “What was that supposed to do?”
“It did what I meant it to do!”
said Hermione rather crossly. “That was a spell to reveal human
presence, and there’s nobody here except us!”
“And old Dusty,” said Ron, glancing
at the patch of carpet from which the corpse-figure had risen.
“Let’s go up,” said Hermione with
a frightened look at the same spot, and she led the way up the
creaking stairs to the drawing room on the first floor.
Hermione waved her wand to ignite the
old gas lamps, then, shivering slightly in the drafty room, she
perched on the sofa, her arms wrapped tightly around her. Ron crossed
to the window and moved the heavy velvet curtain aside an inch.
“Can’t see anyone out there,” he
reported. “And you’d think, if Harry still had a Trace on him,
they’d have followed us here. I know they can’t get in the house,
but—what’s up, Harry?”
Harry had given a cry of pain: His scar
had burned again as something flashed across his mind like a bright
light on water. He saw a large shadow and felt a fury that was not
his own pound through his body, violent and brief as an electric
shock.
“What did you see?” Ron asked,
advancing on Harry. “Did you see him at my place?”
“No, I just felt anger—he’s
really angry—”
“But that could be at the Burrow,”
said Ron loudly. “What else? Didn’t you see anything? Was he
cursing someone?”
“No, I just felt anger—I couldn’t
tell—”
Harry felt badgered, confused, and
Hermione did not help as she said in a frightened voice, “Your
scar, again? But what’s going on? I thought that connection had
closed!”
“It did, for a while,” muttered
Harry; his scar was still painful, which made it hard to concentrate.
“I—I think it’s started opening again whenever he loses
control, that’s how it used to—”
“But then you’ve got to close your
mind!” said Hermione shrilly. “Harry, Dumbledore didn’t want
you to use that connection, he wanted you to shut it down, that’s
why you were supposed to use Occlumency! Otherwise Voldemort can
plant false images in your mind, remember—”
“Yeah, I do remember, thanks,” said
Harry through gritted teeth; he did not need Hermione to tell him
that Voldemort had once used this selfsame connection between them to
lead him into a trap, nor that it had resulted in Sirius’s death.
He wished that he had not told them what he had seen and felt; it
made Voldemort more threatening, as though he were pressing against
the window of the room, and still the pain in his scar was building
and he fought it: It was like resisting the urge to be sick.
He turned his back on Ron and Hermione,
pretending to examine the old tapestry of the Black family tree on
the wall. Then Hermione shrieked: Harry drew his wand again and spun
around to see a silver Patronus soar through the drawing room window
and land upon the floor in front of them, where it solidified into
the weasel that spoke with the voice of Ron’s father.
“Family safe, do not reply, we are
being watched.”
The Patronus dissolved into
nothingness. Ron let out a noise between a whimper and a groan and
dropped onto the sofa: Hermione joined him, gripping his arm.
“They’re all right, they’re all
right!” she whispered, and Ron half laughed and hugged her.
“Harry,” he said over Hermione’s
shoulder, “I—”
“It’s not a problem,” said Harry,
sickened by the pain in his head. “It’s your family, ’course
you’re worried. I’d feel the same way.” He thought of Ginny. “I
do feel the same way.”
The pain in his scar was reaching a
peak, burning as it had done in the garden of the Burrow. Faintly he
heard Hermione say, “I don’t want to be on my own. Could we use
the sleeping bags I’ve brought and camp in here tonight?”
He heard Ron agree. He could not fight
the pain much longer: He had to succumb.
“Bathroom,” he muttered, and he
left the room as fast as he could without running.
He barely made it: Bolting the door
behind him with trembling hands, he grasped his pounding head and
fell to the floor, then in an explosion of agony, he felt the rage
that did not belong to him possess his soul, saw a long room lit only
by firelight, and the great blond Death Eater on the floor, screaming
and writhing, and a slighter figure standing over him, wand
outstretched, while Harry spoke in a high, cold, merciless voice.
“More, Rowle, or shall we end it and
feed you to Nagini? Lord Voldemort is not sure that he will forgive
this time… You called me back for this, to tell me that Harry
Potter has escaped again? Draco, give Rowle another taste of our
displeasure… Do it, or feel my wrath yourself!”
A log fell in the fire: Flames reared,
their light darting across a terrified, pointed white face—with a
sense of emerging from deep water, Harry drew heaving breaths and
opened his eyes.
He was spread-eagled on the cold black
marble floor, his nose inches from one of the silver serpent tails
that supported the large bathtub. He sat up. Malfoy’s gaunt,
petrified face seemed branded on the inside of his eyes. Harry felt
sickened by what he had seen, by the use to which Draco was now being
put by Voldemort.
There was a sharp rap on the door, and
Harry jumped as Hermione’s voice rang out.
“Harry, do you want your toothbrush?
I’ve got it here.”
“Yeah, great, thanks,” he said,
fighting to keep his voice casual as he stood up to let her in.
Chapter 10
Kreacher’s Tale
Harry woke early next morning, wrapped
in a sleeping bag on the drawing room floor. A chink of sky was
visible between the heavy curtains: It was the cool, clear blue of
watered ink, somewhere between night and dawn, and everything was
quiet except for Ron and Hermione’s slow, deep breathing. Harry
glanced over at the dark shapes they made on the floor beside him.
Ron had had a fit of gallantry and insisted that Hermione sleep on
the cushions from the sofa, so that her silhouette was raised above
his. Her arm curved to the floor, her fingers inches from Ron’s.
Harry wondered whether they had fallen asleep holding hands. The idea
made him feel strangely lonely.
He looked up at the shadowy ceiling,
the cobwebbed chandelier. Less than twenty-four hours ago, he had
been standing in the sunlight at the entrance to the marquee, waiting
to show in wedding guests. It seemed a lifetime away. What was going
to happen now? He lay on the floor and he thought of the Horcruxes,
of the daunting, complex mission Dumbledore had left him…
Dumbledore…
The grief that had possessed him since
Dumbledore’s death felt different now. The accusations he had heard
from Muriel at the wedding seemed to have nested in his brain like
diseased things, infecting his memories of the wizard he had
idolized. Could Dumbledore have let such things happen? Had he been
like Dudley, content to watch neglect and abuse as long as it did not
affect him? Could he have turned his back on a sister who was being
imprisoned and hidden?
Harry thought of Godric’s Hollow, of
graves Dumbledore had never mentioned there; he thought of mysterious
objects left without explanation in Dumbledore’s will, and
resentment swelled in the darkness. Why hadn’t Dumbledore told him?
Why hadn’t he explained? Had Dumbledore actually cared about Harry
at all? Or had Harry been nothing more than a tool to be polished and
honed, but not trusted, never confided in?
Harry could not stand lying there with
nothing but bitter thoughts for company. Desperate for something to
do, for distraction, he slipped out of his sleeping bag, picked up
his wand, and crept out of the room. On the landing he whispered,
“Lumos,” and started to climb the stairs by wandlight.
On the second landing was the bedroom
in which he and Ron had slept last time they had been here; he
glanced into it. The wardrobe doors stood open and the bedclothes had
been ripped back. Harry remembered the overturned troll leg
downstairs. Somebody had searched the house since the Order had left.
Snape? Or perhaps Mundungus, who had pilfered plenty from this house
both before and after Sirius died? Harry’s gaze wandered to the
portrait that sometimes contained Phineas Nigellus Black, Sirius’s
great-great-grandfather, but it was empty, showing nothing but a
stretch of muddy backdrop. Phineas Nigellus was evidently spending
the night in the headmaster’s study at Hogwarts.
Harry continued up the stairs until he
reached the topmost landing, where there were only two doors. The one
facing him bore a nameplate reading SIRIUS. Harry had never entered
his godfather’s bedroom before. He pushed open the door, holding
his wand high to cast light as widely as possible. The room was
spacious and must once have been handsome. There was a large bed with
a carved wooden headboard, a tall window obscured by long velvet
curtains, and a chandelier thickly coated in dust with candle stubs
still resting in its sockets, solid wax hanging in frostlike drips. A
fine film of dust covered the pictures on the walls and the bed’s
headboard; a spider’s web stretched between the chandelier and the
top of the large wooden wardrobe, and as Harry moved deeper into the
room, he heard a scurrying of disturbed mice.
The teenage Sirius had plastered the
walls with so many posters and pictures that little of the walls’
silvery-gray silk was visible. Harry could only assume that Sirius’s
parents had been unable to remove the Permanent Sticking Charm that
kept them on the wall, because he was sure they would not have
appreciated their eldest son’s taste in decoration. Sirius seemed
to have gone out of his way to annoy his parents. There were several
large Gryffindor banners, faded scarlet and gold, just to underline
his difference from all the rest of the Slytherin family. There were
many pictures of Muggle motorcycles, and also (Harry had to admire
Sirius’s nerve) several posters of bikini-clad Muggle girls; Harry
could tell that they were Muggles because they remained quite
stationary within their pictures, faded smiles and glazed eyes frozen
on the paper. This was in contrast to the only Wizarding photograph
on the walls, which was a picture of four Hogwarts students standing
arm in arm, laughing at the camera.
With a leap of pleasure, Harry
recognized his father; his untidy black hair stuck up at the back
like Harry’s, and he too wore glasses. Beside him was Sirius,
carelessly handsome, his slightly arrogant face so much younger and
happier than Harry had ever seen it alive. To Sirius’s right stood
Pettigrew, more than a head shorter, plump and watery-eyed, flushed
with pleasure at his inclusion in this coolest of gangs, with the
much-admired rebels that James and Sirius had been. On James’s left
was Lupin, even then a little shabby-looking, but he had the same air
of delighted surprise at finding himself liked and included… or was
it simply because Harry knew how it had been, that he saw these
things in the picture? He tried to take it from the wall; it was his
now, after all, Sirius had left him everything, but it would not
budge. Sirius had taken no chances in preventing his parents from
redecorating his room.
Harry looked around at the floor. The
sky outside was growing brighter: A shaft of light revealed bits of
paper, books, and small objects scattered over the carpet. Evidently
Sirius’s bedroom had been searched too, although its contents
seemed to have been judged mostly, if not entirely, worthless. A few
of the books had been shaken roughly enough to part company with
their covers, and sundry pages littered the floor.
Harry bent down, picked up a few of the
pieces of paper, and examined them. He recognized one as part of an
old edition of A History of Magic, by Bathilda Bagshot, and another
as belonging to a motorcycle maintenance manual. The third was
handwritten and crumpled. He smoothed it out.
Dear Padfoot,
Thank you, thank you, for Harry’s
birthday present! It was his favorite by far. One year old and
already zooming along on a toy broomstick, he looked so pleased with
himself, I’m enclosing a picture so you can see. You know it only
rises about two feet off the ground, but he nearly killed the cat and
he smashed a horrible vase Petunia sent me for Christmas (no
complaints there). Of course, James thought it was so funny, says
he’s going to be a great Quidditch player, but we’ve had to pack
away all the ornaments and make sure we don’t take our eyes off him
when he gets going.
We had a very quiet birthday tea, just
us and old Bathilda, who has always been sweet to us and who dotes on
Harry. We were so sorry you couldn’t come, but the Order’s got to
come first, and Harry’s not old enough to know it’s his birthday
anyway! James is getting a bit frustrated shut up here, he tries not
to show it but I can tell—also, Dumbledore’s still got his
Invisibility Cloak, so no chance of little excursions. If you could
visit, it would cheer him up so much. Wormy was here last weekend, I
thought he seemed down, but that was probably the news about the
McKinnons; I cried all evening when I heard.
Bathilda drops in most days, she’s a
fascinating old thing with the most amazing stories about Dumbledore,
I’m not sure he’d be pleased if he knew! I don’t know how much
to believe, actually, because it seems incredible that Dumbledore
Harry’s extremities seemed to have
gone numb. He stood quite still, holding the miraculous paper in his
nerveless fingers while inside him a kind of quiet eruption sent joy
and grief thundering in equal measure through his veins. Lurching to
the bed, he sat down.
He read the letter again, but could not
take in any more meaning than he had done the first time, and was
reduced to staring at the handwriting itself. She had made her “g”s
the same way he did: He searched through the letter for every one of
them, and each felt like a friendly little wave glimpsed from behind
a veil. The letter was an incredible treasure, proof that Lily Potter
had lived, really lived, that her warm hand had once moved across
this parchment, tracing ink into these letters, these words, words
about him, Harry, her son.
Impatiently brushing away the wetness
in his eyes, he reread the letter, this time concentrating on the
meaning. It was like listening to a half-remembered voice.
They had had a cat… perhaps it had
perished, like his parents, at Godric’s Hollow… or else fled when
there was nobody left to feed it… Sirius had bought him his first
broomstick… His parents had known Bathilda Bagshot; had Dumbledore
introduced them? Dumbledore’s still got his Invisibility Cloak…
There was something funny there…
Harry paused, pondering his mother’s
words. Why had Dumbledore taken James’s Invisibility Cloak? Harry
distinctly remembered his headmaster telling him years before, “I
don’t need a cloak to become invisible.” Perhaps some less gifted
Order member had needed its assistance, and Dumbledore had acted as
carrier? Harry passed on…
Wormy was here… Pettigrew, the
traitor, had seemed “down,” had he? Was he aware that he was
seeing James and Lily alive for the last time?
And finally Bathilda again, who told
incredible stories about Dumbledore. It seems incredible that
Dumbledore—
That Dumbledore what? But there were
any number of things that would seem incredible about Dumbledore;
that he had once received bottom marks in a Transfiguration test, for
instance, or had taken up goat-charming like Aberforth…
Harry got to his feet and scanned the
floor: Perhaps the rest of the letter was here somewhere. He seized
papers, treating them, in his eagerness, with as little consideration
as the original searcher; he pulled open drawers, shook out books,
stood on a chair to run his hand over the top of the wardrobe, and
crawled under the bed and armchair.
At last, lying facedown on the floor,
he spotted what looked like a torn piece of paper under the chest of
drawers. When he pulled it out, it proved to be most of the
photograph Lily had described in her letter. A black-haired baby was
zooming in and out of the picture on a tiny broom, roaring with
laughter, and a pair of legs that must have belonged to James was
chasing after him. Harry tucked the photograph into his pocket with
Lily’s letter and continued to look for the second sheet.
After another quarter of an hour,
however, he was forced to conclude that the rest of his mother’s
letter was gone. Had it simply been lost in the sixteen years that
had elapsed since it had been written, or had it been taken by
whoever had searched the room? Harry read the first sheet again, this
time looking for clues as to what might have made the second sheet
valuable. His toy broomstick could hardly be considered interesting
to the Death Eaters… The only potentially useful thing he could see
here was possible information on Dumbledore. It seems incredible that
Dumbledore—what?
“Harry? Harry! Harry!”
“I’m here!” he called. “What’s
happened?”
There was a clatter of footsteps
outside the door, and Hermione burst inside.
“We woke up and didn’t know where
you were!” she said breathlessly. She turned and shouted over her
shoulder, “Ron! I’ve found him!”
Ron’s annoyed voice echoed distantly
from several floors below.
“Good! Tell him from me he’s a
git!”
“Harry, don’t just disappear,
please, we were terrified! Why did you come up here anyway?” She
gazed around the ransacked room. “What have you been doing?”
“Look what I’ve just found.”
He held out his mother’s letter.
Hermione took it and read it while Harry watched her. When she
reached the end of the page she looked up at him.
“Oh, Harry…”
“And there’s this too.”
He handed her the torn photograph, and
Hermione smiled at the baby zooming in and out of sight on the toy
broom.
“I’ve been looking for the rest of
the letter,” Harry said, “but it’s not here.”
Hermione glanced around.
“Did you make all this mess, or was
some of it done when you got here?”
“Someone had searched before me,”
said Harry.
“I thought so. Every room I looked
into on the way up had been disturbed. What were they after, do you
think?”
“Information on the Order, if it was
Snape.”
“But you’d think he’d already
have all he needed, I mean, he was in the Order, wasn’t he?”
“Well then,” said Harry, keen to
discuss his theory, “what about information on Dumbledore? The
second page of this letter, for instance. You know this Bathilda my
mum mentions, you know who she is?”
“Who?”
“Bathilda Bagshot, the author of—”
“A History of Magic,” said
Hermione, looking interested. “So your parents knew her? She was an
incredible magical historian.”
“And she’s still alive,” said
Harry, “and she lives in Godric’s Hollow, Ron’s Auntie Muriel
was talking about her at the wedding. She knew Dumbledore’s family
too. Be pretty interesting to talk to, wouldn’t she?”
There was a little too much
understanding in the smile Hermione gave him for Harry’s liking. He
took back the letter and the photograph and tucked them inside the
pouch around his neck, so as not to have to look at her and give
himself away.
“I understand why you’d love to
talk to her about your mum and dad, and Dumbledore too,” said
Hermione. “But that wouldn’t really help us in our search for the
Horcruxes, would it?” Harry did not answer, and she rushed on,
“Harry, I know you really want to go to Godric’s Hollow, but I’m
scared, I’m scared at how easily those Death Eaters found us
yesterday. It just makes me feel more than ever that we ought to
avoid the place where your parents are buried, I’m sure they’d be
expecting you to visit it.”
“It’s not just that,” Harry said,
still avoiding looking at her. “Muriel said stuff about Dumbledore
at the wedding. I want to know the truth…”
He told Hermione everything that Muriel
had told him. When he had finished, Hermione said, “Of course, I
can see why that’s upset you, Harry—”
“I’m not upset,” he lied, “I’d
just like to know whether or not it’s true or—”
“Harry, do you really think you’ll
get the truth from a malicious old woman like Muriel, or from Rita
Skeeter? How can you believe them? You knew Dumbledore!”
“I thought I did,” he muttered.
“But you know how much truth there
was in everything Rita wrote about you! Doge is right, how can you
let these people tarnish your memories of Dumbledore?”
He looked away, trying not to betray
the resentment he felt. There it was again: Choose what to believe.
He wanted the truth. Why was everybody so determined that he should
not get it?
“Shall we go down to the kitchen?”
Hermione suggested after a little pause. “Find something for
breakfast?”
He agreed, but grudgingly, and followed
her out onto the landing and past the second door that led off it.
There were deep scratch marks in the paintwork below a small sign
that he had not noticed in the dark. He paused at the top of the
stairs to read it. It was a pompous little sign, neatly lettered by
hand, the sort of thing that Percy Weasley might have stuck on his
bedroom door:
Do Not Enter
Without the Express Permission of
Regulus Arcturus Black
Excitement trickled through Harry, but
he was not immediately sure why. He read the sign again. Hermione was
already a flight of stairs below him.
“Hermione,” he said, and he was
surprised that his voice was so calm. “Come back up here.”
“What’s the matter?”
“R.A.B. I think I’ve found him.”
There was a gasp, and then Hermione ran
back up the stairs.
“In your mum’s letter? But I didn’t
see—”
Harry shook his head, pointing at
Regulus’s sign. She read it, then clutched Harry’s arm so tightly
that he winced.
“Sirius’s brother?” she
whispered.
“He was a Death Eater,” said Harry,
“Sirius told me about him, he joined up when he was really young
and then got cold feet and tried to leave—so they killed him.”
“That fits!” gasped Hermione. “If
he was a Death Eater he had access to Voldemort, and if he became
disenchanted, then he would have wanted to bring Voldemort down!”
She released Harry, leaned over the
banister, and screamed, “Ron! RON! Get up here, quick!”
Ron appeared, panting, a minute later,
his wand ready in his hand.
“What’s up? If it’s massive
spiders again I want breakfast before I—”
He frowned at the sign on Regulus’s
door, to which Hermione was silently pointing.
“What? That was Sirius’s brother,
wasn’t it? Regulus Arcturus… Regulus… R.A.B.! The locket—you
don’t reckon—?”
“Let’s find out,” said Harry. He
pushed the door: It was locked. Hermione pointed her wand at the
handle and said, “Alohomora.” There was a click, and the door
swung open.
They moved over the threshold together,
gazing around. Regulus’s bedroom was slightly smaller than
Sirius’s, though it had the same sense of former grandeur. Whereas
Sirius had sought to advertise his difference from the rest of the
family, Regulus had striven to emphasize the opposite. The Slytherin
colors of emerald and silver were everywhere, draping the bed, the
walls, and the windows. The Black family crest was painstakingly
painted over the bed, along with its motto, TOUJOURS PUR. Beneath
this was a collection of yellow newspaper cuttings, all stuck
together to make a ragged collage. Hermione crossed the room to
examine them.
“They’re all about Voldemort,”
she said. “Regulus seems to have been a fan for a few years before
he joined the Death Eaters…”
A little puff of dust rose from the
bedcovers as she sat down to read the clippings. Harry, meanwhile,
had noticed another photograph; a Hogwarts Quidditch team was smiling
and waving out of the frame. He moved closer and saw the snakes
emblazoned on their chests: Slytherins. Regulus was instantly
recognizable as the boy sitting in the middle of the front row: He
had the same dark hair and slightly haughty look of his brother,
though he was smaller, slighter, and rather less handsome than Sirius
had been.
“He played Seeker,” said Harry.
“What?” said Hermione vaguely; she
was still immersed in Voldemort’s press clippings.
“He’s sitting in the middle of the
front row, that’s where the Seeker… Never mind,” said Harry,
realizing that nobody was listening: Ron was on his hands and knees,
searching under the wardrobe. Harry looked around the room for likely
hiding places and approached the desk. Yet again, somebody had
searched before them. The drawers’ contents had been turned over
recently, the dust disturbed, but there was nothing of value there:
old quills, out-of-date textbooks that bore evidence of being roughly
handled, a recently smashed ink bottle, its sticky residue covering
the contents of the drawer.
“There’s an easier way,” said
Hermione, as Harry wiped his inky fingers on his jeans. She raised
her wand and said, “Accio Locket!”
Nothing happened. Ron, who had been
searching the folds of the faded curtains, looked disappointed.
“Is that it, then? It’s not here?”
“Oh, it could still be here, but
under counter-enchantments,” said Hermione. “Charms to prevent it
being summoned magically, you know.”
“Like Voldemort put on the stone
basin in the cave,” said Harry, remembering how he had been unable
to Summon the fake locket.
“How are we supposed to find it
then?” asked Ron.
“We search manually,” said
Hermione.
“That’s a good idea,” said Ron,
rolling his eyes, and he resumed his examination of the curtains.
They combed every inch of the room for
more than an hour, but were forced, finally, to conclude that the
locket was not there.
The sun had risen now; its light
dazzled them even through the grimy landing windows.
“It could be somewhere else in the
house, though,” said Hermione in a rallying tone as they walked
back downstairs: As Harry and Ron had become more discouraged, she
seemed to have become more determined. “Whether he’d managed to
destroy it or not, he’d want to keep it hidden from Voldemort,
wouldn’t he? Remember all those awful things we had to get rid of
when we were here last time? That clock that shot bolts at everyone
and those old robes that tried to strangle Ron; Regulus might have
put them there to protect the locket’s hiding place, even though we
didn’t realize it at… at…”
Harry and Ron looked at her. She was
standing with one foot in midair, with the dumbstruck look of one who
had just been Obliviated; her eyes had even drifted out of focus.
“…at the time,” she finished in a
whisper.
“Something wrong?” asked Ron.
“There was a locket.”
“What?” said Harry and Ron
together.
“In the cabinet in the drawing room.
Nobody could open it. And we… we…”
Harry felt as though a brick had slid
down through his chest into his stomach. He remembered: He had even
handled the thing as they passed it around, each trying in turn to
prise it open. It had been tossed into a sack of rubbish, along with
the snuffbox of Wartcap powder and the music box that had made
everyone sleepy…
“Kreacher nicked loads of things back
from us,” said Harry. It was the only chance, the only slender hope
left to them, and he was going to cling to it until forced to let go.
“He had a whole stash of stuff in his cupboard in the kitchen.
C’mon.”
He ran down the stairs taking two steps
at a time, the other two thundering along in his wake. They made so
much noise that they woke the portrait of Sirius’s mother as they
passed through the hall.
“Filth! Mudbloods! Scum!” she
screamed after them as they dashed down into the basement kitchen and
slammed the door behind them.
Harry ran the length of the room,
skidded to a halt at the door of Kreacher’s cupboard, and wrenched
it open. There was the nest of dirty old blankets in which the
house-elf had once slept, but they were no longer glittering with the
trinkets Kreacher had salvaged. The only thing there was an old copy
of Nature’s Nobility: A Wizarding Genealogy. Refusing to believe
his eyes, Harry snatched up the blankets and shook them. A dead mouse
fell out and rolled dismally across the floor. Ron groaned as he
threw himself into a kitchen chair; Hermione closed her eyes.
“It’s not over yet,” said Harry,
and he raised his voice and called, “Kreacher!”
There was a loud crack and the
house-elf that Harry had so reluctantly inherited from Sirius
appeared out of nowhere in front of the cold and empty fireplace:
tiny, half human-sized, his pale skin hanging off him in folds, white
hair sprouting copiously from his batlike ears. He was still wearing
the filthy rag in which they had first met him, and the contemptuous
look he bent upon Harry showed that his attitude to his change of
ownership had altered no more than his outfit.
“Master,” croaked Kreacher in his
bullfrog’s voice, and he bowed low, muttering to his knees, “back
in my Mistress’s old house with the blood-traitor Weasley and the
Mudblood—”
“I forbid you to call anyone ‘blood
traitor’ or ‘Mudblood,’” growled Harry. He would have found
Kreacher, with his snoutlike nose and bloodshot eyes, a distinctly
unlovable object even if the elf had not betrayed Sirius to
Voldemort.
“I’ve got a question for you,”
said Harry, his heart beating rather fast as he looked down at the
elf, “and I order you to answer it truthfully. Understand?”
“Yes, Master,” said Kreacher,
bowing low again: Harry saw his lips moving soundlessly, undoubtedly
framing the insults he was now forbidden to utter.
“Two years ago,” said Harry, his
heart now hammering against his ribs, “there was a big gold locket
in the drawing room upstairs. We threw it out. Did you steal it
back?”
There was a moment’s silence, during
which Kreacher straightened up to look Harry full in the face. Then
he said, “Yes.”
“Where is it now?” asked Harry
jubilantly as Ron and Hermione looked gleeful.
Kreacher closed his eyes as though he
could not bear to see their reactions to his next word.
“Gone.”
“Gone?” echoed Harry, elation
flooding out of him. “What do you mean, it’s gone?”
The elf shivered. He swayed.
“Kreacher,” said Harry fiercely, “I
order you—”
“Mundungus Fletcher,” croaked the
elf, his eyes still tight shut. “Mundungus Fletcher stole it all:
Miss Bella’s and Miss Cissy’s pictures, my Mistress’s gloves,
the Order of Merlin, First Class, the goblets with the family crest,
and—and—”
Kreacher was gulping for air: His
hollow chest was rising and falling rapidly, then his eyes flew open
and he uttered a bloodcurdling scream.
“—and the locket, Master Regulus’s
locket, Kreacher did wrong, Kreacher failed in his orders!”
Harry reacted instinctively: As
Kreacher lunged for the poker standing in the grate, he launched
himself upon the elf, flattening him. Hermione’s scream mingled
with Kreacher’s, but Harry bellowed louder than both of them:
“Kreacher, I order you to stay still!”
He felt the elf freeze and released
him. Kreacher lay flat on the cold stone floor, tears gushing from
his sagging eyes.
“Harry, let him up!” Hermione
whispered.
“So he can beat himself up with the
poker?” snorted Harry, kneeling beside the elf. “I don’t think
so. Right, Kreacher, I want the truth: How do you know Mundungus
Fletcher stole the locket?”
“Kreacher saw him!” gasped the elf
as tears poured over his snout and into his mouth full of graying
teeth. “Kreacher saw him coming out of Kreacher’s cupboard with
his hands full of Kreacher’s treasures. Kreacher told the sneak
thief to stop, but Mundungus Fletcher laughed and r-ran…”
“You called the locket ‘Master
Regulus’s,’” said Harry. “Why? Where did it come from? What
did Regulus have to do with it? Kreacher, sit up and tell me
everything you know about that locket, and everything Regulus had to
do with it!”
The elf sat up, curled into a ball,
placed his wet face between his knees, and began to rock backward and
forward. When he spoke, his voice was muffled but quite distinct in
the silent, echoing kitchen.
“Master Sirius ran away, good
riddance, for he was a bad boy and broke my Mistress’s heart with
his lawless ways. But Master Regulus had proper pride; he knew what
was due to the name of Black and the dignity of his pure blood. For
years he talked of the Dark Lord, who was going to bring the wizards
out of hiding to rule the Muggles and the Muggle-borns… and when he
was sixteen years old, Master Regulus joined the Dark Lord. So proud,
so proud, so happy to serve…
“And one day, a year after he had
joined, Master Regulus came down to the kitchen to see Kreacher.
Master Regulus always liked Kreacher. And Master Regulus said… he
said…
The old elf rocked faster than ever.
“…he said that the Dark Lord
required an elf.”
“Voldemort needed an elf?” Harry
repeated, looking around at Ron and Hermione, who looked just as
puzzled as he did.
“Oh yes,” moaned Kreacher. “And
Master Regulus had volunteered Kreacher. It was an honor, said Master
Regulus, an honor for him and for Kreacher, who must be sure to do
whatever the Dark Lord ordered him to do… and then to c-come home.”
Kreacher rocked still faster, his
breath coming in sobs.
“So Kreacher went to the Dark Lord.
The Dark Lord did not tell Kreacher what they were to do, but took
Kreacher with him to a cave beside the sea. And beyond the cave there
was a cavern, and in the cavern was a great black lake…”
The hairs on the back of Harry’s neck
stood up. Kreacher’s croaking voice seemed to come to him from
across that dark water. He saw what had happened as clearly as though
he had been present.
“…There was a boat…”
Of course there had been a boat; Harry
knew the boat, ghostly green and tiny, bewitched so as to carry one
wizard and one victim toward the island in the center. This, then,
was how Voldemort had tested the defenses surrounding the Horcrux: by
borrowing a disposable creature, a house-elf…
“There was a b-basin full of potion
on the island. The D-Dark Lord made Kreacher drink it…”
The elf quaked from head to foot.
“Kreacher drank, and as he drank, he
saw terrible things… Kreacher’s insides burned… Kreacher cried
for Master Regulus to save him, he cried for his Mistress Black, but
the Dark Lord only laughed… He made Kreacher drink all the potion…
He dropped a locket into the empty basin… He filled it with more
potion.
“And then the Dark Lord sailed away,
leaving Kreacher on the island…”
Harry could see it happening. He
watched Voldemort’s white, snakelike face vanishing into darkness,
those red eyes fixed pitilessly on the thrashing elf whose death
would occur within minutes, whenever he succumbed to the desperate
thirst that the burning potion caused its victim… But here, Harry’s
imagination could go no further, for he could not see how Kreacher
had escaped.
“Kreacher needed water, he crawled to
the island’s edge and he drank from the black lake… and hands,
dead hands, came out of the water and dragged Kreacher under the
surface…”
“How did you get away?” Harry
asked, and he was not surprised to hear himself whispering.
Kreacher raised his ugly head and
looked at Harry with his great, bloodshot eyes.
“Master Regulus told Kreacher to come
back,” he said.
“I know—but how did you escape the
Inferi?”
Kreacher did not seem to understand.
“Master Regulus told Kreacher to come
back,” he repeated.
“I know, but—”
“Well, it’s obvious, isn’t it,
Harry?” said Ron. “He Disapparated!”
“But… you couldn’t Apparate in
and out of that cave,” said Harry, “otherwise Dumbledore—”
“Elf magic isn’t like wizard’s
magic, is it?” said Ron. “I mean, they can Apparate and
Disapparate in and out of Hogwarts when we can’t.”
There was silence as Harry digested
this. How could Voldemort have made such a mistake? But even as he
thought this, Hermione spoke, and her voice was icy.
“Of course, Voldemort would have
considered the ways of house-elves far beneath his notice, just like
all the purebloods who treat them like animals… It would never have
occurred to him that they might have magic that he didn’t.”
“The house-elf’s highest law is his
Master’s bidding,” intoned Kreacher. “Kreacher was told to come
home, so Kreacher came home…”
“Well, then, you did what you were
told, didn’t you?” said Hermione kindly. “You didn’t disobey
orders at all!”
Kreacher shook his head, rocking as
fast as ever.
“So what happened when you got back?”
Harry asked. “What did Regulus say when you told him what had
happened?”
“Master Regulus was very worried,
very worried,” croaked Kreacher. “Master Regulus told Kreacher to
stay hidden and not to leave the house. And then… it was a little
while later… Master Regulus came to find Kreacher in his cupboard
one night, and Master Regulus was strange, not as he usually was,
disturbed in his mind, Kreacher could tell… and he asked Kreacher
to take him to the cave, the cave where Kreacher had gone with the
Dark Lord…”
And so they had set off. Harry could
visualize them quite clearly, the frightened old elf and the thin,
dark Seeker who had so resembled Sirius… Kreacher knew how to open
the concealed entrance to the underground cavern, knew how to raise
the tiny boat; this time it was his beloved Regulus who sailed with
him to the island with its basin of poison…
“And he made you drink the potion?”
said Harry, disgusted.
But Kreacher shook his head and wept.
Hermione’s hands leapt to her mouth: She seemed to have understood
something.
“M-Master Regulus took from his
pocket a locket like the one the Dark Lord had,” said Kreacher,
tears pouring down either side of his snoutlike nose. “And he told
Kreacher to take it and, when the basin was empty, to switch the
lockets…”
Kreacher’s sobs came in great rasps
now; Harry had to concentrate hard to understand him.
“And he ordered—Kreacher to
leave—without him. And he told Kreacher—to go home—and never to
tell my Mistress—what he had done—but to destroy—the first
locket. And he drank—all the potion—and Kreacher swapped the
lockets—and watched… as Master Regulus… was dragged beneath the
water… and…”
“Oh, Kreacher!” wailed Hermione,
who was crying. She dropped to her knees beside the elf and tried to
hug him. At once he was on his feet, cringing away from her, quite
obviously repulsed.
“The Mudblood touched Kreacher, he
will not allow it, what would his Mistress say?”
“I told you not to call her
‘Mudblood’!” snarled Harry, but the elf was already punishing
himself: He fell to the ground and banged his forehead on the floor.
“Stop him—stop him!” Hermione
cried. “Oh, don’t you see now how sick it is, the way they’ve
got to obey?”
“Kreacher—stop, stop!” shouted
Harry.
The elf lay on the floor, panting and
shivering, green mucus glistening around his snout, a bruise already
blooming on his pallid forehead where he had struck himself, his eyes
swollen and bloodshot and swimming in tears. Harry had never seen
anything so pitiful.
“So you brought the locket home,”
he said relentlessly, for he was determined to know the full story.
“And you tried to destroy it?”
“Nothing Kreacher did made any mark
upon it,” moaned the elf. “Kreacher tried everything, everything
he knew, but nothing, nothing would work… So many powerful spells
upon the casing, Kreacher was sure the way to destroy it was to get
inside it, but it would not open… Kreacher punished himself, he
tried again, he punished himself, he tried again. Kreacher failed to
obey orders, Kreacher could not destroy the locket! And his Mistress
was mad with grief, because Master Regulus had disappeared, and
Kreacher could not tell her what had happened, no, because Master
Regulus had f-f-forbidden him to tell any of the f-f-family what
happened in the c-cave…”
Kreacher began to sob so hard that
there were no more coherent words. Tears flowed down Hermione’s
cheeks as she watched Kreacher, but she did not dare touch him again.
Even Ron, who was no fan of Kreacher’s, looked troubled. Harry sat
back on his heels and shook his head, trying to clear it.
“I don’t understand you, Kreacher,”
he said finally. “Voldemort tried to kill you, Regulus died to
bring Voldemort down, but you were still happy to betray Sirius to
Voldemort? You were happy to go to Narcissa and Bellatrix, and pass
information to Voldemort through them…”
“Harry, Kreacher doesn’t think like
that,” said Hermione, wiping her eyes on the back of her hand.
“He’s a slave; house-elves are used to bad, even brutal
treatment; what Voldemort did to Kreacher wasn’t that far out of
the common way. What do wizard wars mean to an elf like Kreacher?
He’s loyal to people who are kind to him, and Mrs. Black must have
been, and Regulus certainly was, so he served them willingly and
parroted their beliefs. I know what you’re going to say,” she
went on as Harry began to protest, “that Regulus changed his mind…
but he doesn’t seem to have explained that to Kreacher, does he?
And I think I know why. Kreacher and Regulus’s family were all
safer if they kept to the old pure-blood line. Regulus was trying to
protect them all.”
“Sirius—”
“Sirius was horrible to Kreacher,
Harry, and it’s no good looking like that, you know it’s true.
Kreacher had been alone for a long time when Sirius came to live
here, and he was probably starving for a bit of affection. I’m sure
‘Miss Cissy’ and ‘Miss Bella’ were perfectly lovely to
Kreacher when he turned up, so he did them a favor and told them
everything they wanted to know. I’ve said all along that wizards
would pay for how they treat house-elves. Well, Voldemort did… and
so did Sirius.”
Harry had no retort. As he watched
Kreacher sobbing on the floor, he remembered what Dumbledore had said
to him, mere hours after Sirius’s death: I do not think Sirius ever
saw Kreacher as a being with feelings as acute as a human’s…
“Kreacher,” said Harry after a
while, “when you feel up to it, er… please sit up.”
It was several minutes before Kreacher
hiccuped himself into silence. Then he pushed himself into a sitting
position again, rubbing his knuckles into his eyes like a small
child.
“Kreacher, I am going to ask you to
do something,” said Harry. He glanced at Hermione for assistance.
He wanted to give the order kindly, but at the same time, he could
not pretend that it was not an order. However, the change in his tone
seemed to have gained her approval: She smiled encouragingly.
“Kreacher, I want you, please, to go
and find Mundungus Fletcher. We need to find out where the
locket—where Master Regulus’s locket is. It’s really important.
We want to finish the work Master Regulus started, we want
to—er—ensure that he didn’t die in vain.”
Kreacher dropped his fists and looked
up at Harry.
“Find Mundungus Fletcher?” he
croaked.
“And bring him here, to Grimmauld
Place,” said Harry. “Do you think you could do that for us?”
As Kreacher nodded and got to his feet,
Harry had a sudden inspiration. He pulled out Hagrid’s purse and
took out the fake Horcrux, the substitute locket in which Regulus had
placed the note to Voldemort.
“Kreacher, I’d, er, like you to
have this,” he said, pressing the locket into the elf’s hand.
“This belonged to Regulus and I’m sure he’d want you to have it
as a token of gratitude for what you—”
“Overkill, mate,” said Ron as the
elf took one look at the locket, let out a howl of shock and misery,
and threw himself back onto the ground.
It took them nearly half an hour to
calm down Kreacher, who was so overcome to be presented with a Black
family heirloom for his very own that he was too weak at the knees to
stand properly. When finally he was able to totter a few steps they
all accompanied him to his cupboard, watched him tuck up the locket
safely in his dirty blankets, and assured him that they would make
its protection their first priority while he was away. He then made
two low bows to Harry and Ron, and even gave a funny little spasm in
Hermione’s direction that might have been an attempt at a
respectful salute, before Disapparating with the usual loud crack.
Chapter 11
The Bribe
If Kreacher could escape a lake full of
Inferi, Harry was confident that the capture of Mundungus would take
a few hours at most, and he prowled the house all morning in a state
of high anticipation. However, Kreacher did not return that morning
or even that afternoon. By nightfall, Harry felt discouraged and
anxious, and a supper composed largely of moldy bread, upon which
Hermione had tried a variety of unsuccessful Transfigurations, did
nothing to help.
Kreacher did not return the following
day, nor the day after that. However, two cloaked men had appeared in
the square outside number twelve, and they remained there into the
night, gazing in the direction of the house that they could not see.
“Death Eaters, for sure,” said Ron,
as he, Harry, and Hermione watched from the drawing room windows.
“Reckon they know we’re in here?”
“I don’t think so,” said
Hermione, though she looked frightened, “or they’d have sent
Snape in after us, wouldn’t they?”
“D’you reckon he’s been in here
and had his tongue tied by Moody’s curse?” asked Ron.
“Yes,” said Hermione, “otherwise
he’d have been able to tell that lot how to get in, wouldn’t he?
But they’re probably watching to see whether we turn up. They know
that Harry owns the house, after all.”
“How do they—?” began Harry.
“Wizarding wills are examined by the
Ministry, remember? They’ll know Sirius left you the place.”
The presence of the Death Eaters
outside increased the ominous mood inside number twelve. They had not
heard a word from anyone beyond Grimmauld Place since Mr. Weasley’s
Patronus, and the strain was starting to tell. Restless and
irritable, Ron had developed an annoying habit of playing with the
Deluminator in his pocket: This particularly infuriated Hermione, who
was whiling away the wait for Kreacher by studying The Tales of
Beedle the Bard and did not appreciate the way the lights kept
flashing on and off.
“Will you stop it!” she cried on
the third evening of Kreacher’s absence, as all light was sucked
from the drawing room yet again.
“Sorry, sorry!” said Ron, clicking
the Deluminator and restoring the lights. “I don’t know I’m
doing it!”
“Well, can’t you find something
useful to occupy yourself?”
“What, like reading kids’ stories?”
“Dumbledore left me this book, Ron—”
“—and he left me the Deluminator,
maybe I’m supposed to use it!”
Unable to stand the bickering, Harry
slipped out of the room unnoticed by either of them. He headed
downstairs toward the kitchen, which he kept visiting because he was
sure that was where Kreacher was most likely to reappear. Halfway
down the flight of stairs into the hall, however, he heard a tap on
the front door, then metallic clicks and the grinding of the chain.
Every nerve in his body seemed to
tauten: He pulled out his wand, moved into the shadows beside the
decapitated elf heads, and waited. The door opened: He saw a glimpse
of the lamplit square outside, and a cloaked figure edged into the
hall and closed the door behind it. The intruder took a step forward,
and Moody’s voice asked, “Severus Snape?” Then the dust figure
rose from the end of the hall and rushed him, raising its dead hand.
“It was not I who killed you, Albus,”
said a quiet voice.
The jinx broke: The dust-figure
exploded again, and it was impossible to make out the newcomer
through the dense gray cloud it left behind.
Harry pointed his wand into the middle
of it.
“Don’t move!”
He had forgotten the portrait of Mrs.
Black: At the sound of his yell, the curtains hiding her flew open
and she began to scream, “Mudbloods and filth dishonoring my
house—”
Ron and Hermione came crashing down the
stairs behind Harry, wands pointing, like his, at the unknown man now
standing with his arms raised in the hall below.
“Hold your fire, it’s me, Remus!”
“Oh, thank goodness,” said Hermione
weakly, pointing her wand at Mrs. Black instead; with a bang, the
curtains swished shut again and silence fell. Ron too lowered his
wand, but Harry did not.
“Show yourself!” he called back.
Lupin moved forward into the lamplight,
hands still held high in a gesture of surrender.
“I am Remus John Lupin, werewolf,
sometimes known as Moony, one of the four creators of the Marauder’s
Map, married to Nymphadora, usually known as Tonks, and I taught you
how to produce a Patronus, Harry, which takes the form of a stag.”
“Oh, all right,” said Harry,
lowering his wand, “but I had to check, didn’t I?”
“Speaking as your ex-Defense Against
the Dark Arts teacher, I quite agree that you had to check. Ron,
Hermione, you shouldn’t be quite so quick to lower your defenses.”
They ran down the stairs toward him.
Wrapped in a thick black traveling cloak, he looked exhausted, but
pleased to see them.
“No sign of Severus, then?” he
asked.
“No,” said Harry. “What’s going
on? Is everyone okay?”
“Yes,” said Lupin, “but we’re
all being watched. There are a couple of Death Eaters in the square
outside—”
“We know—”
“I had to Apparate very precisely
onto the top step outside the front door to be sure that they would
not see me. They can’t know you’re in here or I’m sure they’d
have more people out there; they’re staking out everywhere that’s
got any connection with you, Harry. Let’s go downstairs, there’s
a lot to tell you, and I want to know what happened after you left
the Burrow.”
They descended into the kitchen, where
Hermione pointed her wand at the grate. A fire sprang up instantly:
It gave the illusion of coziness to the stark stone walls and
glistened off the long wooden table. Lupin pulled a few butterbeers
from beneath his traveling cloak and they sat down.
“I’d have been here three days ago
but I needed to shake off the Death Eater tailing me,” said Lupin.
“So, you came straight here after the wedding?”
“No,” said Harry, “only after we
ran into a couple of Death Eaters in a café on Tottenham Court
Road.”
Lupin slopped most of his butterbeer
down his front.
“What?”
They explained what had happened; when
they had finished, Lupin looked aghast.
“But how did they find you so
quickly? It’s impossible to track anyone who Apparates, unless you
grab hold of them as they disappear!”
“And it doesn’t seem likely they
were just strolling down Tottenham Court Road at the time, does it?”
said Harry.
“We wondered,” said Hermione
tentatively, “whether Harry could still have the Trace on him?”
“Impossible,” said Lupin. Ron
looked smug, and Harry felt hugely relieved. “Apart from anything
else, they’d know for sure Harry was here if he still had the Trace
on him, wouldn’t they? But I can’t see how they could have
tracked you to Tottenham Court Road, that’s worrying, really
worrying.”
He looked disturbed, but as far as
Harry was concerned, that question could wait.
“Tell us what happened after we left,
we haven’t heard a thing since Ron’s dad told us the family were
safe.”
“Well, Kingsley saved us,” said
Lupin. “Thanks to his warning most of the wedding guests were able
to Disapparate before they arrived.”
“Were they Death Eaters or Ministry
people?” interjected Hermione.
“A mixture; but to all intents and
purposes they’re the same thing now,” said Lupin. “There were
about a dozen of them, but they didn’t know you were there, Harry.
Arthur heard a rumor that they tried to torture your whereabouts out
of Scrimgeour before they killed him; if it’s true, he didn’t
give you away.”
Harry looked at Ron and Hermione; their
expressions reflected the mingled shock and gratitude he felt. He had
never liked Scrimgeour much, but if what Lupin said was true, the
man’s final act had been to try to protect Harry.
“The Death Eaters searched the Burrow
from top to bottom,” Lupin went on. “They found the ghoul, but
didn’t want to get too close—and then they interrogated those of
us who remained for hours. They were trying to get information on
you, Harry, but of course nobody apart from the Order knew that you
had been there.
“At the same time that they were
smashing up the wedding, more Death Eaters were forcing their way
into every Order-connected house in the country. No deaths,” he
added quickly, forestalling the question, “but they were rough.
They burned down Dedalus Diggle’s house, but as you know he wasn’t
there, and they used the Cruciatus Curse on Tonks’s family. Again,
trying to find out where you went after you visited them. They’re
all right—shaken, obviously, but otherwise okay.”
“The Death Eaters got through all
those protective charms?” Harry asked, remembering how effective
these had been on the night he had crashed in Tonks’s parents’
garden.
“What you’ve got to realize, Harry,
is that the Death Eaters have got the full might of the Ministry on
their side now,” said Lupin. “They’ve got the power to perform
brutal spells without fear of identification or arrest. They managed
to penetrate every defensive spell we’d cast against them, and once
inside, they were completely open about why they’d come.”
“And are they bothering to give an
excuse for torturing Harry’s whereabouts out of people?” asked
Hermione, an edge to her voice.
“Well,” said Lupin. He hesitated,
then pulled out a folded copy of the Daily Prophet.
“Here,” he said, pushing it across
the table to Harry, “you’ll know sooner or later anyway. That’s
their pretext for going after you.”
Harry smoothed out the paper. A huge
photograph of his own face filled the front page. He read the
headline over it:
WANTED FOR QUESTIONING ABOUT
THE DEATH OF ALBUS DUMBLEDORE
Ron and Hermione gave roars of outrage,
but Harry said nothing. He pushed the newspaper away; he did not want
to read any more: He knew what it would say. Nobody but those who had
been on top of the tower when Dumbledore died knew who had really
killed him and, as Rita Skeeter had already told the Wizarding world,
Harry had been seen running from the place moments after Dumbledore
had fallen.
“I’m sorry, Harry,” Lupin said.
“So Death Eaters have taken over the
Daily Prophet too?” asked Hermione furiously.
Lupin nodded.
“But surely people realize what’s
going on?”
“The coup has been smooth and
virtually silent,” said Lupin. “The official version of
Scrimgeour’s murder is that he resigned; he has been replaced by
Pius Thicknesse, who is under the Imperius Curse.”
“Why didn’t Voldemort declare
himself Minister of Magic?” asked Ron.
Lupin laughed.
“He doesn’t need to, Ron.
Effectively he is the Minister, but why should he sit behind a desk
at the Ministry? His puppet, Thicknesse, is taking care of everyday
business, leaving Voldemort free to extend his power beyond the
Ministry.
“Naturally many people have deduced
what has happened: There has been such a dramatic change in Ministry
policy in the last few days, and many are whispering that Voldemort
must be behind it. However, that is the point: They whisper. They
daren’t confide in each other, not knowing whom to trust; they are
scared to speak out, in case their suspicions are true and their
families are targeted. Yes, Voldemort is playing a very clever game.
Declaring himself might have provoked open rebellion: Remaining
masked has created confusion, uncertainty, and fear.”
“And this dramatic change in Ministry
policy,” said Harry, “involves warning the Wizarding world
against me instead of Voldemort?”
“That’s certainly part of it,”
said Lupin, “and it is a masterstroke. Now that Dumbledore is dead,
you—the Boy Who Lived—were sure to be the symbol and rallying
point for any resistance to Voldemort. But by suggesting that you had
a hand in the old hero’s death, Voldemort has not only set a price
upon your head, but sown doubt and fear amongst many who would have
defended you.
“Meanwhile, the Ministry has started
moving against Muggle-borns.”
Lupin pointed at the Daily Prophet.
“Look at page two.”
Hermione turned the pages with much the
same expression of distaste she had worn when handling Secrets of the
Darkest Art.
“‘Muggle-born Register,’” she
read aloud. “‘The Ministry of Magic is undertaking a survey of
so-called “Muggle-borns,” the better to understand how they came
to possess magical secrets.
“‘Recent research undertaken by the
Department of Mysteries reveals that magic can only be passed from
person to person when Wizards reproduce. Where no proven Wizarding
ancestry exists, therefore, the so-called Muggle-born is likely to
have obtained magical power by theft or force.
“‘The Ministry is determined to
root out such usurpers of magical power, and to this end has issued
an invitation to every so-called Muggle-born to present themselves
for interview by the newly appointed Muggle-born Registration
Commission.’”
“People won’t let this happen,”
said Ron.
“It is happening, Ron,” said Lupin.
“Muggle-borns are being rounded up as we speak.”
“But how are they supposed to have
‘stolen’ magic?” said Ron. “It’s mental, if you could steal
magic there wouldn’t be any Squibs, would there?”
“I know,” said Lupin.
“Nevertheless, unless you can prove that you have at least one
close Wizarding relative, you are now deemed to have obtained your
magical power illegally and must suffer the punishment.”
Ron glanced at Hermione, then said,
“What if purebloods and half-bloods swear a Muggle-born’s part of
their family? I’ll tell everyone Hermione’s my cousin—”
Hermione covered Ron’s hand with hers
and squeezed it.
“Thank you, Ron, but I couldn’t let
you—”
“You won’t have a choice,” said
Ron fiercely, gripping her hand back. “I’ll teach you my family
tree so you can answer questions on it.
Hermione gave a shaky laugh.
“Ron, as we’re on the run with
Harry Potter, the most wanted person in the country, I don’t think
it matters. If I was going back to school it would be different.
What’s Voldemort planning for Hogwarts?” she asked Lupin.
“Attendance is now compulsory for
every young witch and wizard,” he replied. “That was announced
yesterday. It’s a change, because it was never obligatory before.
Of course, nearly every witch and wizard in Britain has been educated
at Hogwarts, but their parents had the right to teach them at home or
send them abroad if they preferred. This way, Voldemort will have the
whole Wizarding population under his eye from a young age. And it’s
also another way of weeding out Muggle-borns, because students must
be given Blood Status—meaning that they have proven to the Ministry
that they are of Wizard descent—before they are allowed to attend.”
Harry felt sickened and angry: At this
moment, excited eleven-year-olds would be poring over stacks of newly
purchased spell-books, unaware that they would never see Hogwarts,
perhaps never see their families again either.
“It’s… it’s…” he muttered,
struggling to find words that did justice to the horror of his
thoughts, but Lupin said quietly,
“I know.”
Lupin hesitated.
“I’ll understand if you can’t
confirm this, Harry, but the Order is under the impression that
Dumbledore left you a mission.”
“He did,” Harry replied, “and Ron
and Hermione are in on it and they’re coming with me.”
“Can you confide in me what the
mission is?”
Harry looked into the prematurely lined
face, framed in thick but graying hair, and wished that he could
return a different answer.
“I can’t, Remus, I’m sorry. If
Dumbledore didn’t tell you I don’t think I can.”
“I thought you’d say that,” said
Lupin, looking disappointed. “But I might still be of some use to
you. You know what I am and what I can do. I could come with you to
provide protection. There would be no need to tell me exactly what
you were up to.”
Harry hesitated. It was a very tempting
offer, though how they would be able to keep their mission secret
from Lupin if he were with them all the time he could not imagine.
Hermione, however, looked puzzled.
“But what about Tonks?” she asked.
“What about her?” said Lupin.
“Well,” said Hermione, frowning,
“you’re married! How does she feel about you going away with us?”
“Tonks will be perfectly safe,”
said Lupin. “She’ll be at her parents’ house.”
There was something strange in Lupin’s
tone; it was almost cold. There was also something odd in the idea of
Tonks remaining hidden at her parents’ house; she was, after all, a
member of the Order and, as far as Harry knew, was likely to want to
be in the thick of the action.
“Remus,” said Hermione tentatively,
“is everything all right… you know… between you and—”
“Everything is fine, thank you,”
said Lupin pointedly.
Hermione turned pink. There was another
pause, an awkward and embarrassed one, and then Lupin said, with an
air of forcing himself to admit something unpleasant, “Tonks is
going to have a baby.”
“Oh, how wonderful!” squealed
Hermione.
“Excellent!” said Ron
enthusiastically.
“Congratulations,” said Harry.
Lupin gave an artificial smile that was
more like a grimace, then said, “So… do you accept my offer? Will
three become four? I cannot believe that Dumbledore would have
disapproved, he appointed me your Defense Against the Dark Arts
teacher, after all. And I must tell you that I believe that we are
facing magic many of us have never encountered or imagined.”
Ron and Hermione both looked at Harry.
“Just—just to be clear,” he said.
“You want to leave Tonks at her parents’ house and come away with
us?”
“She’ll be perfectly safe there,
they’ll look after her,” said Lupin. He spoke with a finality
bordering on indifference. “Harry, I’m sure James would have
wanted me to stick with you.”
“Well,” said Harry slowly, “I’m
not. I’m pretty sure my father would have wanted to know why you
aren’t sticking with your own kid, actually.”
Lupin’s face drained of color. The
temperature in the kitchen might have dropped ten degrees. Ron stared
around the room as though he had been bidden to memorize it, while
Hermione’s eyes swiveled backward and forward from Harry to Lupin.
“You don’t understand,” said
Lupin at last.
“Explain, then,” said Harry.
Lupin swallowed.
“I—I made a grave mistake in
marrying Tonks. I did it against my better judgment and I have
regretted it very much ever since.”
“I see,” said Harry, “so you’re
just going to dump her and the kid and run off with us?”
Lupin sprang to his feet: His chair
toppled over backward, and he glared at them so fiercely that Harry
saw, for the first time ever, the shadow of the wolf upon his human
face.
“Don’t you understand what I’ve
done to my wife and my unborn child? I should never have married her,
I’ve made her an outcast!”
Lupin kicked aside the chair he had
overturned.
“You have only ever seen me amongst
the Order, or under Dumbledore’s protection at Hogwarts! You don’t
know how most of the Wizarding world sees creatures like me! When
they know of my affliction, they can barely talk to me! Don’t you
see what I’ve done? Even her own family is disgusted by our
marriage, what parents want their only daughter to marry a werewolf?
And the child—the child—”
Lupin actually seized handfuls of his
own hair; he looked quite deranged.
“My kind don’t usually breed! It
will be like me, I am convinced of it—how can I forgive myself,
when I knowingly risked passing on my own condition to an innocent
child? And if, by some miracle, it is not like me, then it will be
better off, a hundred times so, without a father of whom it must
always be ashamed!”
“Remus!” whispered Hermione, tears
in her eyes. “Don’t say that—how could any child be ashamed of
you?”
“Oh, I don’t know, Hermione,”
said Harry. “I’d be pretty ashamed of him.”
Harry did not know where his rage was
coming from, but it had propelled him to his feet too. Lupin looked
as though Harry had hit him.
“If the new regime thinks
Muggle-borns are bad,” Harry said, “what will they do to a
half-werewolf whose father’s in the Order? My father died trying to
protect my mother and me, and you reckon he’d tell you to abandon
your kid to go on an adventure with us?”
“How—how dare you?” said Lupin.
“This is not about a desire for—for danger or personal glory—how
dare you suggest such a—”
“I think you’re feeling a bit of a
daredevil,” Harry said. “You fancy stepping into Sirius’s
shoes—”
“Harry, no!” Hermione begged him,
but he continued to glare into Lupin’s livid face.
“I’d never have believed this,”
Harry said. “The man who taught me to fight dementors—a coward.”
Lupin drew his wand so fast that Harry
had barely reached for his own; there was a loud bang and he felt
himself flying backward as if punched; as he slammed into the kitchen
wall and slid to the floor, he glimpsed the tail of Lupin’s cloak
disappearing around the door.
“Remus, Remus, come back!” Hermione
cried, but Lupin did not respond. A moment later they heard the front
door slam.
“Harry!” wailed Hermione. “How
could you?”
“It was easy,” said Harry. He stood
up; he could feel a lump swelling where his head had hit the wall. He
was still so full of anger he was shaking.
“Don’t look at me like that!” he
snapped at Hermione.
“Don’t you start on her!” snarled
Ron.
“No—no—we mustn’t fight!”
said Hermione, launching herself between them.
“You shouldn’t have said that stuff
to Lupin,” Ron told Harry.
“He had it coming to him,” said
Harry. Broken images were racing each other through his mind: Sirius
falling through the veil; Dumbledore suspended, broken, in midair; a
flash of green light and his mother’s voice, begging for mercy…
“Parents,” said Harry, “shouldn’t
leave their kids unless—unless they’ve got to.”
“Harry—” said Hermione,
stretching out a consoling hand, but he shrugged it off and walked
away, his eyes on the fire Hermione had conjured. He had once spoken
to Lupin out of that fireplace, seeking reassurance about James, and
Lupin had consoled him. Now Lupin’s tortured white face seemed to
swim in the air before him. He felt a sickening surge of remorse.
Neither Ron nor Hermione spoke, but Harry felt sure that they were
looking at each other behind his back, communicating silently.
He turned around and caught them
turning hurriedly away from each other.
“I know I shouldn’t have called him
a coward.”
“No, you shouldn’t,” said Ron at
once.
“But he’s acting like one.”
“All the same…” said Hermione.
“I know,” said Harry. “But if it
makes him go back to Tonks, it’ll be worth it, won’t it?”
He could not keep the plea out of his
voice. Hermione looked sympathetic, Ron uncertain. Harry looked down
at his feet, thinking of his father. Would James have backed Harry in
what he had said to Lupin, or would he have been angry at how his son
had treated his old friend?
The silent kitchen seemed to hum with
the shock of the recent scene and with Ron and Hermione’s unspoken
reproaches. The Daily Prophet Lupin had brought was still lying on
the table, Harry’s own face staring up at the ceiling from the
front page. He walked over to it and sat down, opened the paper at
random, and pretended to read. He could not take in the words; his
mind was still too full of the encounter with Lupin. He was sure that
Ron and Hermione had resumed their silent communications on the other
side of the Prophet. He turned a page loudly, and Dumbledore’s name
leapt out at him. It was a moment or two before he took in the
meaning of the photograph, which showed a family group. Beneath the
photograph were the words: The Dumbledore family, left to right:
Albus; Percival, holding newborn Ariana; Kendra; and Aberforth.
His attention caught, Harry examined
the picture more carefully. Dumbledore’s father, Percival, was a
good-looking man with eyes that seemed to twinkle even in this faded
old photograph. The baby, Ariana, was little longer than a loaf of
bread and no more distinctive-looking. The mother, Kendra, had
jet-black hair pulled into a high bun. Her face had a carved quality
about it. Harry thought of photos of Native Americans he’d seen as
he studied her dark eyes, high cheekbones, and straight nose,
formally composed above a high-necked silk gown. Albus and Aberforth
wore matching lacy collared jackets and had identical,
shoulder-length hairstyles. Albus looked several years older, but
otherwise the two boys looked very alike, for this was before Albus’s
nose had been broken and before he started wearing glasses.
The family looked quite happy and
normal, smiling serenely up out of the newspaper. Baby Ariana’s arm
waved vaguely out of her shawl. Harry looked above the picture and
saw the headline:
EXCLUSIVE EXTRACT FROM THE UPCOMING
BIOGRAPHY OF ALBUS DUMBLEDORE
by Rita Skeeter
Thinking that it could hardly make him
feel any worse than he already did, Harry began to read:
Proud and haughty, Kendra Dumbledore
could not bear to remain in Mould-on-the-Wold after her husband
Percival’s well-publicized arrest and imprisonment in Azkaban. She
therefore decided to uproot the family and relocate to Godric’s
Hollow, the village that was later to gain fame as the scene of Harry
Potter’s strange escape from You-Know-Who.
Like Mould-on-the-Wold, Godric’s
Hollow was home to a number of Wizarding families, but as Kendra knew
none of them, she would be spared the curiosity about her husband’s
crime she had faced in her former village. By repeatedly rebuffing
the friendly advances of her new Wizarding neighbors, she soon
ensured that her family was left well alone.
“Slammed the door in my face when I
went around to welcome her with a batch of homemade Cauldron Cakes,”
says Bathilda Bagshot. “The first year they were there I only ever
saw the two boys. Wouldn’t have known there was a daughter if I
hadn’t been picking Plangentines by moonlight the winter after they
moved in, and saw Kendra leading Ariana out into the back garden.
Walked her round the lawn once, keeping a firm grip on her, then took
her back inside. Didn’t know what to make of it.”
It seems that Kendra thought the move
to Godric’s Hollow was the perfect opportunity to hide Ariana once
and for all, something she had probably been planning for years. The
timing was significant. Ariana was barely seven years old when she
vanished from sight, and seven is the age by which most experts agree
that magic will have revealed itself, if present. Nobody now alive
remembers Ariana ever demonstrating even the slightest sign of
magical ability. It seems clear, therefore, that Kendra made a
decision to hide her daughter’s existence rather than suffer the
shame of admitting that she had produced a Squib. Moving away from
the friends and neighbors who knew Ariana would, of course, make
imprisoning her all the easier. The tiny number of people who
henceforth knew of Ariana’s existence could be counted upon to keep
the secret, including her two brothers, who deflected awkward
questions with the answer their mother had taught them: “My sister
is too frail for school.”
Next week: Albus Dumbledore at
Hogwarts—the Prizes and the Pretense.
Harry had been wrong: What he had read
had indeed made him feel worse. He looked back at the photograph of
the apparently happy family. Was it true? How could he find out? He
wanted to go to Godric’s Hollow, even if Bathilda was in no fit
state to talk to him; he wanted to visit the place where he and
Dumbledore had both lost loved ones. He was in the process of
lowering the newspaper, to ask Ron’s and Hermione’s opinions,
when a deafening crack echoed around the kitchen.
For the first time in three days Harry
had forgotten all about Kreacher. His immediate thought was that
Lupin had burst back into the room, and for a split second, he did
not take in the mass of struggling limbs that had appeared out of
thin air right beside his chair. He hurried to his feet as Kreacher
disentangled himself and, bowing low to Harry, croaked, “Kreacher
has returned with the thief Mundungus Fletcher, Master.”
Mundungus scrambled up and pulled out
his wand; Hermione, however, was too quick for him.
“Expelliarmus!”
Mundungus’s wand soared into the air,
and Hermione caught it. Wild-eyed, Mundungus dived for the stairs:
Ron rugby-tackled him and Mundungus hit the stone floor with a
muffled crunch.
“What?” he bellowed, writhing in
his attempts to free himself from Ron’s grip. “Wha’ve I done?
Setting a bleedin’ ’ouse-elf on me, what are you playing at,
wha’ve I done, lemme go, lemme go, or—”
“You’re not in much of a position
to make threats,” said Harry. He threw aside the newspaper, crossed
the kitchen in a few strides, and dropped to his knees beside
Mundungus, who stopped struggling and looked terrified. Ron got up,
panting, and watched as Harry pointed his wand deliberately at
Mundungus’s nose. Mundungus stank of stale sweat and tobacco smoke:
His hair was matted and his robes stained.
“Kreacher apologizes for the delay in
bringing the thief, Master,” croaked the elf. “Fletcher knows how
to avoid capture, has many hidey-holes and accomplices. Nevertheless,
Kreacher cornered the thief in the end.”
“You’ve done really well,
Kreacher,” said Harry, and the elf bowed low.
“Right, we’ve got a few questions
for you,” Harry told Mundungus, who shouted at once,
“I panicked, okay? I never wanted to
come along, no offense, mate, but I never volunteered to die for you,
an’ that was bleedin’ You-Know-Who come flying at me, anyone
woulda got outta there, I said all along I didn’t wanna do it—”
“For your information, none of the
rest of us Disapparated,” said Hermione.
“Well, you’re a bunch of bleedin’
’eroes then, aren’t you, but I never pretended I was up for
killing meself—”
“We’re not interested in why you
ran out on Mad-Eye,” said Harry, moving his wand a little closer to
Mundungus’s baggy, bloodshot eyes. “We already knew you were an
unreliable bit of scum.”
“Well then, why the ’ell am I being
’unted down by ’ouse-elves? Or is this about them goblets again?
I ain’t got none of ’em left, or you could ’ave ’em—”
“It’s not about the goblets either,
although you’re getting warmer,” said Harry. “Shut up and
listen.”
It felt wonderful to have something to
do, someone of whom he could demand some small portion of truth.
Harry’s wand was now so close to the bridge of Mundungus’s nose
that Mundungus had gone cross-eyed trying to keep it in view.
“When you cleaned out this house of
anything valuable,” Harry began, but Mundungus interrupted him
again.
“Sirius never cared about any of the
junk—”
There was the sound of pattering feet,
a blaze of shining copper, an echoing clang, and a shriek of agony:
Kreacher had taken a run at Mundungus and hit him over the head with
a saucepan.
“Call ’im off, call ’im off, ’e
should be locked up!” screamed Mundungus, cowering as Kreacher
raised the heavy-bottomed pan again.
“Kreacher, no!” shouted Harry.
Kreacher’s thin arms trembled with
the weight of the pan, still held aloft.
“Perhaps just one more, Master Harry,
for luck?”
Ron laughed.
“We need him conscious, Kreacher, but
if he needs persuading you can do the honors,” said Harry.
“Thank you very much, Master,” said
Kreacher with a bow, and he retreated a short distance, his great
pale eyes still fixed upon Mundungus with loathing.
“When you stripped this house of all
the valuables you could find,” Harry began again, “you took a
bunch of stuff from the kitchen cupboard. There was a locket there.”
Harry’s mouth was suddenly dry: He could sense Ron and Hermione’s
tension and excitement too. “What did you do with it?”
“Why?” asked Mundungus. “Is it
valuable?”
“You’ve still got it!” cried
Hermione.
“No, he hasn’t,” said Ron
shrewdly. “He’s wondering whether he should have asked more money
for it.”
“More?” said Mundungus. “That
wouldn’t have been effing difficult… bleedin’ gave it away,
di’n’ I? No choice.”
“What do you mean?”
“I was selling in Diagon Alley and
she come up to me and asks if I’ve got a license for trading in
magical artifacts. Bleedin’ snoop. She was gonna fine me, but she
took a fancy to the locket an’ told me she’d take it and let me
off that time, and to fink meself lucky.”
“Who was this woman?” asked Harry.
“I dunno, some Ministry hag.”
Mundungus considered for a moment, brow
wrinkled.
“Little woman. Bow on top of ’er
head.”
He frowned and then added, “Looked
like a toad.”
Harry dropped his wand: It hit
Mundungus on the nose and shot red sparks into his eyebrows, which
ignited.
“Aguamenti!” screamed Hermione, and
a jet of water streamed from her wand, engulfing a spluttering and
choking Mundungus.
Harry looked up and saw his own shock
reflected in Ron’s and Hermione’s faces. The scars on the back of
his right hand seemed to be tingling again.
Chapter 12
Magic is Might
As August wore on, the square of
unkempt grass in the middle of Grimmauld Place shriveled in the sun
until it was brittle and brown. The inhabitants of number twelve were
never seen by anybody in the surrounding houses, and nor was number
twelve itself. The Muggles who lived in Grimmauld Place had long
since accepted the amusing mistake in the numbering that had caused
number eleven to sit beside number thirteen.
And yet the square was now attracting a
trickle of visitors who seemed to find the anomaly most intriguing.
Barely a day passed without one or two people arriving in Grimmauld
Place with no other purpose, or so it seemed, than to lean against
the railings facing numbers eleven and thirteen, watching the join
between the two houses. The lurkers were never the same two days
running, although they all seemed to share a dislike for normal
clothing. Most of the Londoners who passed them were used to
eccentric dressers and took little notice, though occasionally one of
them might glance back, wondering why anyone would wear such long
cloaks in this heat.
The watchers seemed to be gleaning
little satisfaction from their vigil. Occasionally one of them
started forward excitedly, as if they had seen something interesting
at last, only to fall back looking disappointed.
On the first day of September there
were more people lurking in the square than ever before. Half a dozen
men in long cloaks stood silent and watchful, gazing as ever at
houses eleven and thirteen, but the thing for which they were waiting
still appeared elusive. As evening drew in, bringing with it an
unexpected gust of chilly rain for the first time in weeks, there
occurred one of those inexplicable moments when they appeared to have
seen something interesting. The man with the twisted face pointed and
his closest companion, a podgy, pallid man, started forward, but a
moment later they had relaxed into their previous state of
inactivity, looking frustrated and disappointed.
Meanwhile, inside number twelve, Harry
had just entered the hall. He had nearly lost his balance as he
Apparated onto the top step just outside the front door, and thought
that the Death Eaters might have caught a glimpse of his momentarily
exposed elbow. Shutting the front door carefully behind him, he
pulled off the Invisibility Cloak, draped it over his arm, and
hurried along the gloomy hallway toward the door that led to the
basement, a stolen copy of the Daily Prophet clutched in his hand.
The usual low whisper of “Severus
Snape?” greeted him, the chill wind swept him, and his tongue
rolled up for a moment.
“I didn’t kill you,” he said,
once it had unrolled, then held his breath as the dusty jinx-figure
exploded. He waited until he was halfway down the stairs to the
kitchen, out of earshot of Mrs. Black and clear of the dust cloud,
before calling, “I’ve got news, and you won’t like it.”
The kitchen was almost unrecognizable.
Every surface now shone: Copper pots and pans had been burnished to a
rosy glow; the wooden tabletop gleamed; the goblets and plates
already laid for dinner glinted in the light from a merrily blazing
fire, on which a cauldron was simmering. Nothing in the room,
however, was more dramatically different than the house-elf who now
came hurrying toward Harry, dressed in a snowy-white towel, his ear
hair as clean and fluffy as cotton wool, Regulus’s locket bouncing
on his thin chest.
“Shoes off, if you please, Master
Harry, and hands washed before dinner,” croaked Kreacher, seizing
the Invisibility Cloak and slouching off to hang it on a hook on the
wall, beside a number of old-fashioned robes that had been freshly
laundered.
“What’s happened?” Ron asked
apprehensively. He and Hermione had been poring over a sheaf of
scribbled notes and hand-drawn maps that littered the end of the long
kitchen table, but now they watched Harry as he strode toward them
and threw down the newspaper on top of their scattered parchment.
A large picture of a familiar,
hook-nosed, black-haired man stared up at them all, beneath a
headline that read:
SEVERUS SNAPE CONFIRMED AS HOGWARTS
HEADMASTER
“No!” said Ron and Hermione loudly.
Hermione was quickest; she snatched up
the newspaper and began to read the accompanying story out loud.
“‘Severus Snape, long-standing
Potions master at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, was
today appointed headmaster in the most important of several staffing
changes at the ancient school. Following the resignation of the
previous Muggle Studies teacher, Alecto Carrow will take over the
post while her brother, Amycus, fills the position of Defense Against
the Dark Arts professor.
“‘I welcome the opportunity to
uphold our finest Wizarding traditions and values—’ Like
committing murder and cutting off people’s ears, I suppose! Snape,
headmaster! Snape in Dumbledore’s study—Merlin’s pants!” she
shrieked, making both Harry and Ron jump. She leapt up from the table
and hurtled from the room, shouting as she went, “I’ll be back in
a minute!”
“‘Merlin’s pants’?” repeated
Ron, looking amused. “She must be upset.” He pulled the newspaper
toward him and perused the article about Snape.
“The other teachers won’t stand for
this. McGonagall and Flitwick and Sprout all know the truth, they
know how Dumbledore died. They won’t accept Snape as headmaster.
And who are these Carrows?”
“Death Eaters,” said Harry. “There
are pictures of them inside. They were at the top of the tower when
Snape killed Dumbledore, so it’s all friends together. And,”
Harry went on bitterly, drawing up a chair, “I can’t see that the
other teachers have got any choice but to stay. If the Ministry and
Voldemort are behind Snape it’ll be a choice between staying and
teaching, or a nice few years in Azkaban—and that’s if they’re
lucky. I reckon they’ll stay to try and protect the students.”
Kreacher came bustling to the table
with a large tureen in his hands, and ladled out soup into pristine
bowls, whistling between his teeth as he did so.
“Thanks, Kreacher,” said Harry,
flipping over the Prophet so as not to have to look at Snape’s
face. “Well, at least we know exactly where Snape is now.”
He began to spoon soup into his mouth.
The quality of Kreacher’s cooking had improved dramatically ever
since he had been given Regulus’s locket: Today’s French onion
was as good as Harry had ever tasted.
“There are still a load of Death
Eaters watching the house,” he told Ron as he ate, “more than
usual. It’s like they’re hoping we’ll march out carrying our
school trunks and head off for the Hogwarts Express.”
Ron glanced at his watch.
“I’ve been thinking about that all
day. It left nearly six hours ago. Weird, not being on it, isn’t
it?”
In his mind’s eye Harry seemed to see
the scarlet steam engine as he and Ron had once followed it by air,
shimmering between fields and hills, a rippling scarlet caterpillar.
He was sure Ginny, Neville, and Luna were sitting together at this
moment, perhaps wondering where he, Ron, and Hermione were, or
debating how best to undermine Snape’s new regime.
“They nearly saw me coming back in
just now,” Harry said. “I landed badly on the top step, and the
Cloak slipped.”
“I do that every time. Oh, here she
is,” Ron added, craning around in his seat to watch Hermione
reentering the kitchen. “And what in the name of Merlin’s most
baggy Y Fronts was that about?”
“I remembered this,” Hermione
panted.
She was carrying a large, framed
picture, which she now lowered to the floor before seizing her small,
beaded bag from the kitchen sideboard. Opening it, she proceeded to
force the painting inside, and despite the fact that it was patently
too large to fit inside the tiny bag, within a few seconds it had
vanished, like so much else, into the bag’s capacious depths.
“Phineas Nigellus,” Hermione
explained as she threw the bag onto the kitchen table with the usual
sonorous, clanking crash.
“Sorry?” said Ron, but Harry
understood. The painted image of Phineas Nigellus Black was able to
flit between his portrait in Grimmauld Place and the one that hung in
the headmaster’s office at Hogwarts: the circular tower-top room
where Snape was no doubt sitting right now, in triumphant possession
of Dumbledore’s collection of delicate, silver magical instruments,
the stone Pensieve, the Sorting Hat and, unless it had been moved
elsewhere, the sword of Gryffindor.
“Snape could send Phineas Nigellus to
look inside this house for him,” Hermione explained to Ron as she
resumed her seat. “But let him try it now, all Phineas Nigellus
will be able to see is the inside of my handbag.”
“Good thinking!” said Ron, looking
impressed.
“Thank you,” smiled Hermione,
pulling her soup toward her. “So, Harry, what else happened today?”
“Nothing,” said Harry. “Watched
the Ministry entrance for seven hours. No sign of her. Saw your dad,
though, Ron. He looks fine.”
Ron nodded his appreciation of this
news. They had agreed that it was far too dangerous to try and
communicate with Mr. Weasley while he walked in and out of the
Ministry, because he was always surrounded by other Ministry workers.
It was, however, reassuring to catch these glimpses of him, even if
he did look very strained and anxious.
“Dad always told us most Ministry
people use the Floo Network to get to work,” Ron said. “That’s
why we haven’t seen Umbridge, she’d never walk, she’d think
she’s too important.”
“And what about that funny old witch
and that little wizard in the navy robes?” Hermione asked.
“Oh yeah, the bloke from Magical
Maintenance,” said Ron.
“How do you know he works for Magical
Maintenance?” Hermione asked, her soupspoon suspended in midair.
“Dad said everyone from Magical
Maintenance wears navy blue robes.”
“But you never told us that!”
Hermione dropped her spoon and pulled
toward her the sheaf of notes and maps that she and Ron had been
examining when Harry had entered the kitchen.
“There’s nothing in here about navy
blue robes, nothing!” she said, flipping feverishly through the
pages.
“Well, does it really matter?”
“Ron, it all matters! If we’re
going to get into the Ministry and not give ourselves away when
they’re bound to be on the lookout for intruders, every little
detail matters! We’ve been over and over this, I mean, what’s the
point of all these reconnaissance trips if you aren’t even
bothering to tell us—”
“Blimey, Hermione, I forget one
little thing—”
“You do realize, don’t you, that
there’s probably no more dangerous place in the whole world for us
to be right now than the Ministry of—”
“I think we should do it tomorrow,”
said Harry.
Hermione stopped dead, her jaw hanging;
Ron choked a little over his soup.
“Tomorrow?” repeated Hermione. “You
aren’t serious, Harry?”
“I am,” said Harry. “I don’t
think we’re going to be much better prepared than we are now even
if we skulk around the Ministry entrance for another month. The
longer we put it off, the farther away that locket could be. There’s
already a good chance Umbridge has chucked it away; the thing doesn’t
open.”
“Unless,” said Ron, “she’s
found a way of opening it and she’s now possessed.”
“Wouldn’t make any difference to
her, she was so evil in the first place,” Harry shrugged.
Hermione was biting her lip, deep in
thought.
“We know everything important,”
Harry went on, addressing Hermione. “We know they’ve stopped
Apparition in and out of the Ministry. We know only the most senior
Ministry members are allowed to connect their homes to the Floo
Network now, because Ron heard those two Unspeakables complaining
about it. And we know roughly where Umbridge’s office is, because
of what you heard that bearded bloke saying to his mate—”
“‘I’ll be up on level one,
Dolores wants to see me,’” Hermione recited immediately.
“Exactly,” said Harry. “And we
know you get in using those funny coins, or tokens, or whatever they
are, because I saw that witch borrowing one from her friend—”
“But we haven’t got any!”
“If the plan works, we will have,”
Harry continued calmly.
“I don’t know, Harry, I don’t
know… There are an awful lot of things that could go wrong, so much
relies on chance…”
“That’ll be true even if we spend
another three months preparing,” said Harry. “It’s time to
act.”
He could tell from Ron’s and
Hermione’s faces that they were scared; he was not particularly
confident himself, and yet he was sure the time had come to put their
plan into operation.
They had spent the previous four weeks
taking it in turns to don the Invisibility Cloak and spy on the
official entrance to the Ministry, which Ron, thanks to Mr. Weasley,
had known since childhood. They had tailed Ministry workers on their
way in, eavesdropped on their conversations, and learned by careful
observation which of them could be relied upon to appear, alone, at
the same time every day. Occasionally there had been a chance to
sneak a Daily Prophet out of somebody’s briefcase. Slowly they had
built up the sketchy maps and notes now stacked in front of Hermione.
“All right,” said Ron slowly,
“let’s say we go for it tomorrow… I think it should just be me
and Harry.”
“Oh, don’t start that again!”
sighed Hermione. “I thought we’d settled this.”
“It’s one thing hanging around the
entrances under the Cloak, but this is different, Hermione.” Ron
jabbed a finger at a copy of the Daily Prophet dated ten days
previously. “You’re on the list of Muggle-borns who didn’t
present themselves for interrogation!”
“And you’re supposed to be dying of
spattergroit at the Burrow! If anyone shouldn’t go, it’s Harry,
he’s got a ten-thousand-Galleon price on his head—”
“Fine, I’ll stay here,” said
Harry. “Let me know if you ever defeat Voldemort, won’t you?”
As Ron and Hermione laughed, pain shot
through the scar on Harry’s forehead. His hand jumped to it: He saw
Hermione’s eyes narrow, and he tried to pass off the movement by
brushing his hair out of his eyes.
“Well, if all three of us go we’ll
have to Disapparate separately,” Ron was saying. “We can’t all
fit under the Cloak anymore.”
Harry’s scar was becoming more and
more painful. He stood up. At once, Kreacher hurried forward.
“Master has not finished his soup,
would Master prefer the savory stew, or else the treacle tart to
which Master is so partial?”
“Thanks, Kreacher, but I’ll be back
in a minute—er—bathroom.”
Aware that Hermione was watching him
suspiciously, Harry hurried up the stairs to the hall and then to the
first landing, where he dashed into the bathroom and bolted the door
again. Grunting with pain, he slumped over the black basin with its
taps in the form of open-mouthed serpents and closed his eyes…
He was gliding along a twilit street.
The buildings on either side of him had high, timbered gables; they
looked like gingerbread houses.
He approached one of them, then saw the
whiteness of his own long-fingered hand against the door. He knocked.
He felt a mounting excitement…
The door opened: A laughing woman stood
there. Her face fell as she looked into Harry’s face: humor gone,
terror replacing it…
“Gregorovitch?” said a high, cold
voice.
She shook her head: She was trying to
close the door. A white hand held it steady, prevented her shutting
him out…
“I want Gregorovitch.”
“Er wohnt hier nicht mehr!” she
cried, shaking her head. “He no live here! He no live here! I know
him not!”
Abandoning the attempt to close the
door, she began to back away down the dark hall, and Harry followed,
gliding toward her, and his long-fingered hand had drawn his wand.
“Where is he?”
“Das weiß ich nicht! He move! I know
not, I know not!”
He raised the wand. She screamed. Two
young children came running into the hall. She tried to shield them
with her arms. There was a flash of green light—
“Harry! HARRY!”
He opened his eyes; he had sunk to the
floor. Hermione was pounding on the door again.
“Harry, open up!”
He had shouted out, he knew it. He got
up and unbolted the door; Hermione toppled inside at once, regained
her balance, and looked around suspiciously. Ron was right behind
her, looking unnerved as he pointed his wand into the corners of the
chilly bathroom.
“What were you doing?” asked
Hermione sternly.
“What d’you think I was doing?”
asked Harry with feeble bravado.
“You were yelling your head off!”
said Ron.
“Oh yeah… I must’ve dozed off
or—”
“Harry, please don’t insult our
intelligence,” said Hermione, taking deep breaths. “We know your
scar hurt downstairs, and you’re white as a sheet.”
Harry sat down on the edge of the bath.
“Fine. I’ve just seen Voldemort
murdering a woman. By now he’s probably killed her whole family.
And he didn’t need to. It was Cedric all over again, they were just
there…”
“Harry, you aren’t supposed to let
this happen anymore!” Hermione cried, her voice echoing through the
bathroom. “Dumbledore wanted you to use Occlumency! He thought the
connection was dangerous—Voldemort can use it, Harry! What good is
it to watch him kill and torture, how can it help?”
“Because it means I know what he’s
doing,” said Harry.
“So you’re not even going to try to
shut him out?”
“Hermione, I can’t. You know I’m
lousy at Occlumency, I never got the hang of it.”
“You never really tried!” she said
hotly. “I don’t get it, Harry—do you like having this special
connection or relationship or what—whatever—”
She faltered under the look he gave her
as he stood up.
“Like it?” he said quietly. “Would
you like it?”
“I—no—I’m sorry, Harry, I
didn’t mean—”
“I hate it, I hate the fact that he
can get inside me, that I have to watch him when he’s most
dangerous. But I’m going to use it.”
“Dumbledore—”
“Forget Dumbledore. This is my
choice, nobody else’s. I want to know why he’s after
Gregorovitch.”
“Who?”
“He’s a foreign wandmaker,” said
Harry. “He made Krum’s wand and Krum reckons he’s brilliant.”
“But according to you,” said Ron,
“Voldemort’s got Ollivander locked up somewhere. If he’s
already got a wandmaker, what does he need another one for?”
“Maybe he agrees with Krum, maybe he
thinks Gregorovitch is better… or else he thinks Gregorovitch will
be able to explain what my wand did when he was chasing me, because
Ollivander didn’t know.”
Harry glanced into the cracked, dusty
mirror and saw Ron and Hermione exchanging skeptical looks behind his
back.
“Harry, you keep talking about what
your wand did,” said Hermione, “but you made it happen! Why are
you so determined not to take responsibility for your own power?”
“Because I know it wasn’t me! And
so does Voldemort, Hermione! We both know what really happened!”
They glared at each other: Harry knew
that he had not convinced Hermione and that she was marshaling
counterarguments, against both his theory on his wand and the fact
that he was permitting himself to see into Voldemort’s mind. To his
relief, Ron intervened.
“Drop it,” he advised her. “It’s
up to him. And if we’re going to the Ministry tomorrow, don’t you
reckon we should go over the plan?”
Reluctantly, as the other two could
tell, Hermione let the matter rest, though Harry was quite sure she
would attack again at the first opportunity. In the meantime, they
returned to the basement kitchen, where Kreacher served them all stew
and treacle tart.
They did not get to bed until late that
night, after spending hours going over and over their plan until they
could recite it, word perfect, to each other. Harry, who was now
sleeping in Sirius’s room, lay in bed with his wandlight trained on
the old photograph of his father, Sirius, Lupin, and Pettigrew, and
muttered the plan to himself for another ten minutes. As he
extinguished his wand, however, he was thinking not of Polyjuice
Potion, Puking Pastilles, or the navy blue robes of Magical
Maintenance; he thought of Gregorovitch the wandmaker, and how long
he could hope to remain hidden while Voldemort sought him so
determinedly.
Dawn seemed to follow midnight with
indecent haste.
“You look terrible,” was Ron’s
greeting as he entered the room to wake Harry.
“Not for long,” said Harry,
yawning.
They found Hermione downstairs in the
kitchen. She was being served coffee and hot rolls by Kreacher and
wearing the slightly manic expression that Harry associated with exam
review.
“Robes,” she said under her breath,
acknowledging their presence with a nervous nod and continuing to
poke around in her beaded bag, “Polyjuice Potion… Invisibility
Cloak… Decoy Detonators… You should each take a couple just in
case… Puking Pastilles, Nosebleed Nougat, Extendable Ears…”
They gulped down their breakfast, then
set off upstairs, Kreacher bowing them out and promising to have a
steak-and-kidney pie ready for them when they returned.
“Bless him,” said Ron fondly, “and
when you think I used to fantasize about cutting off his head and
sticking it on the wall.”
They made their way onto the front step
with immense caution: They could see a couple of puffy-eyed Death
Eaters watching the house from across the misty square.
Hermione Disapparated with Ron first,
then came back for Harry.
After the usual brief spell of darkness
and near suffocation, Harry found himself in the tiny alleyway where
the first phase of their plan was scheduled to take place. It was as
yet deserted, except for a couple of large bins; the first Ministry
workers did not usually appear here until at least eight o’clock.
“Right then,” said Hermione,
checking her watch. “She ought to be here in about five minutes.
When I’ve Stunned her—”
“Hermione, we know,” said Ron
sternly. “And I thought we were supposed to open the door before
she got here?”
Hermione squealed.
“I nearly forgot! Stand back—”
She pointed her wand at the padlocked
and heavily graffitied fire door beside them, which burst open with a
crash. The dark corridor behind it led, as they knew from their
careful scouting trips, into an empty theater. Hermione pulled the
door back toward her, to make it look as though it was still closed.
“And now,” she said, turning back
to face the other two in the alleyway, “we put on the Cloak again—”
“—and we wait,” Ron finished,
throwing it over Hermione’s head like a blanket over a birdcage and
rolling his eyes at Harry.
Little more than a minute later, there
was a tiny pop and a little Ministry witch with flyaway gray hair
Apparated feet from them, blinking a little in the sudden brightness;
the sun had just come out from behind a cloud. She barely had time to
enjoy the unexpected warmth, however, before Hermione’s silent
Stunning Spell hit her in the chest and she toppled over.
“Nicely done, Hermione,” said Ron,
emerging from behind a bin beside the theater door as Harry took off
the Invisibility Cloak. Together they carried the little witch into
the dark passageway that led backstage. Hermione plucked a few hairs
from the witch’s head and added them to a flask of muddy Polyjuice
Potion she had taken from the beaded bag. Ron was rummaging through
the little witch’s handbag.
“She’s Mafalda Hopkirk,” he said,
reading a small card that identified their victim as an assistant in
the Improper Use of Magic Office. “You’d better take this,
Hermione, and here are the tokens.”
He passed her several small golden
coins, all embossed with the letters M.O.M., which he had taken from
the witch’s purse.
Hermione drank the Polyjuice Potion,
which was now a pleasant heliotrope color, and within seconds stood
before them, the double of Mafalda Hopkirk. As she removed Mafalda’s
spectacles and put them on, Harry checked his watch.
“We’re running late, Mr. Magical
Maintenance will be here any second.”
They hurried to close the door on the
real Mafalda; Harry and Ron threw the Invisibility Cloak over
themselves but Hermione remained in view, waiting. Seconds later
there was another pop, and a small, ferrety-looking wizard appeared
before them.
“Oh, hello, Mafalda.”
“Hello!” said Hermione in a quavery
voice. “How are you today?”
“Not so good, actually,” replied
the little wizard, who looked thoroughly downcast.
As Hermione and the wizard headed for
the main road, Harry and Ron crept along behind them.
“I’m sorry to hear you’re under
the weather,” said Hermione, talking firmly over the little wizard
as he tried to expound upon his problems; it was essential to stop
him from reaching the street. “Here, have a sweet.”
“Eh? Oh, no thanks—”
“I insist!” said Hermione
aggressively, shaking the bag of pastilles in his face. Looking
rather alarmed, the little wizard took one.
The effect was instantaneous. The
moment the pastille touched his tongue, the little wizard started
vomiting so hard that he did not even notice as Hermione yanked a
handful of hairs from the top of his head.
“Oh dear!” she said, as he
splattered the alley with sick. “Perhaps you’d better take the
day off!”
“No—no!” He choked and retched,
trying to continue on his way despite being unable to walk straight.
“I must—today—must go—”
“But that’s just silly!” said
Hermione, alarmed. “You can’t go to work in this state—I think
you ought to go to St. Mungo’s and get them to sort you out!”
The wizard had collapsed, heaving, onto
all fours, still trying to crawl toward the main street.
“You simply can’t go to work like
this!” cried Hermione.
At last he seemed to accept the truth
of her words. Using a repulsed Hermione to claw his way back into a
standing position, he turned on the spot and vanished, leaving
nothing behind but the bag Ron had snatched from his hand as he went
and some flying chunks of vomit.
“Urgh,” said Hermione, holding up
the skirts of her robe to avoid the puddles of sick. “It would have
made much less mess to Stun him too.”
“Yeah,” said Ron, emerging from
under the cloak holding the wizard’s bag, “but I still think a
whole pile of unconscious bodies would have drawn more attention.
Keen on his job, though, isn’t he? Chuck us the hair and the
potion, then.”
Within two minutes, Ron stood before
them, as small and ferrety as the sick wizard, and wearing the navy
blue robes that had been folded in his bag.
“Weird he wasn’t wearing them
today, wasn’t it, seeing how much he wanted to go? Anyway, I’m
Reg Cattermole, according to the label in the back.”
“Now wait here,” Hermione told
Harry, who was still under the Invisibility Cloak, “and we’ll be
back with some hairs for you.”
He had to wait ten minutes, but it
seemed much longer to Harry, skulking alone in the sick-splattered
alleyway beside the door concealing the Stunned Mafalda. Finally Ron
and Hermione reappeared.
“We don’t know who he is,”
Hermione said, passing Harry several curly black hairs, “but he’s
gone home with a dreadful nosebleed! Here, he’s pretty tall, you’ll
need bigger robes…”
She pulled out a set of the old robes
Kreacher had laundered for them, and Harry retired to take the potion
and change.
Once the painful transformation was
complete he was more than six feet tall and, from what he could tell
from his well-muscled arms, powerfully built. He also had a beard.
Stowing the Invisibility Cloak and his glasses inside his new robes,
he rejoined the other two.
“Blimey, that’s scary,” said Ron,
looking up at Harry, who now towered over him.
“Take one of Mafalda’s tokens,”
Hermione told Harry, “and let’s go, it’s nearly nine.”
They stepped out of the alleyway
together. Fifty yards along the crowded pavement there were spiked
black railings flanking two flights of steps, one labeled GENTLEMEN,
the other LADIES.
“See you in a moment, then,” said
Hermione nervously, and she tottered off down the steps to LADIES.
Harry and Ron joined a number of oddly dressed men descending into
what appeared to be an ordinary underground public toilet, tiled in
grimy black and white.
“Morning, Reg!” called another
wizard in navy blue robes as he let himself into a cubicle by
inserting his golden token into a slot in the door. “Blooming pain
in the bum, this, eh? Forcing us all to get to work this way! Who are
they expecting to turn up, Harry Potter?”
The wizard roared with laughter at his
own wit. Ron gave a forced chuckle.
“Yeah,” he said, “stupid, isn’t
it?”
And he and Harry let themselves into
adjoining cubicles.
To Harry’s left and right came the
sound of flushing. He crouched down and peered through the gap at the
bottom of the cubicle, just in time to see a pair of booted feet
climbing into the toilet next door. He looked left and saw Ron
blinking at him.
“We have to flush ourselves in?” he
whispered.
“Looks like it,” Harry whispered
back; his voice came out deep and gravelly.
They both stood up. Feeling
exceptionally foolish, Harry clambered into the toilet.
He knew at once that he had done the
right thing; though he appeared to be standing in water, his shoes,
feet, and robes remained quite dry. He reached up, pulled the chain,
and next moment had zoomed down a short chute, emerging out of a
fireplace into the Ministry of Magic.
He got up clumsily; there was a lot
more of his body than he was accustomed to. The great Atrium seemed
darker than Harry remembered it. Previously a golden fountain had
filled the center of the hall, casting shimmering spots of light over
the polished wooden floor and walls. Now a gigantic statue of black
stone dominated the scene. It was rather frightening, this vast
sculpture of a witch and a wizard sitting on ornately carved thrones,
looking down at the Ministry workers toppling out of fireplaces below
them. Engraved in foot-high letters at the base of the statue were
the words MAGIC IS MIGHT.
Harry received a heavy blow on the back
of the legs: Another wizard had just flown out of the fireplace
behind him.
“Out of the way, can’t y—oh,
sorry, Runcorn!”
Clearly frightened, the balding wizard
hurried away. Apparently the man whom Harry was impersonating,
Runcorn, was intimidating.
“Psst!” said a voice, and he looked
around to see a wispy little witch and the ferrety wizard from
Magical Maintenance gesturing to him from over beside the statue.
Harry hastened to join them.
“You got in all right, then?”
Hermione whispered to Harry.
“No, he’s still stuck in the bog,”
said Ron.
“Oh, very funny… It’s horrible,
isn’t it?” she said to Harry, who was staring up at the statue.
“Have you seen what they’re sitting on?
Harry looked more closely and realized
that what he had thought were decoratively carved thrones were
actually mounds of carved humans: hundreds and hundreds of naked
bodies, men, women, and children, all with rather stupid, ugly faces,
twisted and pressed together to support the weight of the handsomely
robed wizards.
“Muggles,” whispered Hermione. “In
their rightful place. Come on, let’s get going.”
They joined the stream of witches and
wizards moving toward the golden gates at the end of the hall,
looking around as surreptitiously as possible, but there was no sign
of the distinctive figure of Dolores Umbridge. They passed through
the gates and into a smaller hall, where queues were forming in front
of twenty golden grilles housing as many lifts. They had barely
joined the nearest one when a voice said, “Cattermole!”
They looked around: Harry’s stomach
turned over. One of the Death Eaters who had witnessed Dumbledore’s
death was striding toward them. The Ministry workers beside them fell
silent, their eyes downcast; Harry could feel fear rippling through
them. The man’s scowling, slightly brutish face was somehow at odds
with his magnificent, sweeping robes, which were embroidered with
much gold thread. Someone in the crowd around the lifts called
sycophantically, “Morning, Yaxley!” Yaxley ignored them.
“I requested somebody from Magical
Maintenance to sort out my office, Cattermole. It’s still raining
in there.”
Ron looked around as though hoping
somebody else would intervene, but nobody spoke.
“Raining… in your office?
That’s—that’s not good, is it?”
Ron gave a nervous laugh. Yaxley’s
eyes widened.
“You think it’s funny, Cattermole,
do you?”
A pair of witches broke away from the
queue for the lift and bustled off.
“No,” said Ron, “no, of course—”
“You realize that I am on my way
downstairs to interrogate your wife, Cattermole? In fact, I’m quite
surprised you’re not down there holding her hand while she waits.
Already given her up as a bad job, have you? Probably wise. Be sure
and marry a pureblood next time.”
Hermione had let out a little squeak of
horror. Yaxley looked at her. She coughed feebly and turned away.
“I—I—” stammered Ron.
“But if my wife were accused of being
a Mudblood,” said Yaxley, “—not that any woman I married would
ever be mistaken for such filth—and the Head of the Department of
Magical Law Enforcement needed a job doing, I would make it my
priority to do that job, Cattermole. Do you understand me?”
“Yes,” whispered Ron.
“Then attend to it, Cattermole, and
if my office is not completely dry within an hour, your wife’s
Blood Status will be in even graver doubt than it is now.”
The golden grille before them clattered
open. With a nod and unpleasant smile to Harry, who was evidently
expected to appreciate this treatment of Cattermole, Yaxley swept
away toward another lift. Harry, Ron, and Hermione entered theirs,
but nobody followed them: It was as if they were infectious. The
grilles shut with a clang and the lift began to move upward.
“What am I going to do?” Ron asked
the other two at once; he looked stricken. “If I don’t turn up,
my wife—I mean, Cattermole’s wife—”
“We’ll come with you, we should
stick together—” began Harry, but Ron shook his head feverishly.
“That’s mental, we haven’t got
much time. You two find Umbridge, I’ll go and sort out Yaxley’s
office—but how do I stop it raining?”
“Try Finite Incantatem,” said
Hermione at once, “that should stop the rain if it’s a hex or
curse; if it doesn’t, something’s gone wrong with an Atmospheric
Charm, which will be more difficult to fix, so as an interim measure
try Impervius to protect his belongings—”
“Say it again, slowly—” said Ron,
searching his pockets desperately for a quill, but at that moment the
lift juddered to a halt. A disembodied female voice said, “Level
four, Department for the Regulation and Control of Magical Creatures,
incorporating Beast, Being, and Spirit Divisions, Goblin Liaison
Office, and Pest Advisory Bureau,” and the grilles slid open again,
admitting a couple of wizards and several pale violet paper airplanes
that fluttered around the lamp in the ceiling of the lift.
“Morning, Albert,” said a bushily
whiskered man, smiling at Harry. He glanced over at Ron and Hermione
as the lift creaked upward once more; Hermione was now whispering
frantic instructions to Ron. The wizard leaned toward Harry, leering,
and muttered, “Dirk Cresswell, eh? From Goblin Liaison? Nice one,
Albert. I’m pretty confident I’ll get his job now!”
He winked. Harry smiled back, hoping
that this would suffice. The lift stopped; the grilles opened once
more.
“Level two, Department of Magical Law
Enforcement, including the Improper Use of Magic Office, Auror
Headquarters, and Wizengamot Administration Services,” said the
disembodied witch’s voice.
Harry saw Hermione give Ron a little
push and he hurried out of the lift, followed by the other wizards,
leaving Harry and Hermione alone. The moment the golden door had
closed Hermione said, very fast, “Actually, Harry, I think I’d
better go after him, I don’t think he knows what he’s doing and
if he gets caught the whole thing—”
“Level one, Minister of Magic and
Support Staff.”
The golden grilles slid apart again and
Hermione gasped. Four people stood before them, two of them deep in
conversation: a longhaired wizard wearing magnificent robes of black
and gold, and a squat, toadlike witch wearing a velvet bow in her
short hair and clutching a clipboard to her chest.
Chapter 13
The Muggle-Born Registration Commission
“Ah, Mafalda!” said Umbridge,
looking at Hermione. “Travers sent you, did he?”
“Y-yes,” squeaked Hermione.
“Good, you’ll do perfectly well.”
Umbridge spoke to the wizard in black and gold. “That’s that
problem solved, Minister, if Mafalda can be spared for record-keeping
we shall be able to start straightaway.” She consulted her
clipboard. “Ten people today and one of them the wife of a Ministry
employee! Tut, tut… even here, in the heart of the Ministry!” She
stepped into the lift beside Hermione, as did the two wizards who had
been listening to Umbridge’s conversation with the Minister. “We’ll
go straight down, Mafalda, you’ll find everything you need in the
courtroom. Good morning, Albert, aren’t you getting out?”
“Yes, of course,” said Harry in
Runcorn’s deep voice.
Harry stepped out of the lift. The
golden grilles clanged shut behind him. Glancing over his shoulder,
Harry saw Hermione’s anxious face sinking back out of sight, a tall
wizard on either side of her, Umbridge’s velvet hair-bow level with
her shoulder.
“What brings you up here, Runcorn?”
asked the new Minister of Magic. His long black hair and beard were
streaked with silver, and a great overhanging forehead shadowed his
glinting eyes, putting Harry in mind of a crab looking out from
beneath a rock.
“Needed a quick word with,” Harry
hesitated for a fraction of a second, “Arthur Weasley. Someone said
he was up on level one.”
“Ah,” said Pius Thicknesse. “Has
he been caught having contact with an Undesirable?”
“No,” said Harry, his throat dry.
“No, nothing like that.”
“Ah, well. It’s only a matter of
time,” said Thicknesse. “If you ask me, the blood traitors are as
bad as the Mudbloods. Good day, Runcorn.”
“Good day, Minister.”
Harry watched Thicknesse march away
along the thickly carpeted corridor. The moment the Minister had
passed out of sight, Harry tugged the Invisibility Cloak out from
under his heavy black cloak, threw it over himself, and set off along
the corridor in the opposite direction. Runcorn was so tall that
Harry was forced to stoop to make sure his big feet were hidden.
Panic pulsed in the pit of his stomach.
As he passed gleaming wooden door after gleaming wooden door, each
bearing a small plaque with the owner’s name and occupation upon
it, the might of the Ministry, its complexity, its impenetrability,
seemed to force itself upon him so that the plan he had been
carefully concocting with Ron and Hermione over the past four weeks
seemed laughably childish. They had concentrated all their efforts on
getting inside without being detected: They had not given a moment’s
thought to what they would do if they were forced to separate. Now
Hermione was stuck in court proceedings, which would undoubtedly last
hours; Ron was struggling to do magic that Harry was sure was beyond
him, a woman’s liberty possibly depending on the outcome; and he,
Harry, was wandering around on the top floor when he knew perfectly
well that his quarry had just gone down in the lift.
He stopped walking, leaned against a
wall, and tried to decide what to do. The silence pressed upon him:
There was no bustling or talk or swift footsteps here; the
purple-carpeted corridors were as hushed as though the Muffliato
charm had been cast over the place.
Her office must be up here, Harry
thought.
It seemed most unlikely that Umbridge
would keep her jewelry in her office, but on the other hand it seemed
foolish not to search it to make sure. He therefore set off along the
corridor again, passing nobody but a frowning wizard who was
murmuring instructions to a quill that floated in front of him,
scribbling on a trail of parchment.
Now paying attention to the names on
the doors, Harry turned a corner. Halfway along the next corridor he
emerged into a wide, open space where a dozen witches and wizards sat
in rows at small desks not unlike school desks, though much more
highly polished and free from graffiti. Harry paused to watch them,
for the effect was quite mesmerizing. They were all waving and
twiddling their wands in unison, and squares of colored paper were
flying in every direction like little pink kites. After a few
seconds, Harry realized that there was a rhythm to the proceedings,
that the papers all formed the same pattern; and after a few more
seconds he realized that what he was watching was the creation of
pamphlets—that the paper squares were pages, which, when assembled,
folded, and magicked into place, fell into neat stacks beside each
witch or wizard.
Harry crept closer, although the
workers were so intent on what they were doing that he doubted they
would notice a carpet-muffled footstep, and he slid a completed
pamphlet from the pile beside a young witch. He examined it beneath
the Invisibility Cloak. Its pink cover was emblazoned with a golden
title:
MUDBLOODS
and the Dangers They Pose to
a Peaceful Pure-Blood Society
Beneath the title was a picture of a
red rose with a simpering face in the middle of its petals, being
strangled by a green weed with fangs and a scowl. There was no
author’s name upon the pamphlet, but again, the scars on the back
of his right hand seemed to tingle as he examined it. Then the young
witch beside him confirmed his suspicion as she said, still waving
and twirling her wand, “Will the old hag be interrogating Mudbloods
all day, does anyone know?”
“Careful,” said the wizard beside
her, glancing around nervously; one of his pages slipped and fell to
the floor.
“What, has she got magic ears as well
as an eye, now?”
The witch glanced toward the shining
mahogany door facing the space full of pamphlet-makers; Harry looked
too, and rage reared in him like a snake. Where there might have been
a peephole on a Muggle front door, a large, round eye with a bright
blue iris had been set into the wood—an eye that was shockingly
familiar to anybody who had known Alastor Moody.
For a split second Harry forgot where
he was and what he was doing there: He even forgot that he was
invisible. He strode straight over to the door to examine the eye. It
was not moving: It gazed blindly upward, frozen. The plaque beneath
it read:
DOLORES UMBRIDGE
SENIOR UNDERSECRETARY TO THE MINISTER
Below that, a slightly shinier new
plaque read:
HEAD OF THE MUGGLE-BORN
REGISTRATION COMMISSION
Harry looked back at the dozen
pamphlet-makers: Though they were intent upon their work, he could
hardly suppose that they would not notice if the door of an empty
office opened in front of them. He therefore withdrew from an inner
pocket an odd object with little waving legs and a rubber-bulbed horn
for a body. Crouching down beneath the Cloak, he placed the Decoy
Detonator on the ground.
It scuttled away at once through the
legs of the witches and wizards in front of him. A few moments later,
during which Harry waited with his hand upon the doorknob, there came
a loud bang and a great deal of acrid black smoke billowed from a
corner. The young witch in the front row shrieked: Pink pages flew
everywhere as she and her fellows jumped up, looking around for the
source of the commotion. Harry turned the doorknob, stepped into
Umbridge’s office, and closed the door behind him.
He felt he had stepped back in time.
The room was exactly like Umbridge’s office at Hogwarts: Lace
draperies, doilies, and dried flowers covered every available
surface. The walls bore the same ornamental plates, each featuring a
highly colored, beribboned kitten, gamboling and frisking with
sickening cuteness. The desk was covered with a flouncy, flowered
cloth. Behind Mad-Eye’s eye, a telescopic attachment enabled
Umbridge to spy on the workers on the other side of the door. Harry
took a look through it and saw that they were all still gathered
around the Decoy Detonator. He wrenched the telescope out of the
door, leaving a hole behind, pulled the magical eyeball out of it,
and placed it in his pocket. Then he turned to face the room again,
raised his wand, and murmured, “Accio Locket.”
Nothing happened, but he had not
expected it to; no doubt Umbridge knew all about protective charms
and spells. He therefore hurried behind her desk and began pulling
open the drawers. He saw quills and notebooks and Spellotape;
enchanted paper clips that coiled snakelike from their drawer and had
to be beaten back; a fussy little lace box full of spare hair bows
and clips; but no sign of a locket.
There was a filing cabinet behind the
desk: Harry set to searching it. Like Filch’s filing cabinets at
Hogwarts, it was full of folders, each labeled with a name. It was
not until Harry reached the bottommost drawer that he saw something
to distract him from his search: Mr. Weasley’s file.
He pulled it out and opened it.
ARTHUR WEASLEY
BLOOD STATUS: Pureblood, but with
unacceptable pro-Muggle leanings. Known member of the Order of the
Phoenix.
FAMILY: Wife (pureblood), seven
children, two youngest at Hogwarts. NB: Youngest son currently at
home, seriously ill, Ministry inspectors have confirmed.
SECURITY STATUS: TRACKED. All movements
are being monitored. Strong likelihood Undesirable No. 1 will contact
(has stayed with Weasley family previously)
“Undesirable Number One,” Harry
muttered under his breath as he replaced Mr. Weasley’s folder and
shut the drawer. He had an idea he knew who that was, and sure
enough, as he straightened up and glanced around the office for fresh
hiding places, he saw a poster of himself on the wall, with the words
undesirable no. 1 emblazoned across his chest. A little pink note was
stuck to it with a picture of a kitten in the corner. Harry moved
across to read it and saw that Umbridge had written, “To be
punished.”
Angrier than ever, he proceeded to
grope in the bottoms of the vases and baskets of dried flowers, but
was not at all surprised that the locket was not there. He gave the
office one last sweeping look, and his heart skipped a beat.
Dumbledore was staring at him from a small rectangular mirror,
propped up on a bookcase beside the desk.
Harry crossed the room at a run and
snatched it up, but realized the moment he touched it that it was not
a mirror at all. Dumbledore was smiling wistfully out of the front
cover of a glossy book. Harry had not immediately noticed the curly
green writing across his hat—The Life and Lies of Albus
Dumbledore—nor the slightly smaller writing across his chest: “by
Rita Skeeter, bestselling author of Armando Dippet: Master or Moron?”
Harry opened the book at random and saw
a full-page photograph of two teenage boys, both laughing
immoderately with their arms around each other’s shoulders.
Dumbledore, now with elbow-length hair, had grown a tiny wispy beard
that recalled the one on Krum’s chin that had so annoyed Ron. The
boy who roared in silent amusement beside Dumbledore had a gleeful,
wild look about him. His golden hair fell in curls to his shoulders.
Harry wondered whether it was a young Doge, but before he could check
the caption, the door of the office opened.
If Thicknesse had not been looking over
his shoulder as he entered, Harry would not have had time to pull the
Invisibility Cloak over himself. As it was, he thought Thicknesse
might have caught a glimpse of movement, because for a moment or two
he remained quite still, staring curiously at the place where Harry
had just vanished. Perhaps deciding that all he had seen was
Dumbledore scratching his nose on the front of the book, for Harry
had hastily replaced it upon the shelf, Thicknesse finally walked to
the desk and pointed his wand at the quill standing ready in the ink
pot. It sprang out and began scribbling a note to Umbridge. Very
slowly, hardly daring to breathe, Harry backed out of the office into
the open area beyond.
The pamphlet-makers were still
clustered around the remains of the Decoy Detonator, which continued
to hoot feebly as it smoked. Harry hurried off up the corridor as the
young witch said, “I bet it sneaked up here from Experimental
Charms, they’re so careless, remember that poisonous duck?”
Speeding back toward the lifts, Harry
reviewed his options. It had never been likely that the locket was
here at the Ministry, and there was no hope of bewitching its
whereabouts out of Umbridge while she was sitting in a crowded court.
Their priority now had to be to leave the Ministry before they were
exposed, and try again another day. The first thing to do was to find
Ron, and then they could work out a way of extracting Hermione from
the courtroom.
The lift was empty when it arrived.
Harry jumped in and pulled off the Invisibility Cloak as it started
its descent. To his enormous relief, when it rattled to a halt at
level two, a soaking-wet and wild-eyed Ron got in.
“M-morning,” he stammered to Harry
as the lift set off again.
“Ron, it’s me, Harry!”
“Harry! Blimey, I forgot what you
looked like—why isn’t Hermione with you?”
“She had to go down to the courtrooms
with Umbridge, she couldn’t refuse, and—”
But before Harry could finish the lift
had stopped again: The doors opened and Mr. Weasley walked inside,
talking to an elderly witch whose blonde hair was teased so high it
resembled an anthill.
“…I quite understand what you’re
saying, Wakanda, but I’m afraid I cannot be party to—”
Mr. Weasley broke off; he had noticed
Harry. It was very strange to have Mr. Weasley glare at him with that
much dislike. The lift doors closed and the four of them trundled
downward once more.
“Oh, hello, Reg,” said Mr. Weasley,
looking around at the sound of steady dripping from Ron’s robes.
“Isn’t your wife in for questioning today? Er—what’s happened
to you? Why are you so wet?”
“Yaxley’s office is raining,”
said Ron. He addressed Mr. Weasley’s shoulder, and Harry felt sure
he was scared that his father might recognize him if they looked
directly into each other’s eyes. “I couldn’t stop it, so
they’ve sent me to get Bernie—Pillsworth, I think they said—”
“Yes, a lot of offices have been
raining lately,” said Mr. Weasley. “Did you try Meteolojinx
Recanto? It worked for Bletchley.”
“Meteolojinx Recanto?” whispered
Ron. “No, I didn’t. Thanks, D—I mean, thanks, Arthur.”
The lift doors opened; the old witch
with the anthill hair left, and Ron darted past her out of sight.
Harry made to follow him, but found his path blocked as Percy Weasley
strode into the lift, his nose buried in some papers he was reading.
Not until the doors had clanged shut
again did Percy realize he was in a lift with his father. He glanced
up, saw Mr. Weasley, turned radish red, and left the lift the moment
the doors opened again. For the second time, Harry tried to get out,
but this time found his way blocked by Mr. Weasley’s arm.
“One moment, Runcorn.”
The lift doors closed and as they
clanked down another floor, Mr. Weasley said, “I hear you laid
information about Dirk Cresswell.”
Harry had the impression that Mr.
Weasley’s anger was no less because of the brush with Percy. He
decided his best chance was to act stupid.
“Sorry?” he said.
“Don’t pretend, Runcorn,” said
Mr. Weasley fiercely. “You tracked down the wizard who faked his
family tree, didn’t you?”
“I—so what if I did?” said Harry.
“So Dirk Cresswell is ten times the
wizard you are,” said Mr. Weasley quietly, as the lift sank ever
lower. “And if he survives Azkaban, you’ll have to answer to him,
not to mention his wife, his sons, and his friends—”
“Arthur,” Harry interrupted, “you
know you’re being tracked, don’t you?”
“Is that a threat, Runcorn?” said
Mr. Weasley loudly.
“No,” said Harry, “it’s a fact!
They’re watching your every move—”
The lift doors opened. They had reached
the Atrium. Mr. Weasley gave Harry a scathing look and swept from the
lift. Harry stood there, shaken. He wished he was impersonating
somebody other than Runcorn… The lift doors clanged shut.
Harry pulled out the Invisibility Cloak
and put it back on. He would try to extricate Hermione on his own
while Ron was dealing with the raining office. When the doors opened,
he stepped out into a torch-lit stone passageway quite different from
the wood-paneled and carpeted corridors above. As the lift rattled
away again, Harry shivered slightly, looking toward the distant black
door that marked the entrance to the Department of Mysteries.
He set off, his destination not the
black door, but the doorway he remembered on the left-hand side,
which opened onto the flight of stairs down to the court chambers.
His mind grappled with possibilities as he crept down them: He still
had a couple of Decoy Detonators, but perhaps it would be better to
simply knock on the courtroom door, enter as Runcorn, and ask for a
quick word with Mafalda? Of course, he did not know whether Runcorn
was sufficiently important to get away with this, and even if he
managed it, Hermione’s non-reappearance might trigger a search
before they were clear of the Ministry…
Lost in thought, he did not immediately
register the unnatural chill that was creeping over him, as if he
were descending into fog. It was becoming colder and colder with
every step he took: a cold that reached right down into his throat
and tore at his lungs. And then he felt that stealing sense of
despair, of hopelessness, filling him, expanding inside him…
Dementors, he thought.
And as he reached the foot of the
stairs and turned to his right he saw a dreadful scene. The dark
passage outside the courtrooms was packed with tall, black-hooded
figures, their faces completely hidden, their ragged breathing the
only sound in the place. The petrified Muggle-borns brought in for
questioning sat huddled and shivering on hard wooden benches. Most of
them were hiding their faces in their hands, perhaps in an
instinctive attempt to shield themselves from the dementors’ greedy
mouths. Some were accompanied by families, others sat alone. The
dementors were gliding up and down in front of them, and the cold,
and the hopelessness, and the despair of the place laid themselves
upon Harry like a curse…
Fight it, he told himself, but he knew
that he could not conjure a Patronus here without revealing himself
instantly. So he moved forward as silently as he could, and with
every step he took numbness seemed to steal over his brain, but he
forced himself to think of Hermione and of Ron, who needed him.
Moving through the towering black
figures was terrifying: The eyeless faces hidden beneath their hoods
turned as he passed, and he felt sure that they sensed him, sensed,
perhaps, a human presence that still had some hope, some resilience…
And then, abruptly and shockingly amid
the frozen silence, one of the dungeon doors on the left of the
corridor was flung open and screams echoed out of it.
“No, no, I’m half-blood, I’m
half-blood, I tell you! My father was a wizard, he was, look him up,
Arkie Alderton, he’s a well-known broomstick designer, look him up,
I tell you—get your hands off me, get your hands off—”
“This is your final warning,” said
Umbridge’s soft voice, magically magnified so that it sounded
clearly over the man’s desperate screams. “If you struggle, you
will be subjected to the Dementor’s Kiss.”
The man’s screams subsided, but dry
sobs echoed through the corridor.
“Take him away,” said Umbridge.
Two dementors appeared in the doorway
of the courtroom, their rotting, scabbed hands clutching the upper
arms of a wizard who appeared to be fainting. They glided away down
the corridor with him, and the darkness they trailed behind them
swallowed him from sight.
“Next—Mary Cattermole,” called
Umbridge.
A small woman stood up; she was
trembling from head to foot. Her dark hair was smoothed back into a
bun and she wore long, plain robes. Her face was completely
bloodless. As she passed the dementors, Harry saw her shudder.
He did it instinctively, without any
sort of plan, because he hated the sight of her walking alone into
the dungeon: As the door began to swing closed, he slipped into the
courtroom behind her.
It was not the same room in which he
had once been interrogated for improper use of magic. This one was
much smaller, though the ceiling was quite as high; it gave the
claustrophobic sense of being stuck at the bottom of a deep well.
There were more dementors in here,
casting their freezing aura over the place; they stood like faceless
sentinels in the corners farthest from the high, raised platform.
Here, behind a balustrade, sat Umbridge, with Yaxley on one side of
her, and Hermione, quite as white-faced as Mrs. Cattermole, on the
other. At the foot of the platform, a bright-silver, long-haired cat
prowled up and down, up and down, and Harry realized that it was
there to protect the prosecutors from the despair that emanated from
the dementors: That was for the accused to feel, not the accusers.
“Sit down,” said Umbridge in her
soft, silky voice.
Mrs. Cattermole stumbled to the single
seat in the middle of the floor beneath the raised platform. The
moment she had sat down, chains clinked out of the arms of the chair
and bound her there.
“You are Mary Elizabeth Cattermole?”
asked Umbridge.
Mrs. Cattermole gave a single, shaky
nod.
“Married to Reginald Cattermole of
the Magical Maintenance Department?”
Mrs. Cattermole burst into tears.
“I don’t know where he is, he was
supposed to meet me here!”
Umbridge ignored her.
“Mother to Maisie, Ellie, and Alfred
Cattermole?”
Mrs. Cattermole sobbed harder than
ever.
“They’re frightened, they think I
might not come home—”
“Spare us,” spat Yaxley. “The
brats of Mudbloods do not stir our sympathies.”
Mrs. Cattermole’s sobs masked Harry’s
footsteps as he made his way carefully toward the steps that led up
to the raised platform. The moment he had passed the place where the
Patronus cat patrolled, he felt the change in temperature: It was
warm and comfortable here. The Patronus, he was sure, was Umbridge’s,
and it glowed brightly because she was so happy here, in her element,
upholding the twisted laws she had helped to write. Slowly and very
carefully he edged his way along the platform behind Umbridge,
Yaxley, and Hermione, taking a seat behind the latter. He was worried
about making Hermione jump. He thought of casting the Muffliato charm
upon Umbridge and Yaxley, but even murmuring the word might cause
Hermione alarm. Then Umbridge raised her voice to address Mrs.
Cattermole, and Harry seized his chance.
“I’m behind you,” he whispered
into Hermione’s ear.
As he had expected, she jumped so
violently she nearly overturned the bottle of ink with which she was
supposed to be recording the interview, but both Umbridge and Yaxley
were concentrating upon Mrs. Cattermole, and this went unnoticed.
“A wand was taken from you upon your
arrival at the Ministry today, Mrs. Cattermole,” Umbridge was
saying. “Eight-and-three-quarter inches, cherry, unicorn-hair core.
Do you recognize that description?”
Mrs. Cattermole nodded, mopping her
eyes on her sleeve.
“Could you please tell us from which
witch or wizard you took that wand?”
“T-took?” sobbed Mrs. Cattermole.
“I didn’t t-take it from anybody. I b-bought it when I was eleven
years old. It—it—it—chose me.”
She cried harder than ever.
Umbridge laughed a soft girlish laugh
that made Harry want to attack her. She leaned forward over the
barrier, the better to observe her victim, and something gold swung
forward too, and dangled over the void: the locket.
Hermione had seen it; she let out a
little squeak, but Umbridge and Yaxley, still intent upon their prey,
were deaf to everything else.
“No,” said Umbridge, “no, I don’t
think so, Mrs. Cattermole. Wands only choose witches or wizards. You
are not a witch. I have your responses to the questionnaire that was
sent to you here—Mafalda, pass them to me.”
Umbridge held out a small hand: She
looked so toadlike at that moment that Harry was quite surprised not
to see webs between the stubby fingers. Hermione’s hands were
shaking with shock. She fumbled in a pile of documents balanced on
the chair beside her, finally withdrawing a sheaf of parchment with
Mrs. Cattermole’s name on it.
“That’s—that’s pretty,
Dolores,” she said, pointing at the pendant gleaming in the ruffled
folds of Umbridge’s blouse.
“What?” snapped Umbridge, glancing
down. “Oh yes—an old family heirloom,” she said, patting the
locket lying on her large bosom. “The S stands for Selwyn… I am
related to the Selwyns… Indeed, there are few pure-blood families
to whom I am not related… A pity,” she continued in a louder
voice, flicking through Mrs. Cattermole’s questionnaire, “that
the same cannot be said for you. ‘Parents’ professions:
greengrocers.’”
Yaxley laughed jeeringly. Below, the
fluffy silver cat patrolled up and down, and the dementors stood
waiting in the corners.
It was Umbridge’s lie that brought
the blood surging into Harry’s brain and obliterated his sense of
caution—that the locket she had taken as a bribe from a petty
criminal was being used to bolster her own pure-blood credentials. He
raised his wand, not even troubling to keep it concealed beneath the
Invisibility Cloak, and said, “Stupefy!”
There was a flash of red light;
Umbridge crumpled and her forehead hit the edge of the balustrade:
Mrs. Cattermole’s papers slid off her lap onto the floor and, down
below, the prowling silver cat vanished. Ice-cold air hit them like
an oncoming wind: Yaxley, confused, looked around for the source of
the trouble and saw Harry’s disembodied hand and wand pointing at
him. He tried to draw his own wand, but too late: “Stupefy!”
Yaxley slid to the ground to lie curled
on the floor.
“Harry!”
“Hermione, if you think I was going
to sit here and let her pretend—”
“Harry, Mrs. Cattermole!”
Harry whirled around, throwing off the
Invisibility Cloak; down below, the dementors had moved out of their
corners; they were gliding toward the woman chained to the chair:
Whether because the Patronus had vanished or because they sensed that
their masters were no longer in control, they seemed to have
abandoned restraint. Mrs. Cattermole let out a terrible scream of
fear as a slimy, scabbed hand grasped her chin and forced her face
back.
“EXPECTO PATRONUM!”
The silver stag soared from the tip of
Harry’s wand and leaped toward the dementors, which fell back and
melted into the dark shadows again. The stag’s light, more powerful
and more warming than the cat’s protection, filled the whole
dungeon as it cantered around and around the room.
“Get the Horcrux,” Harry told
Hermione.
He ran back down the steps, stuffing
the Invisibility Cloak back into his bag, and approached Mrs.
Cattermole.
“You?” she whispered, gazing into
his face. “But—but Reg said you were the one who submitted my
name for questioning!”
“Did I?” muttered Harry, tugging at
the chains binding her arms. “Well, I’ve had a change of heart.
Diffindo!” Nothing happened. “Hermione, how do I get rid of these
chains?”
“Wait, I’m trying something up
here—”
“Hermione, we’re surrounded by
dementors!”
“I know that, Harry, but if she wakes
up and the locket’s gone—I need to duplicate it—Geminio! There…
That should fool her…”
Hermione came running downstairs.
“Let’s see… Relashio!”
The chains clinked and withdrew into
the arms of the chair. Mrs. Cattermole looked just as frightened as
ever before.
“I don’t understand,” she
whispered.
“You’re going to leave here with
us,” said Harry, pulling her to her feet. “Go home, grab your
children, and get out, get out of the country if you’ve got to.
Disguise yourselves and run. You’ve seen how it is, you won’t get
anything like a fair hearing here.”
“Harry,” said Hermione, “how are
we going to get out of here with all those dementors outside the
door?”
“Patronuses,” said Harry, pointing
his wand at his own: The stag slowed and walked, still gleaming
brightly, toward the door. “As many as we can muster; do yours,
Hermione.”
“Expec—Expecto patronum,” said
Hermione. Nothing happened.
“It’s the only spell she ever has
trouble with,” Harry told a completely bemused Mrs. Cattermole.
“Bit unfortunate, really… Come on, Hermione…”
“Expecto patronum!”
A silver otter burst from the end of
Hermione’s wand and swam gracefully through the air to join the
stag.
“C’mon,” said Harry, and he led
Hermione and Mrs. Cattermole to the door.
When the Patronuses glided out of the
dungeon there were cries of shock from the people waiting outside.
Harry looked around; the dementors were falling back on both sides of
them, melding into the darkness, scattering before the silver
creatures.
“It’s been decided that you should
all go home and go into hiding with your families,” Harry told the
waiting Muggle-borns, who were dazzled by the light of the Patronuses
and still cowering slightly. “Go abroad if you can. Just get well
away from the Ministry. That’s the—er—new official position.
Now, if you’ll just follow the Patronuses, you’ll be able to
leave from the Atrium.”
They managed to get up the stone steps
without being intercepted, but as they approached the lifts Harry
started to have misgivings. If they emerged into the Atrium with a
silver stag, an otter soaring alongside it, and twenty or so people,
half of them accused Muggle-borns, he could not help feeling that
they would attract unwanted attention. He had just reached this
unwelcome conclusion when the lift clanged to a halt in front of
them.
“Reg!” screamed Mrs. Cattermole,
and she threw herself into Ron’s arms. “Runcorn let me out, he
attacked Umbridge and Yaxley, and he’s told all of us to leave the
country, I think we’d better do it, Reg, I really do, let’s hurry
home and fetch the children and—why are you so wet?”
“Water,” muttered Ron, disengaging
himself. “Harry, they know there are intruders inside the Ministry,
something about a hole in Umbridge’s office door, I reckon we’ve
got five minutes if that—”
Hermione’s Patronus vanished with a
pop as she turned a horror-struck face to Harry.
“Harry, if we’re trapped here—!”
“We won’t be if we move fast,”
said Harry. He addressed the silent group behind them, who were all
gawping at him.
“Who’s got wands?”
About half of them raised their hands.
“Okay, all of you who haven’t got
wands need to attach yourself to somebody who has. We’ll need to be
fast before they stop us. Come on.”
They managed to cram themselves into
two lifts. Harry’s Patronus stood sentinel before the golden
grilles as they shut and the lifts began to rise.
“Level eight,” said the witch’s
cool voice, “Atrium.”
Harry knew at once that they were in
trouble. The Atrium was full of people moving from fireplace to
fireplace, sealing them off.
“Harry!” squeaked Hermione. “What
are we going to—?”
“STOP!” Harry thundered, and the
powerful voice of Runcorn echoed through the Atrium: The wizards
sealing the fireplaces froze. “Follow me,” he whispered to the
group of terrified Muggle-borns, who moved forward in a huddle,
shepherded by Ron and Hermione.
“What’s up, Albert?” said the
same balding wizard who had followed Harry out of the fireplace
earlier. He looked nervous.
“This lot need to leave before you
seal the exits,” said Harry with all the authority he could muster.
The group of wizards in front of him
looked at one another.
“We’ve been told to seal all exits
and not let anyone—”
“Are you contradicting me?” Harry
blustered. “Would you like me to have your family tree examined,
like I had Dirk Cresswell’s?”
“Sorry!” gasped the balding wizard,
backing away. “I didn’t mean nothing, Albert, but I thought… I
thought they were in for questioning and…”
“Their blood is pure,” said Harry,
and his deep voice echoed impressively through the hall. “Purer
than many of yours, I daresay. Off you go,” he boomed to the
Muggle-borns, who scurried forward into the fireplaces and began to
vanish in pairs. The Ministry wizards hung back, some looking
confused, others scared and resentful. Then:
“Mary!”
Mrs. Cattermole looked over her
shoulder. The real Reg Cattermole, no longer vomiting but pale and
wan, had just come running out of a lift.
“R-Reg?”
She looked from her husband to Ron, who
swore loudly.
The balding wizard gaped, his head
turning ludicrously from one Reg Cattermole to the other.
“Hey—what’s going on? What is
this?”
“Seal the exit! SEAL IT!”
Yaxley had burst out of another lift
and was running toward the group beside the fireplaces, into which
all of the Muggle-borns but Mrs. Cattermole had now vanished. As the
balding wizard lifted his wand, Harry raised an enormous fist and
punched him, sending him flying through the air.
“He’s been helping Muggle-borns
escape, Yaxley!” Harry shouted.
The balding wizard’s colleagues set
up an uproar, under cover of which Ron grabbed Mrs. Cattermole,
pulled her into the still-open fireplace, and disappeared. Confused,
Yaxley looked from Harry to the punched wizard, while the real Reg
Cattermole screamed, “My wife! Who was that with my wife? What’s
going on?”
Harry saw Yaxley’s head turn, saw an
inkling of the truth dawn in that brutish face.
“Come on!” Harry shouted at
Hermione; he seized her hand and they jumped into the fireplace
together as Yaxley’s curse sailed over Harry’s head. They spun
for a few seconds before shooting up out of a toilet into a cubicle.
Harry flung open the door; Ron was standing there beside the sinks,
still wrestling with Mrs. Cattermole.
“Reg, I don’t understand—”
“Let go, I’m not your husband,
you’ve got to go home!”
There was a noise in the cubicle behind
them; Harry looked around; Yaxley had just appeared.
“LET’S GO!” Harry yelled. He
seized Hermione by the hand and Ron by the arm and turned on the
spot.
Darkness engulfed them, along with the
sensation of compressing bands, but something was wrong… Hermione’s
hand seemed to be sliding out of his grip…
He wondered whether he was going to
suffocate; he could not breathe or see and the only solid things in
the world were Ron’s arm and Hermione’s fingers, which were
slowly slipping away…
And then he saw the door of number
twelve, Grimmauld Place, with its serpent door knocker, but before he
could draw breath, there was a scream and a flash of purple light;
Hermione’s hand was suddenly vicelike upon his and everything went
dark again.
Chapter 14
The Thief
Harry opened his eyes and was dazzled
by gold and green; he had no idea what had happened, he only knew
that he was lying on what seemed to be leaves and twigs. Struggling
to draw breath into lungs that felt flattened, he blinked and
realized that the gaudy glare was sunlight streaming through a canopy
of leaves far above him. Then an object twitched close to his face.
He pushed himself onto his hands and knees, ready to face some small,
fierce creature, but saw that the object was Ron’s foot. Looking
around, Harry saw that they and Hermione were lying on a forest
floor, apparently alone.
Harry’s first thought was of the
Forbidden Forest, and for a moment, even though he knew how foolish
and dangerous it would be for them to appear in the grounds of
Hogwarts, his heart leapt at the thought of sneaking through the
trees to Hagrid’s hut. However, in the few moments it took for Ron
to give a low groan and Harry to start crawling toward him, he
realized that this was not the Forbidden Forest: The trees looked
younger, they were more widely spaced, the ground clearer.
He met Hermione, also on her hands and
knees, at Ron’s head. The moment his eyes fell upon Ron, all other
concerns fled Harry’s mind, for blood drenched the whole of Ron’s
left side and his face stood out, grayish-white, against the
leaf-strewn earth. The Polyjuice Potion was wearing off now: Ron was
halfway between Cattermole and himself in appearance, his hair
turning redder and redder as his face drained of the little color it
had left.
“What’s happened to him?”
“Splinched,” said Hermione, her
fingers already busy at Ron’s sleeve, where the blood was wettest
and darkest.
Harry watched, horrified, as she tore
open Ron’s shirt. He had always thought of Splinching as something
comical, but this… His insides crawled unpleasantly as Hermione
laid bare Ron’s upper arm, where a great chunk of flesh was
missing, scooped cleanly away as though by a knife.
“Harry, quickly, in my bag, there’s
a small bottle labeled ‘Essence of Dittany’—”
“Bag—right—”
Harry sped to the place where Hermione
had landed, seized the tiny beaded bag, and thrust his hand inside
it. At once, object after object began presenting itself to his
touch: He felt the leather spines of books, woolly sleeves of
jumpers, heels of shoes—
“Quickly!”
He grabbed his wand from the ground and
pointed it into the depths of the magical bag.
“Accio Dittany!”
A small brown bottle zoomed out of the
bag; he caught it and hastened back to Hermione and Ron, whose eyes
were now half-closed, strips of white eyeball all that were visible
between his lids.
“He’s fainted,” said Hermione,
who was also rather pale; she no longer looked like Mafalda, though
her hair was still gray in places. “Unstopper it for me, Harry, my
hands are shaking.”
Harry wrenched the stopper off the
little bottle, Hermione took it and poured three drops of the potion
onto the bleeding wound. Greenish smoke billowed upward and when it
had cleared, Harry saw that the bleeding had stopped. The wound now
looked several days old; new skin stretched over what had just been
open flesh.
“Wow,” said Harry.
“It’s all I feel safe doing,”
said Hermione shakily. “There are spells that would put him
completely right, but I daren’t try in case I do them wrong and
cause more damage… He’s lost so much blood already…”
“How did he get hurt? I mean”—Harry
shook his head, trying to clear it, to make sense of whatever had
just taken place—“why are we here? I thought we were going back
to Grimmauld Place?”
Hermione took a deep breath. She looked
close to tears.
“Harry, I don’t think we’re going
to be able to go back there.”
“What d’you—?”
“As we Disapparated, Yaxley caught
hold of me and I couldn’t get rid of him, he was too strong, and he
was still holding on when we arrived at Grimmauld Place, and
then—well, I think he must have seen the door, and thought we were
stopping there, so he slackened his grip and I managed to shake him
off and I brought us here instead!”
“But then, where’s he? Hang on…
You don’t mean he’s at Grimmauld Place? He can’t get in there?”
Her eyes sparkled with unshed tears as
she nodded.
“Harry, I think he can. I—I forced
him to let go with a Revulsion Jinx, but I’d already taken him
inside the Fidelius Charm’s protection. Since Dumbledore died,
we’re Secret-Keepers, so I’ve given him the secret, haven’t I?”
There was no pretending; Harry was sure
she was right. It was a serious blow. If Yaxley could now get inside
the house, there was no way that they could return. Even now, he
could be bringing other Death Eaters in there by Apparition. Gloomy
and oppressive though the house was, it had been their one safe
refuge: even, now that Kreacher was so much happier and friendlier, a
kind of home. With a twinge of regret that had nothing to do with
food, Harry imagined the house-elf busying himself over the
steak-and-kidney pie that Harry, Ron, and Hermione would never eat.
“Harry, I’m sorry, I’m so sorry!”
“Don’t be stupid, it wasn’t your
fault! If anything, it was mine…”
Harry put his hand in his pocket and
drew out Mad-Eye’s eye. Hermione recoiled, looking horrified.
“Umbridge had stuck it to her office
door, to spy on people. I couldn’t leave it there… but that’s
how they knew there were intruders.”
Before Hermione could answer, Ron
groaned and opened his eyes. He was still gray and his face glistened
with sweat.
“How d’you feel?” Hermione
whispered.
“Lousy,” croaked Ron, wincing as he
felt his injured arm. “Where are we?”
“In the woods where they held the
Quidditch World Cup,” said Hermione. “I wanted somewhere
enclosed, undercover, and this was—”
“—the first place you thought of,”
Harry finished for her, glancing around at the apparently deserted
glade. He could not help remembering what had happened the last time
they had Apparated to the first place Hermione had thought of—how
Death Eaters had found them within minutes. Had it been Legilimency?
Did Voldemort or his henchmen know, even now, where Hermione had
taken them?
“D’you reckon we should move on?”
Ron asked Harry, and Harry could tell by the look on Ron’s face
that he was thinking the same.
“I dunno.”
Ron still looked pale and clammy. He
had made no attempt to sit up and it looked as though he was too weak
to do so. The prospect of moving him was daunting.
“Let’s stay here for now,” Harry
said.
Looking relieved, Hermione sprang to
her feet.
“Where are you going?” asked Ron.
“If we’re staying, we should put
some protective enchantments around the place,” she replied, and
raising her wand, she began to walk in a wide circle around Harry and
Ron, murmuring incantations as she went. Harry saw little
disturbances in the surrounding air: It was as if Hermione had cast a
heat haze upon their clearing.
“Salvio Hexia… Protego Totalum…
Repello Muggletum… Muffliato… You could get out the tent, Harry…”
“Tent?”
“In the bag!”
“In the… of course,” said Harry.
He did not bother to grope inside it
this time, but used another Summoning Charm. The tent emerged in a
lumpy mass of canvas, rope, and poles. Harry recognized it, partly
because of the smell of cats, as the same tent in which they had
slept on the night of the Quidditch World Cup.
“I thought this belonged to that
bloke Perkins at the Ministry?” he asked, starting to disentangle
the tent pegs.
“Apparently he didn’t want it back,
his lumbago’s so bad,” said Hermione, now performing complicated
figure-of-eight movements with her wand, “so Ron’s dad said I
could borrow it. Erecto!” she added, pointing her wand at the
misshapen canvas, which in one fluid motion rose into the air and
settled, fully constructed, onto the ground before Harry, out of
whose startled hands a tent peg soared, to land with a final thud at
the end of a guy rope.
“Cave Inimicum,” Hermione finished
with a skyward flourish. “That’s as much as I can do. At the very
least, we should know they’re coming, I can’t guarantee it will
keep out Vol—”
“Don’t say the name!” Ron cut
across her, his voice harsh.
Harry and Hermione looked at each
other.
“I’m sorry,” Ron said, moaning a
little as he raised himself to look at them, “but it feels like a—a
jinx or something. Can’t we call him You-Know-Who—please?”
“Dumbledore said fear of a name—”
began Harry.
“In case you hadn’t noticed, mate,
calling You-Know-Who by his name didn’t do Dumbledore much good in
the end,” Ron snapped back. “Just—just show You-Know-Who some
respect, will you?”
“Respect?” Harry repeated, but
Hermione shot him a warning look; apparently he was not to argue with
Ron while the latter was in such a weakened condition.
Harry and Hermione half carried, half
dragged Ron through the entrance of the tent. The interior was
exactly as Harry remembered it: a small flat, complete with bathroom
and tiny kitchen. He shoved aside an old armchair and lowered Ron
carefully onto the lower berth of a bunk bed. Even this very short
journey had turned Ron whiter still, and once they had settled him on
the mattress he closed his eyes again and did not speak for a while.
“I’ll make some tea,” said
Hermione breathlessly, pulling kettle and mugs from the depths of her
bag and heading toward the kitchen.
Harry found the hot drink as welcome as
the firewhisky had been on the night that Mad-Eye had died; it seemed
to burn away a little of the fear fluttering in his chest. After a
minute or two, Ron broke the silence.
“What d’you reckon happened to the
Cattermoles?”
“With any luck, they’ll have got
away,” said Hermione, clutching her hot mug for comfort. “As long
as Mr. Cattermole had his wits about him, he’ll have transported
Mrs. Cattermole by Side-Along-Apparition and they’ll be fleeing the
country right now with their children. That’s what Harry told her
to do.”
“Blimey, I hope they escaped,” said
Ron, leaning back on his pillows. The tea seemed to be doing him
good; a little of his color had returned. “I didn’t get the
feeling Reg Cattermole was all that quick-witted, though, the way
everyone was talking to me when I was him. God, I hope they made it…
If they both end up in Azkaban because of us…”
Harry looked over at Hermione and the
question he had been about to ask—about whether Mrs. Cattermole’s
lack of a wand would prevent her Apparating alongside her
husband—died in his throat. Hermione was watching Ron fret over the
fate of the Cattermoles, and there was such tenderness in her
expression that Harry felt almost as if he had surprised her in the
act of kissing him.
“So, have you got it?” Harry asked
her, partly to remind her that he was there.
“Got—got what?” she said with a
little start.
“What did we just go through all that
for? The locket! Where’s the locket?”
“You got it?” shouted Ron, raising
himself a little higher on his pillows. “No one tells me anything!
Blimey, you could have mentioned it!”
“Well, we were running for our lives
from the Death Eaters, weren’t we?” said Hermione. “Here.”
And she pulled the locket out of the
pocket of her robes and handed it to Ron.
It was as large as a chicken’s egg.
An ornate letter S, inlaid with many small green stones, glinted
dully in the diffused light shining through the tent’s canvas roof.
“There isn’t any chance someone’s
destroyed it since Kreacher had it?” asked Ron hopefully. “I
mean, are we sure it’s still a Horcrux?”
“I think so,” said Hermione, taking
it back from him and looking at it closely. “There’d be some sign
of damage if it had been magically destroyed.”
She passed it to Harry, who turned it
over in his fingers. The thing looked perfect, pristine. He
remembered the mangled remains of the diary, and how the stone in the
Horcrux ring had been cracked open when Dumbledore destroyed it.
“I reckon Kreacher’s right,” said
Harry. “We’re going to have to work out how to open this thing
before we can destroy it.”
Sudden awareness of what he was
holding, of what lived behind the little golden doors, hit Harry as
he spoke. Even after all their efforts to find it, he felt a violent
urge to fling the locket from him. Mastering himself again, he tried
to prise the locket apart with his fingers, then attempted the charm
Hermione had used to open Regulus’s bedroom door. Neither worked.
He handed the locket back to Ron and Hermione, each of whom did their
best, but were no more successful at opening it than he had been.
“Can you feel it, though?” Ron
asked in a hushed voice, as he held it tight in his clenched fist.
“What d’you mean?”
Ron passed the Horcrux to Harry. After
a moment or two, Harry thought he knew what Ron meant. Was it his own
blood pulsing through his veins that he could feel, or was it
something beating inside the locket, like a tiny metal heart?
“What are we going to do with it?”
Hermione asked.
“Keep it safe till we work out how to
destroy it,” Harry replied, and, little though he wanted to, he
hung the chain around his own neck, dropping the locket out of sight
beneath his robes, where it rested against his chest beside the pouch
Hagrid had given him.
“I think we should take it in turns
to keep watch outside the tent,” he added to Hermione, standing up
and stretching. “And we’ll need to think about some food as well.
You stay there,” he added sharply, as Ron attempted to sit up and
turned a nasty shade of green.
With the Sneakoscope Hermione had given
Harry for his birthday set carefully upon the table in the tent,
Harry and Hermione spent the rest of the day sharing the role of
lookout. However, the Sneakoscope remained silent and still upon its
point all day, and whether because of the protective enchantments and
Muggle-repelling charms Hermione had spread around them, or because
people rarely ventured this way, their patch of wood remained
deserted, apart from occasional birds and squirrels. Evening brought
no change; Harry lit his wand as he swapped places with Hermione at
ten o’clock, and looked out upon a deserted scene, noting the bats
fluttering high above him across the single patch of starry sky
visible from their protected clearing.
He felt hungry now, and a little
light-headed. Hermione had not packed any food in her magical bag, as
she had assumed that they would be returning to Grimmauld Place that
night, so they had had nothing to eat except some wild mushrooms that
Hermione had collected from amongst the nearest trees and stewed in a
billycan. After a couple of mouthfuls Ron had pushed his portion
away, looking queasy; Harry had only persevered so as not to hurt
Hermione’s feelings.
The surrounding silence was broken by
odd rustlings and what sounded like crackings of twigs: Harry thought
that they were caused by animals rather than people, yet he kept his
wand held tight at the ready. His insides, already uncomfortable due
to their inadequate helping of rubbery mushrooms, tingled with
unease.
He had thought that he would feel
elated if they managed to steal back the Horcrux, but somehow he did
not; all he felt as he sat looking out at the darkness, of which his
wand lit only a tiny part, was worry about what would happen next. It
was as though he had been hurtling toward this point for weeks,
months, maybe even years, but now he had come to an abrupt halt, run
out of road.
There were other Horcruxes out there
somewhere, but he did not have the faintest idea where they could be.
He did not even know what all of them were. Meanwhile he was at a
loss to know how to destroy the only one that they had found, the
Horcrux that currently lay against the bare flesh of his chest.
Curiously, it had not taken heat from his body, but lay so cold
against his skin it might just have emerged from icy water. From time
to time Harry thought, or perhaps imagined, that he could feel the
tiny heartbeat ticking irregularly alongside his own.
Nameless forebodings crept upon him as
he sat there in the dark: He tried to resist them, push them away,
yet they came at him relentlessly. Neither can live while the other
survives. Ron and Hermione, now talking softly behind him in the
tent, could walk away if they wanted to: He could not. And it seemed
to Harry as he sat there trying to master his own fear and
exhaustion, that the Horcrux against his chest was ticking away the
time he had left… Stupid idea, he told himself, don’t think that…
His scar was starting to prickle again.
He was afraid that he was making it happen by having these thoughts,
and tried to direct them into another channel. He thought of poor
Kreacher, who had expected them home and had received Yaxley instead.
Would the elf keep silent or would he tell the Death Eater everything
he knew? Harry wanted to believe that Kreacher had changed toward him
in the past month, that he would be loyal now, but who knew what
would happen? What if the Death Eaters tortured the elf? Sick images
swarmed into Harry’s head and he tried to push these away too, for
there was nothing he could do for Kreacher: He and Hermione had
already decided against trying to summon him; what if someone from
the Ministry came too? They could not count on elfish Apparition
being free from the same flaw that had taken Yaxley to Grimmauld
Place on the hem of Hermione’s sleeve.
Harry’s scar was burning now. He
thought that there was so much they did not know: Lupin had been
right about magic they had never encountered or imagined. Why hadn’t
Dumbledore explained more? Had he thought that there would be time;
that he would live for years, for centuries perhaps, like his friend
Nicolas Flamel? If so, he had been wrong… Snape had seen to that…
Snape, the sleeping snake, who had struck at the top of the tower…
And Dumbledore had fallen… fallen…
“Give it to me, Gregorovitch.”
Harry’s voice was high, clear, and
cold, his wand held in front of him by a long-fingered white hand.
The man at whom he was pointing was suspended upside down in midair,
though there were no ropes holding him; he swung there, invisibly and
eerily bound, his limbs wrapped about him, his terrified face, on a
level with Harry’s, ruddy due to the blood that had rushed to his
head. He had pure-white hair and a thick, bushy beard: a trussed-up
Father Christmas.
“I have it not, I have it no more! It
was, many years ago, stolen from me!”
“Do not lie to Lord Voldemort,
Gregorovitch. He knows… He always knows.”
The hanging man’s pupils were wide,
dilated with fear, and they seemed to swell, bigger and bigger until
their blackness swallowed Harry whole—
And now Harry was hurrying along a dark
corridor in stout little Gregorovitch’s wake as he held a lantern
aloft: Gregorovitch burst into the room at the end of the passage and
his lantern illuminated what looked like a workshop; wood shavings
and gold gleamed in the swinging pool of light, and there on the
window ledge sat perched, like a giant bird, a young man with golden
hair. In the split second that the lantern’s light illuminated him,
Harry saw the delight upon his handsome face, then the intruder shot
a Stunning Spell from his wand and jumped neatly backward out of the
window with a crow of laughter.
And Harry was hurtling back out of
those wide, tunnellike pupils and Gregorovitch’s face was stricken
with terror.
“Who was the thief, Gregorovitch?”
said the high cold voice.
“I do not know, I never knew, a young
man—no—please—PLEASE!”
A scream that went on and on and then a
burst of green light—
“Harry!”
He opened his eyes, panting, his
forehead throbbing. He had passed out against the side of the tent,
had slid sideways down the canvas, and was sprawled on the ground. He
looked up at Hermione, whose bushy hair obscured the tiny patch of
sky visible through the dark branches high above them.
“Dream,” he said, sitting up
quickly and attempting to meet Hermione’s glower with a look of
innocence. “Must’ve dozed off, sorry.”
“I know it was your scar! I can tell
by the look on your face! You were looking into Vol—”
“Don’t say his name!” came Ron’s
angry voice from the depths of the tent.
“Fine,” retorted Hermione.
“You-Know-Who’s mind, then!”
“I didn’t mean it to happen!”
Harry said. “It was a dream! Can you control what you dream about,
Hermione?”
“If you just learned to apply
Occlumency—”
But Harry was not interested in being
told off; he wanted to discuss what he had just seen.
“He’s found Gregorovitch, Hermione,
and I think he’s killed him, but before he killed him he read
Gregorovitch’s mind and I saw—”
“I think I’d better take over the
watch if you’re so tired you’re falling asleep,” said Hermione
coldly.
“I can finish the watch!”
“No, you’re obviously exhausted. Go
and lie down.”
She dropped down in the mouth of the
tent, looking stubborn. Angry, but wishing to avoid a row, Harry
ducked back inside.
Ron’s still-pale face was poking out
from the lower bunk; Harry climbed into the one above him, lay down,
and looked up at the dark canvas ceiling. After several moments, Ron
spoke in a voice so low that it would not carry to Hermione, huddled
in the entrance.
“What’s You-Know-Who doing?”
Harry screwed up his eyes in the effort
to remember every detail, then whispered into the darkness.
“He found Gregorovitch. He had him
tied up, he was torturing him.”
“How’s Gregorovitch supposed to
make him a new wand if he’s tied up?”
“I dunno… It’s weird, isn’t
it?”
Harry closed his eyes, thinking of all
he had seen and heard. The more he recalled, the less sense it made…
Voldemort had said nothing about Harry’s wand, nothing about the
twin cores, nothing about Gregorovitch making a new and more powerful
wand to beat Harry’s…
“He wanted something from
Gregorovitch,” Harry said, eyes still closed tight. “He asked him
to hand it over, but Gregorovitch said it had been stolen from him…
and then… then…”
He remembered how he, as Voldemort, had
seemed to hurtle through Gregorovitch’s eyes, into his memories…
“He read Gregorovitch’s mind, and I
saw this young bloke perched on a windowsill, and he fired a curse at
Gregorovitch and jumped out of sight. He stole it, he stole whatever
You-Know-Who’s after. And I… I think I’ve seen him somewhere…”
Harry wished he could have another
glimpse of the laughing boy’s face. The theft had happened many
years ago, according to Gregorovitch. Why did the young thief look
familiar?
The noises of the surrounding woods
were muffled inside the tent; all Harry could hear was Ron’s
breathing. After a while, Ron whispered, “Couldn’t you see what
the thief was holding?”
“No… it must’ve been something
small.”
“Harry?”
The wooden slats of Ron’s bunk
creaked as he repositioned himself in bed.
“Harry, you don’t reckon
You-Know-Who’s after something else to turn into a Horcrux?”
“I don’t know,” said Harry
slowly. “Maybe. But wouldn’t it be dangerous for him to make
another one? Didn’t Hermione say he had pushed his soul to the
limit already?”
“Yeah, but maybe he doesn’t know
that.”
“Yeah… maybe,” said Harry.
He had been sure that Voldemort had
been looking for a way around the problem of the twin cores, sure
that Voldemort sought a solution from the old wandmaker… and yet he
had killed him, apparently without asking him a single question about
wandlore.
What was Voldemort trying to find? Why,
with the Ministry of Magic and the Wizarding world at his feet, was
he far away, intent on the pursuit of an object that Gregorovitch had
once owned, and which had been stolen by the unknown thief?
Harry could still see the blond-haired
youth’s face; it was merry, wild; there was a Fred and George-ish
air of triumphant trickery about him. He had soared from the
windowsill like a bird, and Harry had seen him before, but he could
not think where…
With Gregorovitch dead, it was the
merry-faced thief who was in danger now, and it was on him that
Harry’s thoughts dwelled, as Ron’s snores began to rumble from
the lower bunk and as he himself drifted slowly into sleep once more.
Chapter 15
The Goblin’s Revenge
Early next morning, before the other
two were awake, Harry left the tent to search the woods around them
for the oldest, most gnarled, and resilient-looking tree he could
find. There in its shadow he buried Mad-Eye Moody’s eye and marked
the spot by gouging a small cross in the bark with his wand. It was
not much, but Harry felt that Mad-Eye would have much preferred this
to being stuck on Dolores Umbridge’s door. Then he returned to the
tent to wait for the others to wake, and discuss what they were going
to do next.
Harry and Hermione felt that it was
best not to stay anywhere too long, and Ron agreed, with the sole
proviso that their next move took them within reach of a bacon
sandwich. Hermione therefore removed the enchantments she had placed
around the clearing, while Harry and Ron obliterated all the marks
and impressions on the ground that might show they had camped there.
Then they Disapparated to the outskirts of a small market town.
Once they had pitched the tent in the
shelter of a small copse of trees and surrounded it with freshly cast
defensive enchantments, Harry ventured out under the Invisibility
Cloak to find sustenance. This, however, did not go as planned. He
had barely entered the town when an unnatural chill, a descending
mist, and a sudden darkening of the skies made him freeze where he
stood.
“But you can make a brilliant
Patronus!” protested Ron, when Harry arrived back at the tent
empty-handed, out of breath, and mouthing the single word, dementors.
“I couldn’t… make one,” he
panted, clutching the stitch in his side. “Wouldn’t… come.”
Their expressions of consternation and
disappointment made Harry feel ashamed. It had been a nightmarish
experience, seeing the dementors gliding out of the mist in the
distance and realizing, as the paralyzing cold choked his lungs and a
distant screaming filled his ears, that he was not going to be able
to protect himself. It had taken all Harry’s willpower to uproot
himself from the spot and run, leaving the eyeless dementors to glide
amongst the Muggles who might not be able to see them, but would
assuredly feel the despair they cast wherever they went.
“So we still haven’t got any food.”
“Shut up, Ron,” snapped Hermione.
“Harry, what happened? Why do you think you couldn’t make your
Patronus? You managed perfectly yesterday!”
“I don’t know.”
He sat low in one of Perkins’s old
armchairs, feeling more humiliated by the moment. He was afraid that
something had gone wrong inside him. Yesterday seemed a long time
ago: Today he might have been thirteen years old again, the only one
who collapsed on the Hogwarts Express.
Ron kicked a chair leg.
“What?” he snarled at Hermione.
“I’m starving! All I’ve had since I bled half to death is a
couple of toadstools!”
“You go and fight your way through
the dementors, then,” said Harry, stung.
“I would, but my arm’s in a sling,
in case you hadn’t noticed!”
‘“That’s convenient.”
“And what’s that supposed to—?”
“Of course!” cried Hermione,
clapping a hand to her forehead and startling both of them into
silence. “Harry, give me the locket! Come on,” she said
impatiently, clicking her fingers at him when he did not react, “the
Horcrux, Harry, you’re still wearing it!”
She held out her hands, and Harry
lifted the golden chain over his head. The moment it parted contact
with Harry’s skin he felt free and oddly light. He had not even
realized that he was clammy or that there was a heavy weight pressing
on his stomach until both sensations lifted.
“Better?” asked Hermione.
“Yeah, loads better!”
“Harry,” she said, crouching down
in front of him and using the kind of voice he associated with
visiting the very sick, “you don’t think you’ve been possessed,
do you?”
“What? No!” he said defensively. “I
remember everything we’ve done while I’ve been wearing it. I
wouldn’t know what I’d done if I’d been possessed, would I?
Ginny told me there were times when she couldn’t remember
anything.”
“Hmm,” said Hermione, looking down
at the heavy gold locket. “Well, maybe we ought not to wear it. We
can just keep it in the tent.”
“We are not leaving that Horcrux
lying around,” Harry stated firmly. “If we lose it, if it gets
stolen—”
“Oh, all right, all right,” said
Hermione, and she placed it around her own neck and tucked it out of
sight down the front of her shirt. “But we’ll take turns wearing
it, so nobody keeps it on too long.”
“Great,” said Ron irritably, “and
now we’ve sorted that out, can we please get some food?”
“Fine, but we’ll go somewhere else
to find it,” said Hermione with half a glance at Harry. “There’s
no point staying where we know dementors are swooping around.”
In the end they settled down for the
night in a far-flung field belonging to a lonely farm, from which
they had managed to obtain eggs and bread.
“It’s not stealing, is it?” asked
Hermione in a troubled voice, as they devoured scrambled eggs on
toast. “Not if I left some money under the chicken coop?”
Ron rolled his eyes and said, with his
cheeks bulging, “’Er-my-nee, ’oo worry ’oo much. ’Elax!”
And, indeed, it was much easier to
relax when they were comfortably well fed: The argument about the
dementors was forgotten in laughter that night, and Harry felt
cheerful, even hopeful, as he took the first of the three night
watches.
This was their first encounter with the
fact that a full stomach meant good spirits; an empty one, bickering
and gloom. Harry was least surprised by this, because he had suffered
periods of near starvation at the Dursleys’. Hermione bore up
reasonably well on those nights when they managed to scavenge nothing
but berries or stale biscuits, her temper perhaps a little shorter
than usual and her silences rather dour. Ron, however, had always
been used to three delicious meals a day, courtesy of his mother or
of the Hogwarts house-elves, and hunger made him both unreasonable
and irascible. Whenever lack of food coincided with Ron’s turn to
wear the Horcrux, he became downright unpleasant.
“So where next?” was his constant
refrain. He did not seem to have any ideas himself, but expected
Harry and Hermione to come up with plans while he sat and brooded
over the low food supplies. Accordingly Harry and Hermione spent
fruitless hours trying to decide where they might find the other
Horcruxes, and how to destroy the one they had already got, their
conversations becoming increasingly repetitive as they had no new
information.
As Dumbledore had told Harry that he
believed Voldemort had hidden the Horcruxes in places important to
him, they kept reciting, in a sort of dreary litany, those locations
they knew that Voldemort had lived or visited. The orphanage where he
had been born and raised; Hogwarts, where he had been educated;
Borgin and Burkes, where he had worked after completing school; then
Albania, where he had spent his years of exile: These formed the
basis of their speculations.
“Yeah, let’s go to Albania.
Shouldn’t take more than an afternoon to search an entire country,”
said Ron sarcastically.
“There can’t be anything there.
He’d already made five of his Horcruxes before he went into exile,
and Dumbledore was certain the snake is the sixth,” said Hermione.
“We know the snake’s not in Albania, it’s usually with Vol—”
“Didn’t I ask you to stop saying
that?”
“Fine! The snake is usually with
You-Know-Who—happy?”
“Not particularly.”
“I can’t see him hiding anything at
Borgin and Burkes,” said Harry, who had made this point many times
before, but said it again simply to break the nasty silence. “Borgin
and Burke were experts at Dark objects, they would’ve recognized a
Horcrux straightaway.”
Ron yawned pointedly. Repressing a
strong urge to throw something at him, Harry plowed on, “I still
reckon he might have hidden something at Hogwarts.”
Hermione sighed.
“But Dumbledore would have found it,
Harry!”
Harry repeated the argument he kept
bringing out in favor of this theory.
“Dumbledore said in front of me that
he never assumed he knew all of Hogwarts’s secrets. I’m telling
you, if there was one place Vol—”
“Oi!”
“YOU-KNOW-WHO, then!” Harry
shouted, goaded past endurance. “If there was one place that was
really important to You-Know-Who, it was Hogwarts!”
“Oh, come on,” scoffed Ron. “His
school?”
“Yeah, his school! It was his first
real home, the place that meant he was special; it meant everything
to him, and even after he left—”
“This is You-Know-Who we’re talking
about, right? Not you?” inquired Ron. He was tugging at the chain
of the Horcrux around his neck: Harry was visited by a desire to
seize it and throttle him.
“You told us that You-Know-Who asked
Dumbledore to give him a job after he left,” said Hermione.
“That’s right,” said Harry.
“And Dumbledore thought he only
wanted to come back to try and find something, probably another
founder’s object, to make into another Horcrux?”
“Yeah,” said Harry.
“But he didn’t get the job, did
he?” said Hermione. “So he never got the chance to find a
founder’s object there and hide it in the school!”
“Okay, then,” said Harry, defeated.
“Forget Hogwarts.”
Without any other leads, they traveled
into London and, hidden beneath the Invisibility Cloak, searched for
the orphanage in which Voldemort had been raised. Hermione stole into
a library and discovered from their records that the place had been
demolished many years before. They visited its site and found a tower
block of offices.
“We could try digging in the
foundations?” Hermione suggested halfheartedly.
“He wouldn’t have hidden a Horcrux
here,” Harry said. He had known it all along: The orphanage had
been the place Voldemort had been determined to escape; he would
never have hidden a part of his soul there. Dumbledore had shown
Harry that Voldemort sought grandeur or mystique in his hiding
places; this dismal gray corner of London was as far removed as you
could imagine from Hogwarts or the Ministry or a building like
Gringotts, the Wizarding bank, with its golden doors and marble
floors.
Even without any new ideas, they
continued to move through the countryside, pitching the tent in a
different place each night for security. Every morning they made sure
that they had removed all clues to their presence, then set off to
find another lonely and secluded spot, traveling by Apparition to
more woods, to the shadowy crevices of cliffs, to purple moors,
gorse-covered mountainsides, and once a sheltered and pebbly cove.
Every twelve hours or so they passed the Horcrux between them as
though they were playing some perverse, slow-motion game of
pass-the-parcel, where they dreaded the music stopping because the
reward was twelve hours of increased fear and anxiety.
Harry’s scar kept prickling. It
happened most often, he noticed, when he was wearing the Horcrux.
Sometimes he could not stop himself reacting to the pain.
“What? What did you see?” demanded
Ron, whenever he noticed Harry wince.
“A face,” muttered Harry, every
time. “The same face. The thief who stole from Gregorovitch.”
And Ron would turn away, making no
effort to hide his disappointment. Harry knew that Ron was hoping to
hear news of his family or of the rest of the Order of the Phoenix,
but after all, he, Harry, was not a television aerial; he could only
see what Voldemort was thinking at the time, not tune in to whatever
took his fancy. Apparently Voldemort was dwelling endlessly on the
unknown youth with the gleeful face, whose name and whereabouts,
Harry felt sure, Voldemort knew no better than he did. As Harry’s
scar continued to burn and the merry, blond-haired boy swam
tantalizingly in his memory, he learned to suppress any sign of pain
or discomfort, for the other two showed nothing but impatience at the
mention of the thief. He could not entirely blame them, when they
were so desperate for a lead on the Horcruxes.
As the days stretched into weeks, Harry
began to suspect that Ron and Hermione were having conversations
without, and about, him. Several times they stopped talking abruptly
when Harry entered the tent, and twice he came accidentally upon
them, huddled a little distance away, heads together and talking
fast; both times they fell silent when they realized he was
approaching them and hastened to appear busy collecting wood or
water.
Harry could not help wondering whether
they had only agreed to come on what now felt like a pointless and
rambling journey because they thought he had some secret plan that
they would learn in due course. Ron was making no effort to hide his
bad mood, and Harry was starting to fear that Hermione too was
disappointed by his poor leadership. In desperation he tried to think
of further Horcrux locations, but the only one that continued to
occur to him was Hogwarts, and as neither of the others thought this
at all likely, he stopped suggesting it.
Autumn rolled over the countryside as
they moved through it: They were now pitching the tent on mulches of
fallen leaves. Natural mists joined those cast by the dementors; wind
and rain added to their troubles. The fact that Hermione was getting
better at identifying edible fungi could not altogether compensate
for their continuing isolation, the lack of other people’s company,
or their total ignorance of what was going on in the war against
Voldemort.
“My mother,” said Ron one night, as
they sat in the tent on a riverbank in Wales, “can make good food
appear out of thin air.”
He prodded moodily at the lumps of
charred gray fish on his plate. Harry glanced automatically at Ron’s
neck and saw, as he had expected, the golden chain of the Horcrux
glinting there. He managed to fight down the impulse to swear at Ron,
whose attitude would, he knew, improve slightly when the time came to
take off the locket.
“Your mother can’t produce food out
of thin air,” said Hermione. “No one can. Food is the first of
the five Principal Exceptions to Gamp’s Law of Elemental
Transfigur—”
“Oh, speak English, can’t you?”
Ron said, prising a fish bone out from between his teeth.
“It’s impossible to make good food
out of nothing! You can Summon it if you know where it is, you can
transform it, you can increase the quantity if you’ve already got
some—”
“Well, don’t bother increasing
this, it’s disgusting,” said Ron.
“Harry caught the fish and I did my
best with it! I notice I’m always the one who ends up sorting out
the food, because I’m a girl, I suppose!”
“No, it’s because you’re supposed
to be the best at magic!” shot back Ron.
Hermione jumped up and bits of roast
pike slid off her tin plate onto the floor.
“You can do the cooking tomorrow,
Ron, you can find the ingredients and try and charm them into
something worth eating, and I’ll sit here and pull faces and moan
and you can see how you—”
“Shut up!” said Harry, leaping to
his feet and holding up both hands. “Shut up now!”
Hermione looked outraged.
“How can you side with him, he hardly
ever does the cook—”
“Hermione, be quiet, I can hear
someone!”
He was listening hard, his hands still
raised, warning them not to talk. Then, over the rush and gush of the
dark river beside them, he heard voices again. He looked around at
the Sneakoscope. It was not moving.
“You cast the Muffliato charm over
us, right?” he whispered to Hermione.
“I did everything,” she whispered
back, “Muffliato, Muggle-Repelling and Disillusionment Charms, all
of it. They shouldn’t be able to hear or see us, whoever they are.”
Heavy scuffing and scraping noises,
plus the sound of dislodged stones and twigs, told them that several
people were clambering down the steep, wooded slope that descended to
the narrow bank where they had pitched the tent. They drew their
wands, waiting. The enchantments they had cast around themselves
ought to be sufficient, in the near total darkness, to shield them
from the notice of Muggles and normal witches and wizards. If these
were Death Eaters, then perhaps their defenses were about to be
tested by Dark Magic for the first time.
The voices became louder but no more
intelligible as the group of men reached the bank. Harry estimated
that their owners were fewer than twenty feet away, but the cascading
river made it impossible to tell for sure. Hermione snatched up the
beaded bag and started to rummage; after a moment she drew out three
Extendable Ears and threw one each to Harry and Ron, who hastily
inserted the ends of the flesh-colored strings into their ears and
fed the other ends out of the tent entrance.
Within seconds Harry heard a weary male
voice.
“There ought to be a few salmon in
here, or d’you reckon it’s too early in the season? Accio
Salmon!”
There were several distinct splashes
and then the slapping sounds of fish against flesh. Somebody grunted
appreciatively. Harry pressed the Extendable Ear deeper into his own:
Over the murmur of the river he could make out more voices, but they
were not speaking English or any human language he had ever heard. It
was a rough and unmelodious tongue, a string of rattling, guttural
noises, and there seemed to be two speakers, one with a slightly
lower, slower voice than the other.
A fire danced into life on the other
side of the canvas; large shadows passed between tent and flames. The
delicious smell of baking salmon wafted tantalizingly in their
direction. Then came the clinking of cutlery on plates, and the first
man spoke again.
“Here, Griphook, Gornuk.”
Goblins! Hermione mouthed at Harry, who
nodded.
“Thank you,” said the goblins
together in English.
“So, you three have been on the run
how long?” asked a new, mellow, and pleasant voice; it was vaguely
familiar to Harry, who pictured a round-bellied, cheerful-faced man.
“Six weeks… seven… I forget,”
said the tired man. “Met up with Griphook in the first couple of
days and joined forces with Gornuk not long after. Nice to have a bit
of company.” There was a pause, while knives scraped plates and tin
mugs were picked up and replaced on the ground. “What made you
leave, Ted?” continued the man.
“Knew they were coming for me,”
replied mellow-voiced Ted, and Harry suddenly knew who he was:
Tonks’s father. “Heard Death Eaters were in the area last week
and decided I’d better run for it. Refused to register as a
Muggle-born on principle, see, so I knew it was a matter of time,
knew I’d have to leave in the end. My wife should be okay, she’s
pure-blood. And then I met Dean here, what, a few days ago, son?”
“Yeah,” said another voice, and
Harry, Ron, and Hermione stared at each other, silent but beside
themselves with excitement, sure they recognized the voice of Dean
Thomas, their fellow Gryffindor.
“Muggle-born, eh?” asked the first
man.
“Not sure,” said Dean. “My dad
left my mum when I was a kid. I’ve got no proof he was a wizard,
though.”
There was silence for a while, except
for the sounds of munching; then Ted spoke again.
“I’ve got to say, Dirk, I’m
surprised to run into you. Pleased, but surprised. Word was you’d
been caught.”
“I was,” said Dirk. “I was
halfway to Azkaban when I made a break for it, Stunned Dawlish, and
nicked his broom. It was easier than you’d think; I don’t reckon
he’s quite right at the moment. Might be Confunded. If so, I’d
like to shake the hand of the witch or wizard who did it, probably
saved my life.”
There was another pause in which the
fire crackled and the river rushed on. Then Ted said, “And where do
you two fit in? I, er, had the impression the goblins were for
You-Know-Who, on the whole.”
“You had a false impression,” said
the higher-voiced of the goblins. “We take no sides. This is a
wizards’ war.”
“How come you’re in hiding, then?”
“I deemed it prudent,” said the
deeper-voiced goblin. “Having refused what I considered an
impertinent request, I could see that my personal safety was in
jeopardy.”
“What did they ask you to do?”
asked Ted.
“Duties ill-befitting the dignity of
my race,” replied the goblin, his voice rougher and less human as
he said it. “I am not a house-elf.”
“What about you, Griphook?”
“Similar reasons,” said the
higher-voiced goblin. “Gringotts is no longer under the sole
control of my race. I recognize no Wizarding master.”
He added something under his breath in
Gobbledegook, and Gornuk laughed.
“What’s the joke?” asked Dean.
“He said,” replied Dirk, “that
there are things wizards don’t recognize, either.”
There was a short pause.
“I don’t get it,” said Dean.
“I had my small revenge before I
left,” said Griphook in English.
“Good man—goblin, I should say,”
amended Ted hastily. “Didn’t manage to lock a Death Eater up in
one of the old high-security vaults, I suppose?”
“If I had, the sword would not have
helped him break out,” replied Griphook. Gornuk laughed again and
even Dirk gave a dry chuckle.
“Dean and I are still missing
something here,” said Ted.
“So is Severus Snape, though he does
not know it,” said Griphook, and the two goblins roared with
malicious laughter. Inside the tent Harry’s breathing was shallow
with excitement: He and Hermione stared at each other, listening as
hard as they could.
“Didn’t you hear about that, Ted?”
asked Dirk. “About the kids who tried to steal Gryffindor’s sword
out of Snape’s office at Hogwarts?”
An electric current seemed to course
through Harry, jangling his every nerve as he stood rooted to the
spot.
“Never heard a word,” said Ted.
“Not in the Prophet, was it?”
“Hardly,” chortled Dirk. “Griphook
here told me, he heard about it from Bill Weasley who works for the
bank. One of the kids who tried to take the sword was Bill’s
younger sister.”
Harry glanced toward Hermione and Ron,
both of whom were clutching the Extendable Ears as tightly as
lifelines.
“She and a couple of friends got into
Snape’s office and smashed open the glass case where he was
apparently keeping the sword. Snape caught them as they were trying
to smuggle it down the staircase.”
“Ah, God bless ’em,” said Ted.
“What did they think, that they’d be able to use the sword on
You-Know-Who? Or on Snape himself?”
“Well, whatever they thought they
were going to do with it, Snape decided the sword wasn’t safe where
it was,” said Dirk. “Couple of days later, once he’d got the
say-so from You-Know-Who, I imagine, he sent it down to London to be
kept in Gringotts instead.”
The goblins started to laugh again.
“I’m still not seeing the joke,”
said Ted.
“It’s a fake,” rasped Griphook.
“The sword of Gryffindor!”
“Oh yes. It is a copy—an excellent
copy, it is true—but it was Wizard-made. The original was forged
centuries ago by goblins and had certain properties only goblin-made
armor possesses. Wherever the genuine sword of Gryffindor is, it is
not in a vault at Gringotts bank.”
“I see,” said Ted. “And I take it
you didn’t bother telling the Death Eaters this?”
“I saw no reason to trouble them with
the information,” said Griphook smugly, and now Ted and Dean joined
in Gornuk and Dirk’s laughter.
Inside the tent, Harry closed his eyes,
willing someone to ask the question he needed answered, and after a
minute that seemed ten, Dean obliged; he was (Harry remembered with a
jolt) an ex-boyfriend of Ginny’s too.
“What happened to Ginny and the
others? The ones who tried to steal it?”
“Oh, they were punished, and
cruelly,” said Griphook indifferently.
“They’re okay, though?” asked Ted
quickly. “I mean, the Weasleys don’t need any more of their kids
injured, do they?”
“They suffered no serious injury, as
far as I am aware,” said Griphook.
“Lucky for them,” said Ted. “With
Snape’s track record I suppose we should just be glad they’re
still alive.”
“You believe that story, then, do
you, Ted?” asked Dirk. “You believe Snape killed Dumbledore?”
“’Course I do,” said Ted. “You’re
not going to sit there and tell me you think Potter had anything to
do with it?”
“Hard to know what to believe these
days,” muttered Dirk.
“I know Harry Potter,” said Dean.
“And I reckon he’s the real thing—the Chosen One, or whatever
you want to call it.”
“Yeah, there’s a lot would like to
believe he’s that, son,” said Dirk, “me included. But where is
he? Run for it, by the looks of things. You’d think, if he knew
anything we don’t, or had anything special going for him, he’d be
out there now fighting, rallying resistance, instead of hiding. And
you know, the Prophet made a pretty good case against him—”
“The Prophet?” scoffed Ted. “You
deserve to be lied to if you’re still reading that muck, Dirk. You
want the facts, try the Quibbler.”
There was a sudden explosion of choking
and retching, plus a good deal of thumping; by the sound of it, Dirk
had swallowed a fish bone. At last he spluttered, “The Quibbler?
That lunatic rag of Xeno Lovegood’s?”
“It’s not so lunatic these days,”
said Ted. “You want to give it a look. Xeno is printing all the
stuff the Prophet’s ignoring, not a single mention of
Crumple-Horned Snorkacks in the last issue. How long they’ll let
him get away with it, mind, I don’t know. But Xeno says, front page
of every issue, that any wizard who’s against You-Know-Who ought to
make helping Harry Potter their number-one priority.”
“Hard to help a boy who’s vanished
off the face of the earth,” said Dirk.
“Listen, the fact that they haven’t
caught him yet’s one hell of an achievement,” said Ted. “I’d
take tips from him gladly; it’s what we’re trying to do, stay
free, isn’t it?”
“Yeah, well, you’ve got a point
there,” said Dirk heavily. “With the whole of the Ministry and
all their informers looking for him I’d have expected him to be
caught by now. Mind, who’s to say they haven’t already caught and
killed him without publicizing it?”
“Ah, don’t say that, Dirk,”
murmured Ted.
There was a long pause filled with more
clattering of knives and forks. When they spoke again it was to
discuss whether they ought to sleep on the bank or retreat back up
the wooded slope. Deciding the trees would give better cover, they
extinguished their fire, then clambered back up the incline, their
voices fading away.
Harry, Ron, and Hermione reeled in the
Extendable Ears. Harry, who had found the need to remain silent
increasingly difficult the longer they eavesdropped, now found
himself unable to say more than, “Ginny—the sword—”
“I know!” said Hermione.
She lunged for the tiny beaded bag,
this time sinking her arm in it right up to the armpit.
“Here… we… are…” she said
between gritted teeth, and she pulled at something that was evidently
in the depths of the bag. Slowly the edge of an ornate picture frame
came into sight. Harry hurried to help her. As they lifted the empty
portrait of Phineas Nigellus free of Hermione’s bag, she kept her
wand pointing at it, ready to cast a spell at any moment.
“If somebody swapped the real sword
for the fake while it was in Dumbledore’s office,” she panted, as
they propped the painting against the side of the tent, “Phineas
Nigellus would have seen it happen, he hangs right beside the case!”
“Unless he was asleep,” said Harry,
but he still held his breath as Hermione knelt down in front of the
empty canvas, her wand directed at its center, cleared her throat,
then said:
“Er—Phineas? Phineas Nigellus?”
Nothing happened.
“Phineas Nigellus?” said Hermione
again. “Professor Black? Please could we talk to you? Please?”
“‘Please’ always helps,” said a
cold, snide voice, and Phineas Nigellus slid into his portrait. At
once, Hermione cried:
“Obscuro!”
A black blindfold appeared over Phineas
Nigellus’s clever, dark eyes, causing him to bump into the frame
and shriek with pain.
“What—how dare—what are you—?”
“I’m very sorry, Professor Black,”
said Hermione, “but it’s a necessary precaution!”
“Remove this foul addition at once!
Remove it, I say! You are ruining a great work of art! Where am I?
What is going on?”
“Never mind where we are,” said
Harry, and Phineas Nigellus froze, abandoning his attempts to peel
off the painted blindfold.
“Can that possibly be the voice of
the elusive Mr. Potter?”
“Maybe,” said Harry, knowing that
this would keep Phineas Nigellus’s interest. “We’ve got a
couple of questions to ask you—about the sword of Gryffindor.”
“Ah,” said Phineas Nigellus, now
turning his head this way and that in an effort to catch sight of
Harry, “yes. That silly girl acted most unwisely there—”
“Shut up about my sister,” said Ron
roughly. Phineas Nigellus raised supercilious eyebrows.
“Who else is here?” he asked,
turning his head from side to side. “Your tone displeases me! The
girl and her friends were foolhardy in the extreme. Thieving from the
headmaster!”
“They weren’t thieving,” said
Harry. “That sword isn’t Snape’s.”
“It belongs to Professor Snape’s
school,” said Phineas Nigellus. “Exactly what claim did the
Weasley girl have upon it? She deserved her punishment, as did the
idiot Longbottom and the Lovegood oddity!”
“Neville is not an idiot and Luna is
not an oddity!” said Hermione.
“Where am I?” repeated Phineas
Nigellus, starting to wrestle with the blindfold again. “Where have
you brought me? Why have you removed me from the house of my
forebears?”
“Never mind that! How did Snape
punish Ginny, Neville, and Luna?” asked Harry urgently.
“Professor Snape sent them into the
Forbidden Forest, to do some work for the oaf, Hagrid.”
“Hagrid’s not an oaf!” said
Hermione shrilly.
“And Snape might’ve thought that
was a punishment,” said Harry, “but Ginny, Neville, and Luna
probably had a good laugh with Hagrid. The Forbidden Forest…
they’ve faced plenty worse than the Forbidden Forest, big deal!”
He felt relieved; he had been imagining
horrors, the Cruciatus Curse at the very least.
“What we really wanted to know,
Professor Black, is whether anyone else has, um, taken out the sword
at all? Maybe it’s been taken away for cleaning or—or something?”
Phineas Nigellus paused again in his
struggles to free his eyes and sniggered.
“Muggle-borns,” he said.
“Goblin-made armor does not require cleaning, simple girl. Goblins’
silver repels mundane dirt, imbibing only that which strengthens it.”
“Don’t call Hermione simple,”
said Harry.
“I grow weary of contradiction,”
said Phineas Nigellus. “Perhaps it is time for me to return to the
headmaster’s office?”
Still blindfolded, he began groping the
side of his frame, trying to feel his way out of his picture and back
into the one at Hogwarts. Harry had a sudden inspiration.
“Dumbledore! Can’t you bring us
Dumbledore?”
“I beg your pardon?” asked Phineas
Nigellus.
“Professor Dumbledore’s
portrait—couldn’t you bring him along, here, into yours?”
Phineas Nigellus turned his face in the
direction of Harry’s voice.
“Evidently it is not only
Muggle-borns who are ignorant, Potter. The portraits of Hogwarts may
commune with each other, but they cannot travel outside the castle
except to visit a painting of themselves hanging elsewhere.
Dumbledore cannot come here with me, and after the treatment I have
received at your hands, I can assure you that I shall not be making a
return visit!”
Slightly crestfallen, Harry watched
Phineas redouble his attempts to leave his frame.
“Professor Black,” said Hermione,
“couldn’t you just tell us, please, when was the last time the
sword was taken out of its case? Before Ginny took it out, I mean?”
Phineas snorted impatiently.
“I believe that the last time I saw
the sword of Gryffindor leave its case was when Professor Dumbledore
used it to break open a ring.”
Hermione whipped around to look at
Harry. Neither of them dared say more in front of Phineas Nigellus,
who had at last managed to locate the exit.
“Well, good night to you,” he said
a little waspishly, and he began to move out of sight again. Only the
edge of his hat brim remained in view when Harry gave a sudden shout.
“Wait! Have you told Snape you saw
this?”
Phineas Nigellus stuck his blindfolded
head back into the picture.
“Professor Snape has more important
things on his mind than the many eccentricities of Albus Dumbledore.
Good-bye, Potter!”
And with that, he vanished completely,
leaving behind him nothing but his murky backdrop.
“Harry!” Hermione cried.
“I know!” Harry shouted. Unable to
contain himself, he punched the air; it was more than he had dared to
hope for. He strode up and down the tent, feeling that he could have
run a mile; he did not even feel hungry anymore. Hermione was
squashing Phineas Nigellus’s portrait back into the beaded bag;
when she had fastened the clasp she threw the bag aside and raised a
shining face to Harry.
“The sword can destroy Horcruxes!
Goblin-made blades imbibe only that which strengthen them—Harry,
that sword’s impregnated with basilisk venom!”
“And Dumbledore didn’t give it to
me because he still needed it, he wanted to use it on the locket—”
“—and he must have realized they
wouldn’t let you have it if he put it in his will—”
“—so he made a copy—”
“—and put a fake in the glass
case—”
“—and he left the real one—where?”
They gazed at each other; Harry felt
that the answer was dangling invisibly in the air above them,
tantalizingly close. Why hadn’t Dumbledore told him? Or had he, in
fact, told Harry, but Harry had not realized it at the time?
“Think!” whispered Hermione.
“Think! Where would he have left it?”
“Not at Hogwarts,” said Harry,
resuming his pacing.
“Somewhere in Hogsmeade?” suggested
Hermione.
“The Shrieking Shack?” said Harry.
“Nobody ever goes in there.”
“But Snape knows how to get in,
wouldn’t that be a bit risky?”
“Dumbledore trusted Snape,” Harry
reminded her.
“Not enough to tell him that he had
swapped the swords,” said Hermione.
“Yeah, you’re right!” said Harry,
and he felt even more cheered at the thought that Dumbledore had had
some reservations, however faint, about Snape’s trustworthiness.
“So, would he have hidden the sword well away from Hogsmeade, then?
What d’you reckon, Ron? Ron?”
Harry looked around. For one bewildered
moment he thought that Ron had left the tent, then realized that Ron
was lying in the shadow of a lower bunk, looking stony.
“Oh, remembered me, have you?” he
said.
“What?”
Ron snorted as he stared up at the
underside of the upper bunk.
“You two carry on. Don’t let me
spoil your fun.”
Perplexed, Harry looked to Hermione for
help, but she shook her head, apparently as nonplussed as he was.
“What’s the problem?” asked
Harry.
“Problem? There’s no problem,”
said Ron, still refusing to look at Harry. “Not according to you,
anyway.”
There were several plunks on the canvas
over their heads. It had started to rain.
“Well, you’ve obviously got a
problem,” said Harry. “Spit it out, will you?”
Ron swung his long legs off the bed and
sat up. He looked mean, unlike himself.
“All right, I’ll spit it out. Don’t
expect me to skip up and down the tent because there’s some other
damn thing we’ve got to find. Just add it to the list of stuff you
don’t know.”
“I don’t know?” repeated Harry,
“I don’t know?”
Plunk, plunk, plunk. The rain was
falling harder and heavier; it pattered on the leaf-strewn bank all
around them and into the river chattering through the dark. Dread
doused Harry’s jubilation: Ron was saying exactly what he had
suspected and feared him to be thinking.
“It’s not like I’m not having the
time of my life here,” said Ron, “you know, with my arm mangled
and nothing to eat and freezing my backside off every night. I just
hoped, you know, after we’d been running round a few weeks, we’d
have achieved something.”
“Ron,” Hermione said, but in such a
quiet voice that Ron could pretend not to have heard it over the loud
tattoo the rain was now beating on the tent.
“I thought you knew what you’d
signed up for,” said Harry.
“Yeah, I thought I did too.”
“So what part of it isn’t living up
to your expectations?” asked Harry. Anger was coming to his defense
now. “Did you think we’d be staying in five-star hotels? Finding
a Horcrux every other day? Did you think you’d be back to Mummy by
Christmas?”
“We thought you knew what you were
doing!” shouted Ron, standing up, and his words pierced Harry like
scalding knives. “We thought Dumbledore had told you what to do, we
thought you had a real plan!”
“Ron!” said Hermione, this time
clearly audible over the rain thundering on the tent roof, but again,
he ignored her.
“Well, sorry to let you down,” said
Harry, his voice quite calm even though he felt hollow, inadequate.
“I’ve been straight with you from the start, I told you
everything Dumbledore told me. And in case you haven’t noticed,
we’ve found one Horcrux—”
“Yeah, and we’re about as near
getting rid of it as we are to finding the rest of them—nowhere
effing near, in other words!”
“Take off the locket, Ron,”
Hermione said, her voice unusually high. “Please take it off. You
wouldn’t be talking like this if you hadn’t been wearing it all
day.”
“Yeah, he would,” said Harry, who
did not want excuses made for Ron. “D’you think I haven’t
noticed the two of you whispering behind my back? D’you think I
didn’t guess you were thinking this stuff?”
“Harry, we weren’t—”
“Don’t lie!” Ron hurled at her.
“You said it too, you said you were disappointed, you said you’d
thought he had a bit more to go on than—”
“I didn’t say it like that—Harry,
I didn’t!” she cried.
The rain was pounding the tent, tears
were pouring down Hermione’s face, and the excitement of a few
minutes before had vanished as if it had never been, a short-lived
firework that had flared and died, leaving everything dark, wet, and
cold. The sword of Gryffindor was hidden they knew not where, and
they were three teenagers in a tent whose only achievement was not,
yet, to be dead.
“So why are you still here?” Harry
asked Ron.
“Search me,” said Ron.
“Go home then,” said Harry.
“Yeah, maybe I will!” shouted Ron,
and he took several steps toward Harry, who did not back away.
“Didn’t you hear what they said about my sister? But you don’t
give a rat’s fart, do you, it’s only the Forbidden Forest, Harry
I’ve-Faced-Worse Potter doesn’t care what happens to her in
here—well, I do, all right, giant spiders and mental stuff—”
“I was only saying—she was with the
others, they were with Hagrid—”
“Yeah, I get it, you don’t care!
And what about the rest of my family, ‘the Weasleys don’t need
another kid injured,’ did you hear that?”
“Yeah, I—”
“Not bothered what it meant, though?”
“Ron!” said Hermione, forcing her
way between them. “I don’t think it means anything new has
happened, anything we don’t know about; think, Ron, Bill’s
already scarred, plenty of people must have seen that George has lost
an ear by now, and you’re supposed to be on your deathbed with
spattergroit, I’m sure that’s all he meant—”
“Oh, you’re sure, are you? Right
then, well, I won’t bother myself about them. It’s all right for
you two, isn’t it, with your parents safely out of the way—”
“My parents are dead!” Harry
bellowed.
“And mine could be going the same
way!” yelled Ron.
“Then GO!” roared Harry. “Go back
to them, pretend you’ve got over your spattergroit and Mummy’ll
be able to feed you up and—”
Ron made a sudden movement: Harry
reacted, but before either wand was clear of its owner’s pocket,
Hermione had raised her own.
“Protego!” she cried, and an
invisible shield expanded between her and Harry on the one side and
Ron on the other; all of them were forced backward a few steps by the
strength of the spell, and Harry and Ron glared from either side of
the transparent barrier as though they were seeing each other clearly
for the first time. Harry felt a corrosive hatred toward Ron:
Something had broken between them.
“Leave the Horcrux,” Harry said.
Ron wrenched the chain from over his
head and cast the locket into a nearby chair. He turned to Hermione.
“What are you doing?”
“What do you mean?”
“Are you staying, or what?”
“I…” She looked anguished.
“Yes—yes, I’m staying. Ron, we said we’d go with Harry, we
said we’d help—”
“I get it. You choose him.”
“Ron, no—please—come back, come
back!”
She was impeded by her own Shield
Charm; by the time she had removed it he had already stormed into the
night. Harry stood quite still and silent, listening to her sobbing
and calling Ron’s name amongst the trees.
After a few minutes she returned, her
sopping hair plastered to her face.
“He’s g-g-gone! Disapparated!”
She threw herself into a chair, curled
up, and started to cry.
Harry felt dazed. He stooped, picked up
the Horcrux, and placed it around his own neck. He dragged blankets
off Ron’s bunk and threw them over Hermione. Then he climbed onto
his own bed and stared up at the dark canvas roof, listening to the
pounding of the rain.
Chapter 16
Godric’s Hollow
When Harry woke the following day it
was several seconds before he remembered what had happened. Then he
hoped, childishly, that it had been a dream, that Ron was still there
and had never left. Yet by turning his head on his pillow he could
see Ron’s deserted bunk. It was like a dead body in the way it
seemed to draw his eyes. Harry jumped down from his own bed, keeping
his eyes averted from Ron’s. Hermione, who was already busy in the
kitchen, did not wish Harry good morning, but turned her face away
quickly as he went by.
He’s gone, Harry told himself. He’s
gone. He had to keep thinking it as he washed and dressed, as though
repetition would dull the shock of it. He’s gone and he’s not
coming back. And that was the simple truth of it, Harry knew, because
their protective enchantments meant that it would be impossible, once
they vacated this spot, for Ron to find them again.
He and Hermione ate breakfast in
silence. Hermione’s eyes were puffy and red; she looked as if she
had not slept. They packed up their things, Hermione dawdling. Harry
knew why she wanted to spin out their time on the riverbank; several
times he saw her look up eagerly, and he was sure she had deluded
herself into thinking that she heard footsteps through the heavy
rain, but no red-haired figure appeared between the trees. Every time
Harry imitated her, looked around (for he could not help hoping a
little, himself) and saw nothing but rain-swept woods, another little
parcel of fury exploded inside him. He could hear Ron saying, “We
thought you knew what you were doing!”, and he resumed packing with
a hard knot in the pit of his stomach.
The muddy river beside them was rising
rapidly and would soon spill over onto their bank. They had lingered
a good hour after they would usually have departed their campsite.
Finally having entirely repacked the beaded bag three times, Hermione
seemed unable to find any more reasons to delay: She and Harry
grasped hands and Disapparated, reappearing on a windswept
heather-covered hillside.
The instant they arrived, Hermione
dropped Harry’s hand and walked away from him, finally sitting down
on a large rock, her face on her knees, shaking with what he knew
were sobs. He watched her, supposing that he ought to go and comfort
her, but something kept him rooted to the spot. Everything inside him
felt cold and tight: Again he saw the contemptuous expression on
Ron’s face. Harry strode off through the heather, walking in a
large circle with the distraught Hermione at its center, casting the
spells she usually performed to ensure their protection.
They did not discuss Ron at all over
the next few days. Harry was determined never to mention his name
again, and Hermione seemed to know that it was no use forcing the
issue, although sometimes at night when she thought he was sleeping,
he would hear her crying. Meanwhile Harry had started bringing out
the Marauder’s Map and examining it by wandlight. He was waiting
for the moment when Ron’s labeled dot would reappear in the
corridors of Hogwarts, proving that he had returned to the
comfortable castle, protected by his status of pureblood. However,
Ron did not appear on the map, and after a while Harry found himself
taking it out simply to stare at Ginny’s name in the girls’
dormitory, wondering whether the intensity with which he gazed at it
might break into her sleep, that she would somehow know he was
thinking about her, hoping that she was all right.
By day, they devoted themselves to
trying to determine the possible locations of Gryffindor’s sword,
but the more they talked about the places in which Dumbledore might
have hidden it, the more desperate and far-fetched their speculation
became. Cudgel his brains though he might, Harry could not remember
Dumbledore ever mentioning a place in which he might hide something.
There were moments when he did not know whether he was angrier with
Ron or with Dumbledore. We thought you knew what you were doing… We
thought Dumbledore had told you what to do… We thought you had a
real plan!
He could not hide it from himself: Ron
had been right. Dumbledore had left him with virtually nothing. They
had discovered one Horcrux, but they had no means of destroying it:
The others were as unattainable as they had ever been. Hopelessness
threatened to engulf him. He was staggered now to think of his own
presumption in accepting his friends’ offers to accompany him on
this meandering, pointless journey. He knew nothing, he had no ideas,
and he was constantly, painfully on the alert for any indication that
Hermione too was about to tell him that she had had enough, that she
was leaving.
They were spending many evenings in
near silence, and Hermione took to bringing out Phineas Nigellus’s
portrait and propping it up in a chair, as though he might fill part
of the gaping hole left by Ron’s departure. Despite his previous
assertion that he would never visit them again, Phineas Nigellus did
not seem able to resist the chance to find out more about what Harry
was up to, and consented to reappear, blindfolded, every few days or
so. Harry was even glad to see him, because he was company, albeit of
a snide and taunting kind. They relished any news about what was
happening at Hogwarts, though Phineas Nigellus was not an ideal
informer. He venerated Snape, the first Slytherin headmaster since he
himself had controlled the school, and they had to be careful not to
criticize or ask impertinent questions about Snape, or Phineas
Nigellus would instantly leave his painting.
However, he did let drop certain
snippets. Snape seemed to be facing a constant, low level of mutiny
from a hard core of students. Ginny had been banned from going into
Hogsmeade. Snape had reinstated Umbridge’s old decree forbidding
gatherings of three or more students or any unofficial student
societies.
From all of these things, Harry deduced
that Ginny, and probably Neville and Luna along with her, had been
doing their best to continue Dumbledore’s Army. This scant news
made Harry want to see Ginny so badly it felt like a stomachache; but
it also made him think of Ron again, and of Dumbledore, and of
Hogwarts itself, which he missed nearly as much as his ex-girlfriend.
Indeed, as Phineas Nigellus talked about Snape’s crackdown, Harry
experienced a split second of madness when he imagined simply going
back to school to join the destabilization of Snape’s regime: Being
fed, and having a soft bed, and other people being in charge, seemed
the most wonderful prospect in the world at that moment. But then he
remembered that he was Undesirable Number One, that there was a
ten-thousand-Galleon price on his head, and that to walk into
Hogwarts these days was just as dangerous as walking into the
Ministry of Magic. Indeed, Phineas Nigellus inadvertently emphasized
this fact by slipping in leading questions about Harry and Hermione’s
whereabouts. Hermione shoved him back inside the beaded bag every
time he did this, and Phineas Nigellus invariably refused to reappear
for several days after these unceremonious good-byes.
The weather grew colder and colder.
They did not dare remain in any one area too long, so rather than
staying in the south of England, where a hard ground frost was the
worst of their worries, they continued to meander up and down the
country, braving a mountainside, where sleet pounded the tent; a
wide, flat marsh, where the tent was flooded with chill water; and a
tiny island in the middle of a Scottish loch, where snow half buried
the tent in the night.
They had already spotted Christmas
trees twinkling from several sitting room windows before there came
an evening when Harry resolved to suggest, again, what seemed to him
the only unexplored avenue left to them. They had just eaten an
unusually good meal: Hermione had been to a supermarket under the
Invisibility Cloak (scrupulously dropping the money into an open till
as she left), and Harry thought that she might be more persuadable
than usual on a stomach full of spaghetti Bolognese and tinned pears.
He had also had the foresight to suggest that they take a few hours’
break from wearing the Horcrux, which was hanging over the end of the
bunk beside him.
“Hermione?”
“Hmm?” She was curled up in one of
the sagging armchairs with The Tales of Beedle the Bard. He could not
imagine how much more she could get out of the book, which was not,
after all, very long; but evidently she was still deciphering
something in it, because Spellman’s Syllabary lay open on the arm
of the chair.
Harry cleared his throat. He felt
exactly as he had done on the occasion, several years previously,
when he had asked Professor McGonagall whether he could go into
Hogsmeade, despite the fact that he had not persuaded the Dursleys to
sign his permission slip.
“Hermione, I’ve been thinking,
and—”
“Harry, could you help me with
something?”
Apparently she had not been listening
to him. She leaned forward and held out The Tales of Beedle the Bard.
“Look at that symbol,” she said,
pointing to the top of a page. Above what Harry assumed was the title
of the story (being unable to read runes, he could not be sure),
there was a picture of what looked like a triangular eye, its pupil
crossed with a vertical line.
“I never took Ancient Runes,
Hermione.”
“I know that, but it isn’t a rune
and it’s not in the syllabary, either. All along I thought it was a
picture of an eye, but I don’t think it is! It’s been inked in,
look, somebody’s drawn it there, it isn’t really part of the
book. Think, have you ever seen it before?”
“No… No, wait a moment.” Harry
looked closer. “Isn’t it the same symbol Luna’s dad was wearing
round his neck?”
“Well, that’s what I thought too!”
“Then it’s Grindelwald’s mark.”
She stared at him, openmouthed.
“What?”
“Krum told me…”
He recounted the story that Viktor Krum
had told him at the wedding. Hermione looked astonished.
“Grindelwald’s mark?”
She looked from Harry to the weird
symbol and back again. “I’ve never heard that Grindelwald had a
mark. There’s no mention of it in anything I’ve ever read about
him.”
“Well, like I say, Krum reckoned that
symbol was carved on a wall at Durmstrang, and Grindelwald put it
there.”
She fell back into the old armchair,
frowning.
“That’s very odd. If it’s a
symbol of Dark Magic, what’s it doing in a book of children’s
stories?”
“Yeah, it is weird,” said Harry.
“And you’d think Scrimgeour would have recognized it. He was
Minister, he ought to have been expert on Dark stuff.”
“I know… Perhaps he thought it was
an eye, just like I did. All the other stories have little pictures
over the titles.”
She did not speak, but continued to
pore over the strange mark. Harry tried again.
“Hermione?”
“Hmm?”
“I’ve been thinking. I—I want to
go to Godric’s Hollow.”
She looked up at him, but her eyes were
unfocused, and he was sure she was still thinking about the
mysterious mark on the book.
“Yes,” she said. “Yes, I’ve
been wondering that too. I really think we’ll have to.”
“Did you hear me right?” he asked.
“Of course I did. You want to go to
Godric’s Hollow. I agree, I think we should. I mean, I can’t
think of anywhere else it could be either. It’ll be dangerous, but
the more I think about it, the more likely it seems it’s there.”
“Er—what’s there?” asked Harry.
At that, she looked just as bewildered
as he felt.
“Well, the sword, Harry! Dumbledore
must have known you’d want to go back there, and I mean, Godric’s
Hollow is Godric Gryffindor’s birthplace—”
“Really? Gryffindor came from
Godric’s Hollow?”
“Harry, did you ever even open A
History of Magic?”
“Erm,” he said, smiling for what
felt like the first time in months: The muscles in his face felt
oddly stiff. “I might’ve opened it, you know, when I bought it…
just the once…”
“Well, as the village is named after
him I’d have thought you might have made the connection,” said
Hermione. She sounded much more like her old self than she had done
of late; Harry half expected her to announce that she was off to the
library. “There’s a bit about the village in A History of Magic,
wait…”
She opened the beaded bag and rummaged
for a while, finally extracting her copy of their old school
textbook, A History of Magic by Bathilda Bagshot, which she thumbed
through until finding the page she wanted.
“‘Upon the signature of the
International Statute of Secrecy in 1689, wizards went into hiding
for good. It was natural, perhaps, that they formed their own small
communities within a community. Many small villages and hamlets
attracted several magical families, who banded together for mutual
support and protection. The villages of Tinworth in Cornwall, Upper
Flagley in Yorkshire, and Ottery St. Catchpole on the south coast of
England were notable homes to knots of Wizarding families who lived
alongside tolerant and sometimes Confunded Muggles. Most celebrated
of these half-magical dwelling places is, perhaps, Godric’s Hollow,
the West Country village where the great wizard Godric Gryffindor was
born, and where Bowman Wright, Wizarding smith, forged the first
Golden Snitch. The graveyard is full of the names of ancient magical
families, and this accounts, no doubt, for the stories of hauntings
that have dogged the little church beside it for many centuries.’
“You and your parents aren’t
mentioned,” Hermione said, closing the book, “because Professor
Bagshot doesn’t cover anything later than the end of the nineteenth
century. But you see? Godric’s Hollow, Godric Gryffindor,
Gryffindor’s sword; don’t you think Dumbledore would have
expected you to make the connection?”
“Oh yeah…”
Harry did not want to admit that he had
not been thinking about the sword at all when he suggested they go to
Godric’s Hollow. For him, the lure of the village lay in his
parents’ graves, the house where he had narrowly escaped death, and
in the person of Bathilda Bagshot.
“Remember what Muriel said?” he
asked eventually.
“Who?”
“You know,” he hesitated: He did
not want to say Ron’s name. “Ginny’s great-aunt. At the
wedding. The one who said you had skinny ankles.”
“Oh,” said Hermione. It was a
sticky moment: Harry knew that she had sensed Ron’s name in the
offing. He rushed on:
“She said Bathilda Bagshot still
lives in Godric’s Hollow.”
“Bathilda Bagshot,” murmured
Hermione, running her index finger over Bathilda’s embossed name on
the front cover of A History of Magic. “Well, I suppose—”
She gasped so dramatically that Harry’s
insides turned over; he drew his wand, looking around at the
entrance, half expecting to see a hand forcing its way through the
entrance flap, but there was nothing there.
“What?” he said, half angry, half
relieved. “What did you do that for? I thought you’d seen a Death
Eater unzipping the tent, at least—”
“Harry, what if Bathilda’s got the
sword? What if Dumbledore entrusted it to her?”
Harry considered this possibility.
Bathilda would be an extremely old woman by now, and according to
Muriel, she was “gaga.” Was it likely that Dumbledore would have
hidden the sword of Gryffindor with her? If so, Harry felt that
Dumbledore had left a great deal to chance: Dumbledore had never
revealed that he had replaced the sword with a fake, nor had he so
much as mentioned a friendship with Bathilda. Now, however, was not
the moment to cast doubt on Hermione’s theory, not when she was so
surprisingly willing to fall in with Harry’s dearest wish.
“Yeah, he might have done! So, are we
going to go to Godric’s Hollow?”
“Yes, but we’ll have to think it
through carefully, Harry.” She was sitting up now, and Harry could
tell that the prospect of having a plan again had lifted her mood as
much as his. “We’ll need to practice Disapparating together under
the Invisibility Cloak for a start, and perhaps Disillusionment
Charms would be sensible too, unless you think we should go the whole
hog and use Polyjuice Potion? In that case we’ll need to collect
hair from somebody. I actually think we’d better do that, Harry,
the thicker our disguises the better…”
Harry let her talk, nodding and
agreeing whenever there was a pause, but his mind had left the
conversation. For the first time since he had discovered that the
sword in Gringotts was a fake, he felt excited.
He was about to go home, about to
return to the place where he had had a family. It was in Godric’s
Hollow that, but for Voldemort, he would have grown up and spent
every school holiday. He could have invited friends to his house…
He might even have had brothers and sisters… It would have been his
mother who had made his seventeenth birthday cake. The life he had
lost had hardly ever seemed so real to him as at this moment, when he
knew he was about to see the place where it had been taken from him.
After Hermione had gone to bed that night, Harry quietly extracted
his rucksack from Hermione’s beaded bag, and from inside it, the
photograph album Hagrid had given him so long ago. For the first time
in months, he perused the old pictures of his parents, smiling and
waving up at him from the images, which were all he had left of them
now.
Harry would gladly have set out for
Godric’s Hollow the following day, but Hermione had other ideas.
Convinced as she was that Voldemort would expect Harry to return to
the scene of his parents’ deaths, she was determined that they
would set off only after they had ensured that they had the best
disguises possible. It was therefore a full week later—once they
had surreptitiously obtained hairs from innocent Muggles who were
Christmas shopping, and had practiced Apparating and Disapparating
while underneath the Invisibility Cloak together—that Hermione
agreed to make the journey.
They were to Apparate to the village
under cover of darkness, so it was late afternoon when they finally
swallowed Polyjuice Potion, Harry transforming into a balding,
middle-aged Muggle man, Hermione into his small and rather mousy
wife. The beaded bag containing all of their possessions (apart from
the Horcrux, which Harry was wearing around his neck) was tucked into
an inside pocket of Hermione’s buttoned-up coat. Harry lowered the
Invisibility Cloak over them, then they turned into the suffocating
darkness once again.
Heart beating in his throat, Harry
opened his eyes. They were standing hand in hand in a snowy lane
under a dark blue sky, in which the night’s first stars were
already glimmering feebly. Cottages stood on either side of the
narrow road, Christmas decorations twinkling in their windows. A
short way ahead of them, a glow of golden streetlights indicated the
center of the village.
“All this snow!” Hermione whispered
beneath the cloak. “Why didn’t we think of snow? After all our
precautions, we’ll leave prints! We’ll just have to get rid of
them—you go in front, I’ll do it—”
Harry did not want to enter the village
like a pantomime horse, trying to keep themselves concealed while
magically covering their traces.
“Let’s take off the Cloak,” said
Harry, and when she looked frightened, “Oh, come on, we don’t
look like us and there’s no one around.”
He stowed the Cloak under his jacket
and they made their way forward unhampered, the icy air stinging
their faces as they passed more cottages: Any one of them might have
been the one in which James and Lily had once lived or where Bathilda
lived now. Harry gazed at the front doors, their snow-burdened roofs,
and their front porches, wondering whether he remembered any of them,
knowing deep inside that it was impossible, that he had been little
more than a year old when he had left this place forever. He was not
even sure whether he would be able to see the cottage at all; he did
not know what happened when the subjects of a Fidelius Charm died.
Then the little lane along which they were walking curved to the left
and the heart of the village, a small square, was revealed to them.
Strung all around with colored lights,
there was what looked like a war memorial in the middle, partly
obscured by a windblown Christmas tree. There were several shops, a
post office, a pub, and a little church whose stained-glass windows
were glowing jewel-bright across the square.
The snow here had become impacted: It
was hard and slippery where people had trodden on it all day.
Villagers were crisscrossing in front of them, their figures briefly
illuminated by streetlamps. They heard a snatch of laughter and pop
music as the pub door opened and closed; then they heard a carol
start up inside the little church.
“Harry, I think it’s Christmas
Eve!” said Hermione.
“Is it?”
He had lost track of the date; they had
not seen a newspaper for weeks.
“I’m sure it is,” said Hermione,
her eyes upon the church. “They… they’ll be in there, won’t
they? Your mum and dad? I can see the graveyard behind it.”
Harry felt a thrill of something that
was beyond excitement, more like fear. Now that he was so near, he
wondered whether he wanted to see after all. Perhaps Hermione knew
how he was feeling, because she reached for his hand and took the
lead for the first time, pulling him forward. Halfway across the
square, however, she stopped dead.
“Harry, look!”
She was pointing at the war memorial.
As they had passed it, it had transformed. Instead of an obelisk
covered in names, there was a statue of three people: a man with
untidy hair and glasses, a woman with long hair and a kind, pretty
face, and a baby boy sitting in his mother’s arms. Snow lay upon
all their heads, like fluffy white caps.
Harry drew closer, gazing up into his
parents’ faces. He had never imagined that there would be a statue…
How strange it was to see himself represented in stone, a happy baby
without a scar on his forehead…
“C’mon,” said Harry, when he had
looked his fill, and they turned again toward the church. As they
crossed the road, he glanced over his shoulder; the statue had turned
back into the war memorial.
The singing grew louder as they
approached the church. It made Harry’s throat constrict, it
reminded him so forcefully of Hogwarts, of Peeves bellowing rude
versions of carols from inside suits of armor, of the Great Hall’s
twelve Christmas trees, of Dumbledore wearing a bonnet he had won in
a cracker, of Ron in a hand-knitted sweater…
There was a kissing gate at the
entrance to the graveyard. Hermione pushed it open as quietly as
possible and they edged through it. On either side of the slippery
path to the church doors, the snow lay deep and untouched. They moved
off through the snow, carving deep trenches behind them as they
walked around the building, keeping to the shadows beneath the
brilliant windows.
Behind the church, row upon row of
snowy tombstones protruded from a blanket of pale blue that was
flecked with dazzling red, gold, and green wherever the reflections
from the stained glass hit the snow. Keeping his hand closed tightly
on the wand in his jacket pocket, Harry moved toward the nearest
grave.
“Look at this, it’s an Abbott,
could be some long-lost relation of Hannah’s!”
“Keep your voice down,” Hermione
begged him.
They waded deeper and deeper into the
graveyard, gouging dark tracks into the snow behind them, stooping to
peer at the words on old headstones, every now and then squinting
into the surrounding darkness to make absolutely sure that they were
unaccompanied.
“Harry, here!”
Hermione was two rows of tombstones
away; he had to wade back to her, his heart positively banging in his
chest.
“Is it—?”
“No, but look!”
She pointed to the dark stone. Harry
stooped down and saw, upon the frozen, lichen-spotted granite, the
words KENDRA DUMBLEDORE and, a short way below her dates of birth and
death, AND HER DAUGHTER ARIANA. There was also a quotation:
Where your treasure is, there will your
heart be also.
So Rita Skeeter and Muriel had got some
of their facts right. The Dumbledore family had indeed lived here,
and part of it had died here.
Seeing the grave was worse than hearing
about it. Harry could not help thinking that he and Dumbledore both
had deep roots in this graveyard, and that Dumbledore ought to have
told him so, yet he had never thought to share the connection. They
could have visited the place together; for a moment Harry imagined
coming here with Dumbledore, of what a bond that would have been, of
how much it would have meant to him. But it seemed that to
Dumbledore, the fact that their families lay side by side in the same
graveyard had been an unimportant coincidence, irrelevant, perhaps,
to the job he wanted Harry to do.
Hermione was looking at Harry, and he
was glad that his face was hidden in shadow. He read the words on the
tombstone again. Where your treasure is, there will your heart be
also. He did not understand what these words meant. Surely Dumbledore
had chosen them, as the eldest member of the family once his mother
had died.
“Are you sure he never mentioned—?”
Hermione began.
“No,” said Harry curtly, then,
“let’s keep looking,” and he turned away, wishing he had not
seen the stone: He did not want his excited trepidation tainted with
resentment.
“Here!” cried Hermione again a few
moments later from out of the darkness. “Oh no, sorry! I thought it
said Potter.”
She was rubbing at a crumbling, mossy
stone, gazing down at it, a little frown on her face.
“Harry, come back a moment.”
He did not want to be sidetracked
again, and only grudgingly made his way back through the snow toward
her.
“What?”
“Look at this!”
The grave was extremely old, weathered
so that Harry could hardly make out the name. Hermione showed him the
symbol beneath it.
“Harry, that’s the mark in the
book!”
He peered at the place she indicated:
The stone was so worn that it was hard to make out what was engraved
there, though there did seem to be a triangular mark beneath the
nearly illegible name.
“Yeah… it could be…”
Hermione lit her wand and pointed it at
the name on the headstone.
“It says Ig—Ignotus, I think…”
“I’m going to keep looking for my
parents, all right?” Harry told her, a slight edge to his voice,
and he set off again, leaving her crouched beside the old grave.
Every now and then he recognized a
surname that, like Abbott, he had met at Hogwarts. Sometimes there
were several generations of the same Wizarding family represented in
the graveyard: Harry could tell from the dates that it had either
died out, or the current members had moved away from Godric’s
Hollow. Deeper and deeper amongst the graves he went, and every time
he reached a new headstone he felt a little lurch of apprehension and
anticipation.
The darkness and the silence seemed to
become, all of a sudden, much deeper. Harry looked around, worried,
thinking of dementors, then realized that the carols had finished,
that the chatter and flurry of churchgoers were fading away as they
made their way back into the square. Somebody inside the church had
just turned off the lights.
Then Hermione’s voice came out of the
blackness for the third time, sharp and clear from a few yards away.
“Harry, they’re here… right
here.”
And he knew by her tone that it was his
mother and father this time: He moved toward her, feeling as if
something heavy were pressing on his chest, the same sensation he had
had right after Dumbledore had died, a grief that had actually
weighed on his heart and lungs.
The headstone was only two rows behind
Kendra and Ariana’s. It was made of white marble, just like
Dumbledore’s tomb, and this made it easy to read, as it seemed to
shine in the dark. Harry did not need to kneel or even approach very
close to it to make out the words engraved upon it.
JAMES POTTER LILY POTTER
BORN 27 MARCH 1960 BORN 30 JANUARY 1960
DIED 31 OCTOBER 1981 DIED 31 OCTOBER
1981
The last enemy that shall be destroyed
is death.
Harry read the words slowly, as though
he would have only one chance to take in their meaning, and he read
the last of them aloud.
“‘The last enemy that shall be
destroyed is death’…” A horrible thought came to him, and with
it a kind of panic. “Isn’t that a Death Eater idea? Why is that
there?”
“It doesn’t mean defeating death in
the way the Death Eaters mean it, Harry,” said Hermione, her voice
gentle. “It means… you know… living beyond death. Living after
death.”
But they were not living, thought
Harry: They were gone. The empty words could not disguise the fact
that his parents’ moldering remains lay beneath snow and stone,
indifferent, unknowing. And tears came before he could stop them,
boiling hot then instantly freezing on his face, and what was the
point in wiping them off or pretending? He let them fall, his lips
pressed hard together, looking down at the thick snow hiding from his
eyes the place where the last of Lily and James lay, bones now,
surely, or dust, not knowing or caring that their living son stood so
near, his heart still beating, alive because of their sacrifice and
close to wishing, at this moment, that he was sleeping under the snow
with them.
Hermione had taken his hand again and
was gripping it tightly. He could not look at her, but returned the
pressure, now taking deep, sharp gulps of the night air, trying to
steady himself, trying to regain control. He should have brought
something to give them, and he had not thought of it, and every plant
in the graveyard was leafless and frozen. But Hermione raised her
wand, moved it in a circle through the air, and a wreath of Christmas
roses blossomed before them. Harry caught it and laid it on his
parents’ grave.
As soon as he stood up he wanted to
leave: He did not think he could stand another moment there. He put
his arm around Hermione’s shoulders, and she put hers around his
waist, and they turned in silence and walked away through the snow,
past Dumbledore’s mother and sister, back toward the dark church
and the out-of-sight kissing gate.
Chapter 17
Bathilda’s Secret
“Harry, stop.”
“What’s wrong?”
They had only just reached the grave of
the unknown Abbott.
“There’s someone there. Someone
watching us. I can tell. There, over by the bushes.”
They stood quite still, holding on to
each other, gazing at the dense black boundary of the graveyard.
Harry could not see anything.
“Are you sure?”
“I saw something move, I could have
sworn I did…”
She broke from him to free her wand
arm.
“We look like Muggles,” Harry
pointed out.
“Muggles who’ve just been laying
flowers on your parents’ grave! Harry, I’m sure there’s someone
over there!”
Harry thought of A History of Magic;
the graveyard was supposed to be haunted: what if—? But then he
heard a rustle and saw a little eddy of dislodged snow in the bush to
which Hermione had pointed. Ghosts could not move snow.
“It’s a cat,” said Harry, after a
second or two, “or a bird. If it was a Death Eater we’d be dead
by now. But let’s get out of here, and we can put the Cloak back
on.”
They glanced back repeatedly as they
made their way out of the graveyard. Harry, who did not feel as
sanguine as he had pretended when reassuring Hermione, was glad to
reach the gate and the slippery pavement. They pulled the
Invisibility Cloak back over themselves. The pub was fuller than
before: Many voices inside it were now singing the carol that they
had heard as they approached the church. For a moment Harry
considered suggesting they take refuge inside it, but before he could
say anything Hermione murmured, “Let’s go this way,” and pulled
him down the dark street leading out of the village in the opposite
direction from which they had entered. Harry could make out the point
where the cottages ended and the lane turned into open country again.
They walked as quickly as they dared, past more windows sparkling
with multicolored lights, the outlines of Christmas trees dark
through the curtains.
“How are we going to find Bathilda’s
house?” asked Hermione, who was shivering a little and kept
glancing back over her shoulder. “Harry? What do you think? Harry?”
She tugged at his arm, but Harry was
not paying attention. He was looking toward the dark mass that stood
at the very end of this row of houses. Next moment he had sped up,
dragging Hermione along with him; she slipped a little on the ice.
“Harry—”
“Look… Look at it, Hermione…”
“I don’t… oh!”
He could see it; the Fidelius Charm
must have died with James and Lily. The hedge had grown wild in the
sixteen years since Hagrid had taken Harry from the rubble that lay
scattered amongst the waist-high grass. Most of the cottage was still
standing, though entirely covered in dark ivy and snow, but the right
side of the top floor had been blown apart; that, Harry was sure, was
where the curse had backfired. He and Hermione stood at the gate,
gazing up at the wreck of what must once have been a cottage just
like those that flanked it.
“I wonder why nobody’s ever rebuilt
it?” whispered Hermione.
“Maybe you can’t rebuild it?”
Harry replied. “Maybe it’s like the injuries from Dark Magic and
you can’t repair the damage?”
He slipped a hand from beneath the
Cloak and grasped the snowy and thickly rusted gate, not wishing to
open it, but simply to hold some part of the house.
“You’re not going to go inside? It
looks unsafe, it might—oh, Harry, look!”
His touch on the gate seemed to have
done it. A sign had risen out of the ground in front of them, up
through the tangles of nettles and weeds, like some bizarre,
fast-growing flower, and in golden letters upon the wood it said:
On this spot, on the night of 31
October 1981,
Lily and James Potter lost their lives.
Their son, Harry, remains the only
wizard
ever to have survived the Killing
Curse.
This house, invisible to Muggles, has
been left
in its ruined state as a monument to
the Potters
and as a reminder of the violence
that tore apart their family.
And all around these neatly lettered
words, scribbles had been added by other witches and wizards who had
come to see the place where the Boy Who Lived had escaped. Some had
merely signed their names in Everlasting Ink; others had carved their
initials into the wood, still others had left messages. The most
recent of these, shining brightly over sixteen years’ worth of
magical graffiti, all said similar things.
Good luck, Harry, wherever you are.
If you read this, Harry, we’re all
behind you!
Long live Harry Potter.
“They shouldn’t have written on the
sign!” said Hermione, indignant.
But Harry beamed at her.
“It’s brilliant. I’m glad they
did. I…”
He broke off. A heavily muffled figure
was hobbling up the lane toward them, silhouetted by the bright
lights in the distant square. Harry thought, though it was hard to
judge, that the figure was a woman. She was moving slowly, possibly
frightened of slipping on the snowy ground. Her stoop, her stoutness,
her shuffling gait all gave an impression of extreme age. They
watched in silence as she drew nearer. Harry was waiting to see
whether she would turn into any of the cottages she was passing, but
he knew instinctively that she would not. At last she came to a halt
a few yards from them and simply stood there in the middle of the
frozen road, facing them.
He did not need Hermione’s pinch to
his arm. There was next to no chance that this woman was a Muggle:
She was standing there gazing at a house that ought to have been
completely invisible to her, if she was not a witch. Even assuming
that she was a witch, however, it was odd behavior to come out on a
night this cold, simply to look at an old ruin. By all the rules of
normal magic, meanwhile, she ought not to be able to see Hermione and
him at all. Nevertheless, Harry had the strangest feeling that she
knew that they were there, and also who they were. Just as he had
reached this uneasy conclusion, she raised a gloved hand and
beckoned.
Hermione moved closer to him under the
Cloak, her arm pressed against his.
“How does she know?”
He shook his head. The woman beckoned
again, more vigorously. Harry could think of many reasons not to obey
the summons, and yet his suspicions about her identity were growing
stronger every moment that they stood facing each other in the
deserted street.
Was it possible that she had been
waiting for them all these long months? That Dumbledore had told her
to wait, and that Harry would come in the end? Was it not likely that
it was she who had moved in the shadows in the graveyard and had
followed them to this spot? Even her ability to sense them suggested
some Dumbledore-ish power that he had never encountered before.
Finally Harry spoke, causing Hermione
to gasp and jump.
“Are you Bathilda?”
The muffled figure nodded and beckoned
again.
Beneath the Cloak Harry and Hermione
looked at each other. Harry raised his eyebrows; Hermione gave a
tiny, nervous nod.
They stepped toward the woman and, at
once, she turned and hobbled off back the way they had come. Leading
them past several houses, she turned in at a gate. They followed her
up the front path through a garden nearly as overgrown as the one
they had just left. She fumbled for a moment with a key at the front
door, then opened it and stepped back to let them pass.
She smelled bad, or perhaps it was her
house: Harry wrinkled his nose as they sidled past her and pulled off
the Cloak. Now that he was beside her, he realized how tiny she was;
bowed down with age, she came barely level with his chest. She closed
the door behind them, her knuckles blue and mottled against the
peeling paint, then turned and peered into Harry’s face. Her eyes
were thick with cataracts and sunken into folds of transparent skin,
and her whole face was dotted with broken veins and liver spots. He
wondered whether she could make him out at all; even if she could, it
was the balding Muggle whose identity he had stolen that she would
see.
The odor of old age, of dust, of
unwashed clothes and stale food intensified as she unwound a
moth-eaten black shawl, revealing a head of scant white hair through
which the scalp showed clearly.
“Bathilda?” Harry repeated.
She nodded again. Harry became aware of
the locket against his skin; the thing inside it that sometimes
ticked or beat had woken; he could feel it pulsing through the cold
gold. Did it know, could it sense, that the thing that would destroy
it was near?
Bathilda shuffled past them, pushing
Hermione aside as though she had not seen her, and vanished into what
seemed to be a sitting room.
“Harry, I’m not sure about this,”
breathed Hermione.
“Look at the size of her; I think we
could overpower her if we had to,” said Harry. “Listen, I should
have told you, I knew she wasn’t all there. Muriel called her
‘gaga.’”
“Come!” called Bathilda from the
next room.
Hermione jumped and clutched Harry’s
arm.
“It’s okay,” said Harry
reassuringly, and he led the way into the sitting room.
Bathilda was tottering around the place
lighting candles, but it was still very dark, not to mention
extremely dirty. Thick dust crunched beneath their feet, and Harry’s
nose detected, underneath the dank and mildewed smell, something
worse, like meat gone bad. He wondered when was the last time anyone
had been inside Bathilda’s house to check whether she was coping.
She seemed to have forgotten that she could do magic, too, for she
lit the candles clumsily by hand, her trailing lace cuff in constant
danger of catching fire.
“Let me do that,” offered Harry,
and he took the matches from her. She stood watching him as he
finished lighting the candle stubs that stood on saucers around the
room, perched precariously on stacks of books and on side tables
crammed with cracked and moldy cups.
The last surface on which Harry spotted
a candle was a bow-fronted chest of drawers on which there stood a
large number of photographs. When the flame danced into life, its
reflection wavered on their dusty glass and silver. He saw a few tiny
movements from the pictures. As Bathilda fumbled with logs for the
fire, he muttered “Tergeo”: The dust vanished from the
photographs, and he saw at once that half a dozen were missing from
the largest and most ornate frames. He wondered whether Bathilda or
somebody else had removed them. Then the sight of a photograph near
the back of the collection caught his eye, and he snatched it up.
It was the golden-haired, merry-faced
thief, the young man who had perched on Gregorovitch’s windowsill,
smiling lazily up at Harry out of the silver frame. And it came to
Harry instantly where he had seen the boy before: in The Life and
Lies of Albus Dumbledore, arm in arm with the teenage Dumbledore, and
that must be where all the missing photographs were: in Rita’s
book.
“Mrs.—Miss—Bagshot?” he said,
and his voice shook slightly. “Who is this?”
Bathilda was standing in the middle of
the room watching Hermione light the fire for her.
“Miss Bagshot?” Harry repeated, and
he advanced with the picture in his hands as the flames burst into
life in the fireplace. Bathilda looked up at his voice, and the
Horcrux beat faster upon his chest.
“Who is this person?” Harry asked
her, pushing the picture forward.
She peered at it solemnly, then up at
Harry.
“Do you know who this is?” he
repeated in a much slower and louder voice than usual. “This man?
Do you know him? What’s he called?”
Bathilda merely looked vague. Harry
felt an awful frustration. How had Rita Skeeter unlocked Bathilda’s
memories?
“Who is this man?” he repeated
loudly.
“Harry, what are you doing?” asked
Hermione.
“This picture, Hermione, it’s the
thief, the thief who stole from Gregorovitch! Please!” he said to
Bathilda. “Who is this?”
But she only stared at him.
“Why did you ask us to come with you,
Mrs.—Miss—Bagshot?” asked Hermione, raising her own voice. “Was
there something you wanted to tell us?”
Giving no sign that she had heard
Hermione, Bathilda now shuffled a few steps closer to Harry. With a
little jerk of her head she looked back into the hall.
“You want us to leave?” he asked.
She repeated the gesture, this time
pointing firstly at him, then at herself, then at the ceiling.
“Oh, right… Hermione, I think she
wants me to go upstairs with her.”
“All right,” said Hermione, “let’s
go.”
But when Hermione moved, Bathilda shook
her head with surprising vigor, once more pointing first at Harry,
then to herself.
“She wants me to go with her, alone.”
“Why?” asked Hermione, and her
voice rang out sharp and clear in the candlelit room; the old lady
shook her head a little at the loud noise.
“Maybe Dumbledore told her to give
the sword to me, and only to me?”
“Do you really think she knows who
you are?”
“Yes,” said Harry, looking down
into the milky eyes fixed upon his own, “I think she does.”
“Well, okay then, but be quick,
Harry.”
“Lead the way,” Harry told
Bathilda.
She seemed to understand, because she
shuffled around him toward the door. Harry glanced back at Hermione
with a reassuring smile, but he was not sure she had seen it; she
stood hugging herself in the midst of the candlelit squalor, looking
toward the bookcase. As Harry walked out of the room, unseen by both
Hermione and Bathilda, he slipped the silver-framed photograph of the
unknown thief inside his jacket.
The stairs were steep and narrow: Harry
was half tempted to place his hands on stout Bathilda’s backside to
ensure that she did not topple over backward on top of him, which
seemed only too likely. Slowly, wheezing a little, she climbed to the
upper landing, turned immediately right, and led him into a
low-ceilinged bedroom.
It was pitch-black and smelled
horrible: Harry had just made out a chamber pot protruding from under
the bed before Bathilda closed the door and even that was swallowed
by the darkness.
“Lumos,” said Harry, and his wand
ignited. He gave a start: Bathilda had moved close to him in those
few seconds of darkness, and he had not heard her approach.
“You are Potter?” she whispered.
“Yes, I am.”
She nodded slowly, solemnly. Harry felt
the Horcrux beating fast, faster than his own heart: It was an
unpleasant, agitating sensation.
“Have you got anything for me?”
Harry asked, but she seemed distracted by his lit wand-tip.
“Have you got anything for me?” he
repeated.
Then she closed her eyes and several
things happened at once: Harry’s scar prickled painfully; the
Horcrux twitched so that the front of his sweater actually moved; the
dark, fetid room dissolved momentarily. He felt a leap of joy and
spoke in a high, cold voice: Hold him!
Harry swayed where he stood: The dark,
foul-smelling room seemed to close around him again; he did not know
what had just happened.
“Have you got anything for me?” he
asked for a third time, much louder.
“Over here,” she whispered,
pointing to the corner. Harry raised his wand and saw the outline of
a cluttered dressing table beneath the curtained window.
This time she did not lead him. Harry
edged between her and the unmade bed, his wand raised. He did not
want to look away from her.
“What is it?” he asked as he
reached the dressing table, which was heaped high with what looked
and smelled like dirty laundry.
“There,” she said, pointing at the
shapeless mass.
And in the instant that he looked away,
his eyes raking the tangled mess for a sword hilt, a ruby, she moved
weirdly: He saw it out of the corner of his eye; panic made him turn
and horror paralyzed him as he saw the old body collapsing and the
great snake pouring from the place where her neck had been.
The snake struck as he raised his wand:
The force of the bite to his forearm sent the wand spinning up toward
the ceiling; its light swung dizzyingly around the room and was
extinguished: Then a powerful blow from the tail to his midriff
knocked the breath out of him: He fell backward onto the dressing
table, into the mound of filthy clothing—
He rolled sideways, narrowly avoiding
the snake’s tail, which thrashed down upon the table where he had
been a second earlier: Fragments of the glass surface rained upon him
as he hit the floor. From below he heard Hermione call, “Harry?”
He could not get enough breath into his
lungs to call back: Then a heavy smooth mass smashed him to the floor
and he felt it slide over him, powerful, muscular—
“No!” he gasped, pinned to the
floor.
“Yes,” whispered the voice. “Yesss…
hold you… hold you…”
“Accio… Accio Wand…”
But nothing happened and he needed his
hands to try to force the snake from him as it coiled itself around
his torso, squeezing the air from him, pressing the Horcrux hard into
his chest, a circle of ice that throbbed with life, inches from his
own frantic heart, and his brain was flooding with cold, white light,
all thought obliterated, his own breath drowned, distant footsteps,
everything going…
A metal heart was banging outside his
chest, and now he was flying, flying with triumph in his heart,
without need of broomstick or thestral…
He was abruptly awake in the
sour-smelling darkness; Nagini had released him. He scrambled up and
saw the snake outlined against the landing light: It struck, and
Hermione dived aside with a shriek; her deflected curse hit the
curtained window, which shattered. Frozen air filled the room as
Harry ducked to avoid another shower of broken glass and his foot
slipped on a pencil-like something—his wand—
He bent and snatched it up, but now the
room was full of the snake, its tail thrashing; Hermione was nowhere
to be seen and for a moment Harry thought the worst, but then there
was a loud bang and a flash of red light, and the snake flew into the
air, smacking Harry hard in the face as it went, coil after heavy
coil rising up to the ceiling. Harry raised his wand, but as he did
so, his scar seared more painfully, more powerfully than it had done
in years.
“He’s coming! Hermione, he’s
coming!”
As he yelled the snake fell, hissing
wildly. Everything was chaos: It smashed shelves from the wall, and
splintered china flew everywhere as Harry jumped over the bed and
seized the dark shape he knew to be Hermione—
She shrieked with pain as he pulled her
back across the bed: The snake reared again, but Harry knew that
worse than the snake was coming, was perhaps already at the gate, his
head was going to split open with the pain from his scar—
The snake lunged as he took a running
leap, dragging Hermione with him; as it struck, Hermione screamed,
“Confringo!” and her spell flew around the room, exploding the
wardrobe mirror and ricocheting back at them, bouncing from floor to
ceiling; Harry felt the heat of it sear the back of his hand. Glass
cut his cheek as, pulling Hermione with him, he leapt from bed to
broken dressing table and then straight out of the smashed window
into nothingness, her scream reverberating through the night as they
twisted in midair…
And then his scar burst open and he was
Voldemort and he was running across the fetid bedroom, his long white
hands clutching at the windowsill as he glimpsed the bald man and the
little woman twist and vanish, and he screamed with rage, a scream
that mingled with the girl’s, that echoed across the dark gardens
over the church bells ringing in Christmas Day…
And his scream was Harry’s scream,
his pain was Harry’s pain… that it could happen here, where it
had happened before… here, within sight of that house where he had
come so close to knowing what it was to die… to die… The pain was
so terrible… ripped from his body… But if he had no body, why did
his head hurt so badly; if he was dead, how could he feel so
unbearably, didn’t pain cease with death, didn’t it go…
The night wet and windy, two children
dressed as pumpkins waddling across the square, and the shop windows
covered in paper spiders, all the tawdry Muggle trappings of a world
in which they did not believe… And he was gliding along, that sense
of purpose and power and rightness in him that he always knew on
these occasions… Not anger… that was for weaker souls than he…
but triumph, yes… He had waited for this, he had hoped for it…
“Nice costume, mister!”
He saw the small boy’s smile falter
as he ran near enough to see beneath the hood of the cloak, saw the
fear cloud his painted face: Then the child turned and ran away…
Beneath the robe he fingered the handle of his wand… One simple
movement and the child would never reach his mother… but
unnecessary, quite unnecessary…
And along a new and darker street he
moved, and now his destination was in sight at last, the Fidelius
Charm broken, though they did not know it yet… And he made less
noise than the dead leaves slithering along the pavement as he drew
level with the dark hedge, and stared over it…
They had not drawn the curtains; he saw
them quite clearly in their little sitting room, the tall
black-haired man in his glasses, making puffs of colored smoke erupt
from his wand for the amusement of the small black-haired boy in his
blue pajamas. The child was laughing and trying to catch the smoke,
to grab it in his small fist…
A door opened and the mother entered,
saying words he could not hear, her long dark-red hair falling over
her face. Now the father scooped up the son and handed him to the
mother. He threw his wand down upon the sofa and stretched, yawning…
The gate creaked a little as he pushed
it open, but James Potter did not hear. His white hand pulled out the
wand beneath his cloak and pointed it at the door, which burst open.
He was over the threshold as James came
sprinting into the hall. It was easy, too easy, he had not even
picked up his wand…
“Lily, take Harry and go! It’s him!
Go! Run! I’ll hold him off!”
Hold him off, without a wand in his
hand!…He laughed before casting the curse…
“Avada Kedavra!”
The green light filled the cramped
hallway, it lit the pram pushed against the wall, it made the
banisters glare like lightning rods, and James Potter fell like a
marionette whose strings were cut…
He could hear her screaming from the
upper floor, trapped, but as long as she was sensible, she, at least,
had nothing to fear… He climbed the steps, listening with faint
amusement to her attempts to barricade herself in… She had no wand
upon her either… How stupid they were, and how trusting, thinking
that their safety lay in friends, that weapons could be discarded
even for moments…
He forced the door open, cast aside the
chair and boxes hastily piled against it with one lazy wave of his
wand… and there she stood, the child in her arms. At the sight of
him, she dropped her son into the crib behind her and threw her arms
wide, as if this would help, as if in shielding him from sight she
hoped to be chosen instead…
“Not Harry, not Harry, please not
Harry!”
“Stand aside, you silly girl… stand
aside, now.”
“Not Harry, please no, take me, kill
me instead—”
“This is my last warning—”
“Not Harry! Please… have mercy…
have mercy… Not Harry! Not Harry! Please—I’ll do anything—”
“Stand aside. Stand aside, girl!”
He could have forced her away from the
crib, but it seemed more prudent to finish them all…
The green light flashed around the room
and she dropped like her husband. The child had not cried all this
time: He could stand, clutching the bars of his crib, and he looked
up into the intruder’s face with a kind of bright interest, perhaps
thinking that it was his father who hid beneath the cloak, making
more pretty lights, and his mother would pop up any moment, laughing—
He pointed the wand very carefully into
the boy’s face: He wanted to see it happen, the destruction of this
one, inexplicable danger. The child began to cry: It had seen that he
was not James. He did not like it crying, he had never been able to
stomach the small ones whining in the orphanage—
“Avada Kedavra!”
And then he broke: He was nothing,
nothing but pain and terror, and he must hide himself, not here in
the rubble of the ruined house, where the child was trapped and
screaming, but far away… far away…
“No,” he moaned.
The snake rustled on the filthy,
cluttered floor, and he had killed the boy, and yet he was the boy…
“No…”
And now he stood at the broken window
of Bathilda’s house, immersed in memories of his greatest loss, and
at his feet the great snake slithered over broken china and glass…
He looked down and saw something… something incredible…
“No…”
“Harry, it’s all right, you’re
all right!”
He stooped down and picked up the
smashed photograph. There he was, the unknown thief, the thief he was
seeking…
“No… I dropped it… I dropped it…”
“Harry, it’s okay, wake up, wake
up!”
He was Harry… Harry, not Voldemort…
and the thing that was rustling was not a snake… He opened his
eyes.
“Harry,” Hermione whispered. “Do
you feel all—all right?”
“Yes,” he lied.
He was in the tent, lying on one of the
lower bunks beneath a heap of blankets. He could tell that it was
almost dawn by the stillness and the quality of the cold, flat light
beyond the canvas ceiling. He was drenched in sweat; he could feel it
on the sheets and blankets.
“We got away.”
“Yes,” said Hermione. “I had to
use a Hover Charm to get you into your bunk, I couldn’t lift you.
You’ve been… Well, you haven’t been quite…”
There were purple shadows under her
brown eyes and he noticed a small sponge in her hand: She had been
wiping his face.
“You’ve been ill,” she finished.
“Quite ill.”
“How long ago did we leave?”
“Hours ago. It’s nearly morning.”
“And I’ve been… what,
unconscious?”
“Not exactly,” said Hermione
uncomfortably. “You’ve been shouting and moaning and… things,”
she added in a tone that made Harry feel uneasy. What had he done?
Screamed curses like Voldemort, cried like the baby in the crib?
“I couldn’t get the Horcrux off
you,” Hermione said, and he knew she wanted to change the subject.
“It was stuck, stuck to your chest. You’ve got a mark; I’m
sorry, I had to use a Severing Charm to get it away. The snake bit
you too, but I’ve cleaned the wound and put some dittany on it…”
He pulled the sweaty T-shirt he was
wearing away from himself and looked down. There was a scarlet oval
over his heart where the locket had burned him. He could also see the
half-healed puncture marks to his forearm.
“Where’ve you put the Horcrux?”
“In my bag. I think we should keep it
off for a while.”
He lay back on his pillows and looked
into her pinched gray face.
“We shouldn’t have gone to Godric’s
Hollow. It’s my fault, it’s all my fault, Hermione, I’m sorry.”
“It’s not your fault. I wanted to
go too; I really thought Dumbledore might have left the sword there
for you.”
“Yeah, well… we got that wrong,
didn’t we?”
“What happened, Harry? What happened
when she took you upstairs? Was the snake hiding somewhere? Did it
just come out and kill her and attack you?”
“No,” he said. “She was the
snake… or the snake was her… all along.”
“W-what?”
He closed his eyes. He could still
smell Bathilda’s house on him: It made the whole thing horribly
vivid.
“Bathilda must’ve been dead a
while. The snake was… was inside her. You-Know-Who put it there in
Godric’s Hollow, to wait. You were right. He knew I’d go back.”
“The snake was inside her?”
He opened his eyes again: Hermione
looked revolted, nauseated.
“Lupin said there would be magic we’d
never imagined,” Harry said. “She didn’t want to talk in front
of you, because it was Parseltongue, all Parseltongue, and I didn’t
realize, but of course I could understand her. Once we were up in the
room, the snake sent a message to You-Know-Who, I heard it happen
inside my head, I felt him get excited, he said to keep me there…
and then…”
He remembered the snake coming our of
Bathilda’s neck: Hermione did not need to know the details.
“…she changed, changed into the
snake, and attacked.”
He looked down at the puncture marks.
“It wasn’t supposed to kill me,
just keep me there till You-Know-Who came.”
If he had only managed to kill the
snake, it would have been worth it, all of it… Sick at heart, he
sat up and threw back the covers.
“Harry, no, I’m sure you ought to
rest!”
“You’re the one who needs sleep. No
offense, but you look terrible. I’m fine. I’ll keep watch for a
while. Where’s my wand?”
She did not answer, she merely looked
at him.
“Where’s my wand, Hermione?”
She was biting her lip, and tears swam
in her eyes.
“Harry…”
“Where’s my wand?”
She reached down beside the bed and
held it out to him.
The holly and phoenix wand was nearly
severed in two. One fragile strand of phoenix feather kept both
pieces hanging together. The wood had splintered apart completely.
Harry took it into his hands as though it was a living thing that had
suffered a terrible injury. He could not think properly: Everything
was a blur of panic and fear. Then he held out the wand to Hermione.
“Mend it. Please.”
“Harry, I don’t think, when it’s
broken like this—”
“Please, Hermione, try!”
“R-Reparo.”
The dangling half of the wand resealed
itself. Harry held it up.
“Lumos!”
The wand sparked feebly, then went out.
Harry pointed it at Hermione.
“Expelliarmus!”
Hermione’s wand gave a little jerk,
but did not leave her hand. The feeble attempt at magic was too much
for Harry’s wand, which split into two again. He stared at it,
aghast, unable to take in what he was seeing… the wand that had
survived so much…
“Harry,” Hermione whispered so
quietly he could hardly hear her. “I’m so, so sorry. I think it
was me. As we were leaving, you know, the snake was coming for us,
and so I cast a Blasting Curse, and it rebounded everywhere, and it
must have—must have hit—”
“It was an accident,” said Harry
mechanically. He felt empty, stunned. “We’ll—we’ll find a way
to repair it.”
“Harry, I don’t think we’re going
to be able to,” said Hermione, the tears trickling down her face.
“Remember… remember Ron? When he broke his wand, crashing the
car? It was never the same again, he had to get a new one.”
Harry thought of Ollivander, kidnapped
and held hostage by Voldemort; of Gregorovitch, who was dead. How was
he supposed to find himself a new wand?
“Well,” he said, in a falsely
matter-of-fact voice, “well, I’ll just borrow yours for now,
then. While I keep watch.”
Her face glazed with tears, Hermione
handed over her wand, and he left her sitting beside his bed,
desiring nothing more than to get away from her.
Chapter 18
The Life and Lies of Albus Dumbledore
The sun was coming up: The pure,
colorless vastness of the sky stretched over him, indifferent to him
and his suffering. Harry sat down in the tent entrance and took a
deep breath of clean air. Simply to be alive to watch the sun rise
over the sparkling snowy hillside ought to have been the greatest
treasure on earth, yet he could not appreciate it: His senses had
been spiked by the calamity of losing his wand. He looked out over a
valley blanketed in snow, distant church bells chiming through the
glittering silence.
Without realizing it, he was digging
his fingers into his arms as if he were trying to resist physical
pain. He had spilled his own blood more times than he could count; he
had lost all the bones in his right arm once; this journey had
already given him scars to his chest and forearm to join those on his
hand and forehead, but never, until this moment, had he felt himself
to be fatally weakened, vulnerable, and naked, as though the best
part of his magical power had been torn from him. He knew exactly
what Hermione would say if he expressed any of this: The wand is only
as good as the wizard. But she was wrong, his case was different. She
had not felt the wand spin like the needle of a compass and shoot
golden flames at his enemy. He had lost the protection of the twin
cores, and only now that it was gone did he realize how much he had
been counting upon it.
He pulled the pieces of the broken wand
out of his pocket and, without looking at them, tucked them away in
Hagrid’s pouch around his neck. The pouch was now too full of
broken and useless objects to take any more. Harry’s hand brushed
the old Snitch through the mokeskin and for a moment he had to fight
the temptation to pull it out and throw it away. Impenetrable,
unhelpful, useless, like everything else Dumbledore had left behind—
And his fury at Dumbledore broke over
him now like lava, scorching him inside, wiping out every other
feeling. Out of sheer desperation they had talked themselves into
believing that Godric’s Hollow held answers, convinced themselves
that they were supposed to go back, that it was all part of some
secret path laid out for them by Dumbledore; but there was no map, no
plan. Dumbledore had left them to grope in the darkness, to wrestle
with unknown and undreamed-of terrors, alone and unaided: Nothing was
explained, nothing was given freely, they had no sword, and now,
Harry had no wand. And he had dropped the photograph of the thief,
and it would surely be easy now for Voldemort to find out who he was…
Voldemort had all the information now…
“Harry?”
Hermione looked frightened that he
might curse her with her own wand. Her face streaked with tears, she
crouched down beside him, two cups of tea trembling in her hands and
something bulky under her arm.
“Thanks,” he said, taking one of
the cups.
“Do you mind if I talk to you?”
“No,” he said because he did not
want to hurt her feelings.
“Harry, you wanted to know who that
man in the picture was. Well… I’ve got the book.”
Timidly she pushed it onto his lap, a
pristine copy of The Life and Lies of Albus Dumbledore.
“Where—how—?”
“It was in Bathilda’s sitting room,
just lying there… This note was sticking out of the top of it.”
Hermione read the few lines of spiky,
acid-green writing aloud.
“‘Dear Batty, Thanks for your help.
Here’s a copy of the book, hope you like it. You said everything,
even if you don’t remember it. Rita.’ I think it must have
arrived while the real Bathilda was alive, but perhaps she wasn’t
in any fit state to read it?”
“No, she probably wasn’t.”
Harry looked down upon Dumbledore’s
face and experienced a surge of savage pleasure: Now he would know
all the things that Dumbledore had never thought it worth telling
him, whether Dumbledore wanted him to or not.
“You’re still really angry at me,
aren’t you?” said Hermione; he looked up to see fresh tears
leaking out of her eyes, and knew that his anger must have shown in
his face.
“No,” he said quietly. “No,
Hermione, I know it was an accident. You were trying to get us out of
there alive, and you were incredible. I’d be dead if you hadn’t
been there to help me.”
He tried to return her watery smile,
then turned his attention to the book. Its spine was stiff; it had
clearly never been opened before. He riffled through the pages,
looking for photographs. He came across the one he sought almost at
once, the young Dumbledore and his handsome companion, roaring with
laughter at some long-forgotten joke. Harry dropped his eyes to the
caption.
Albus Dumbledore, shortly after his
mother’s death,
with his friend Gellert Grindelwald.
Harry gaped at the last word for
several long moments. Grindelwald. His friend Grindelwald. He looked
sideways at Hermione, who was still contemplating the name as though
she could not believe her eyes. Slowly she looked up at Harry.
“Grindelwald?”
Ignoring the remainder of the
photographs, Harry searched the pages around them for a recurrence of
that fatal name. He soon discovered it and read greedily, but became
lost: It was necessary to go further back to make sense of it all,
and eventually he found himself at the start of a chapter entitled
“The Greater Good.” Together, he and Hermione started to read:
Now approaching his eighteenth
birthday, Dumbledore left Hogwarts in a blaze of glory—Head Boy,
Prefect, Winner of the Barnabus Finkley Prize for Exceptional
Spell-Casting, British Youth Representative to the Wizengamot, Gold
Medal-Winner for Ground-Breaking Contribution to the International
Alchemical Conference in Cairo. Dumbledore intended, next, to take a
Grand Tour with Elphias “Dogbreath” Doge, the dim-witted but
devoted sidekick he had picked up at school.
The two young men were staying at the
Leaky Cauldron in London, preparing to depart for Greece the
following morning, when an owl arrived bearing news of Dumbledore’s
mother’s death. “Dogbreath” Doge, who refused to be interviewed
for this book, has given the public his own sentimental version of
what happened next. He represents Kendra’s death as a tragic blow,
and Dumbledore’s decision to give up his expedition as an act of
noble self-sacrifice.
Certainly Dumbledore returned to
Godric’s Hollow at once, supposedly to “care” for his younger
brother and sister. But how much care did he actually give them?
“He were a head case, that
Aberforth,” says Enid Smeek, whose family lived on the outskirts of
Godric’s Hollow at that time. “Ran wild. ’Course, with his mum
and dad gone you’d have felt sorry for him, only he kept chucking
goat dung at my head. I don’t think Albus was fussed about him, I
never saw them together, anyway.”
So what was Albus doing, if not
comforting his wild young brother? The answer, it seems, is ensuring
the continued imprisonment of his sister. For, though her first
jailer had died, there was no change in the pitiful condition of
Ariana Dumbledore. Her very existence continued to be known only to
those few outsiders who, like “Dogbreath” Doge, could be counted
upon to believe in the story of her “ill health.”
Another such easily satisfied friend of
the family was Bathilda Bagshot, the celebrated magical historian who
has lived in Godric’s Hollow for many years. Kendra, of course, had
rebuffed Bathilda when she first attempted to welcome the family to
the village. Several years later, however, the author sent an owl to
Albus at Hogwarts, having been favorably impressed by his paper on
trans-species transformation in Transfiguration Today. This initial
contact led to acquaintance with the entire Dumbledore family. At the
time of Kendra’s death, Bathilda was the only person in Godric’s
Hollow who was on speaking terms with Dumbledore’s mother.
Unfortunately, the brilliance that
Bathilda exhibited earlier in her life has now dimmed. “The fire’s
lit, but the cauldron’s empty,” as Ivor Dillonsby put it to me,
or, in Enid Smeek’s slightly earthier phrase, “She’s nutty as
squirrel poo.” Nevertheless, a combination of tried-and-tested
reporting techniques enabled me to extract enough nuggets of hard
fact to string together the whole scandalous story.
Like the rest of the Wizarding world,
Bathilda puts Kendra’s premature death down to a backfiring charm,
a story repeated by Albus and Aberforth in later years. Bathilda also
parrots the family line on Ariana, calling her “frail” and
“delicate.” On one subject, however, Bathilda is well worth the
effort I put into procuring Veritaserum, for she, and she alone,
knows the full story of the best-kept secret of Albus Dumbledore’s
life. Now revealed for the first time, it calls into question
everything that his admirers believed of Dumbledore: his supposed
hatred of the Dark Arts, his opposition to the oppression of Muggles,
even his devotion to his own family.
The very same summer that Dumbledore
went home to Godric’s Hollow, now an orphan and head of the family,
Bathilda Bagshot agreed to accept into her home her great-nephew,
Gellert Grindelwald.
The name of Grindelwald is justly
famous: In a list of Most Dangerous Dark Wizards of All Time, he
would miss out on the top spot only because You-Know-Who arrived, a
generation later, to steal his crown. As Grindelwald never extended
his campaign of terror to Britain, however, the details of his rise
to power are not widely known here.
Educated at Durmstrang, a school famous
even then for its unfortunate tolerance of the Dark Arts, Grindelwald
showed himself quite as precociously brilliant as Dumbledore. Rather
than channel his abilities into the attainment of awards and prizes,
however, Gellert Grindelwald devoted himself to other pursuits. At
sixteen years old, even Durmstrang felt it could no longer turn a
blind eye to the twisted experiments of Gellert Grindelwald, and he
was expelled.
Hitherto, all that has been known of
Grindelwald’s next movements is that he “traveled abroad for some
months.” It can now be revealed that Grindelwald chose to visit his
great-aunt in Godric’s Hollow, and that there, intensely shocking
though it will be for many to hear it, he struck up a close
friendship with none other than Albus Dumbledore.
“He seemed a charming boy to me,”
babbles Bathilda, “whatever he became later. Naturally I introduced
him to poor Albus, who was missing the company of lads his own age.
The boys took to each other at once.”
They certainly did. Bathilda shows me a
letter, kept by her, that Albus Dumbledore sent Gellert Grindelwald
in the dead of night.
“Yes, even after they’d spent all
day in discussion—both such brilliant young boys, they got on like
a cauldron on fire—I’d sometimes hear an owl tapping at Gellert’s
bedroom window, delivering a letter from Albus! An idea would have
struck him, and he had to let Gellert know immediately!”
And what ideas they were. Profoundly
shocking though Albus Dumbledore’s fans will find it, here are the
thoughts of their seventeen-year-old hero, as relayed to his new best
friend. (A copy of the original letter may be seen on page 463.)
Gellert—
Your point about Wizard dominance being
FOR THE MUGGLES’ OWN GOOD—this, I think, is the crucial point.
Yes, we have been given power and yes, that power gives us the right
to rule, but it also gives us responsibilities over the ruled. We
must stress this point, it will be the foundation stone upon which we
build. Where we are opposed, as we surely will be, this must be the
basis of all our counterarguments. We seize control FOR THE GREATER
GOOD. And from this it follows that where we meet resistance, we must
use only the force that is necessary and no more. (This was your
mistake at Durmstrang! But I do not complain, because if you had not
been expelled, we would never have met.)
Albus
Astonished and appalled though his many
admirers will be, this letter constitutes proof that Albus Dumbledore
once dreamed of overthrowing the Statute of Secrecy and establishing
Wizard rule over Muggles. What a blow for those who have always
portrayed Dumbledore as the Muggle-borns’ greatest champion! How
hollow those speeches promoting Muggle rights seem in the light of
this damning new evidence! How despicable does Albus Dumbledore
appear, busy plotting his rise to power when he should have been
mourning his mother and caring for his sister!
No doubt those determined to keep
Dumbledore on his crumbling pedestal will bleat that he did not,
after all, put his plans into action, that he must have suffered a
change of heart, that he came to his senses. However, the truth seems
altogether more shocking.
Barely two months into their great new
friendship, Dumbledore and Grindelwald parted, never to see each
other again until they met for their legendary duel (for more, see
chapter 22). What caused this abrupt rupture? Had Dumbledore come to
his senses? Had he told Grindelwald he wanted no more part in his
plans? Alas, no.
“It was poor little Ariana dying, I
think, that did it,” says Bathilda. “It came as an awful shock.
Gellert was there in the house when it happened, and he came back to
my house all of a dither, told me he wanted to go home the next day.
Terribly distressed, you know. So I arranged a Portkey and that was
the last I saw of him.
“Albus was beside himself at Ariana’s
death. It was so dreadful for those two brothers. They had lost
everybody except each other. No wonder tempers ran a little high.
Aberforth blamed Albus, you know, as people will under these dreadful
circumstances. But Aberforth always talked a little madly, poor boy.
All the same, breaking Albus’s nose at the funeral was not decent.
It would have destroyed Kendra to see her sons fighting like that,
across her daughter’s body. A shame Gellert could not have stayed
for the funeral… He would have been a comfort to Albus, at least…”
This dreadful coffin-side brawl, known
only to those few who attended Ariana Dumbledore’s funeral, raises
several questions. Why exactly did Aberforth Dumbledore blame Albus
for his sister’s death? Was it, as “Batty” pretends, a mere
effusion of grief? Or could there have been some more concrete reason
for his fury? Grindelwald, expelled from Durmstrang for near-fatal
attacks upon fellow students, fled the country hours after the girl’s
death, and Albus (out of shame or fear?) never saw him again, not
until forced to do so by the pleas of the Wizarding world.
Neither Dumbledore nor Grindelwald ever
seems to have referred to this brief boyhood friendship in later
life. However, there can be no doubt that Dumbledore delayed, for
some five years of turmoil, fatalities, and disappearances, his
attack upon Gellert Grindelwald. Was it lingering affection for the
man or fear of exposure as his once best friend that caused
Dumbledore to hesitate? Was it only reluctantly that Dumbledore set
out to capture the man he was once so delighted he had met?
And how did the mysterious Ariana die?
Was she the inadvertent victim of some Dark rite? Did she stumble
across something she ought not to have done, as the two young men sat
practicing for their attempt at glory and domination? Is it possible
that Ariana Dumbledore was the first person to die “for the greater
good”?
The chapter ended here and Harry looked
up. Hermione had reached the bottom of the page before him. She
tugged the book out of Harry’s hands, looking a little alarmed by
his expression, and closed it without looking at it, as though hiding
something indecent.
“Harry—”
But he shook his head. Some inner
certainty had crashed down inside him; it was exactly as he had felt
after Ron left. He had trusted Dumbledore, believed him the
embodiment of goodness and wisdom. All was ashes: How much more could
he lose? Ron, Dumbledore, the phoenix wand…
“Harry.” She seemed to have heard
his thoughts. “Listen to me. It—it doesn’t make very nice
reading—”
“Yeah, you could say that—”
“—but don’t forget, Harry, this
is Rita Skeeter writing.”
“You did read that letter to
Grindelwald, didn’t you?”
“Yes, I—I did.” She hesitated,
looking upset, cradling her tea in her cold hands. “I think that’s
the worst bit. I know Bathilda thought it was all just talk, but ‘For
the Greater Good’ became Grindelwald’s slogan, his justification
for all the atrocities he committed later. And… from that… it
looks like Dumbledore gave him the idea. They say ‘For the Greater
Good’ was even carved over the entrance to Nurmengard.”
“What’s Nurmengard?”
“The prison Grindelwald had built to
hold his opponents. He ended up in there himself, once Dumbledore had
caught him. Anyway, it’s—it’s an awful thought that
Dumbledore’s ideas helped Grindelwald rise to power. But on the
other hand, even Rita can’t pretend that they knew each other for
more than a few months one summer when they were both really young,
and—”
“I thought you’d say that,” said
Harry. He did not want to let his anger spill out at her, but it was
hard to keep his voice steady. “I thought you’d say ‘They were
young.’ They were the same age as we are now. And here we are,
risking our lives to fight the Dark Arts, and there he was, in a
huddle with his new best friend, plotting their rise to power over
the Muggles.”
His temper would not remain in check
much longer: He stood up and walked around, trying to work some of it
off.
“I’m not trying to defend what
Dumbledore wrote,” said Hermione. “All that ‘right to rule’
rubbish, it’s ‘Magic Is Might’ all over again. But Harry, his
mother had just died, he was stuck alone in the house—”
“Alone? He wasn’t alone! He had his
brother and sister for company, his Squib sister he was keeping
locked up—”
“I don’t believe it,” said
Hermione. She stood up too. “Whatever was wrong with that girl, I
don’t think she was a Squib. The Dumbledore we knew would never,
ever have allowed—”
“The Dumbledore we thought we knew
didn’t want to conquer Muggles by force!” Harry shouted, his
voice echoing across the empty hilltop, and several blackbirds rose
into the air, squawking and spiraling against the pearly sky.
“He changed, Harry, he changed! It’s
as simple as that! Maybe he did believe these things when he was
seventeen, but the whole of the rest of his life was devoted to
fighting the Dark Arts! Dumbledore was the one who stopped
Grindelwald, the one who always voted for Muggle protection and
Muggle-born rights, who fought You-Know-Who from the start, and who
died trying to bring him down!”
Rita’s book lay on the ground between
them, so that the face of Albus Dumbledore smiled dolefully at both.
“Harry, I’m sorry, but I think the
real reason you’re so angry is that Dumbledore never told you any
of this himself.”
“Maybe I am!” Harry bellowed, and
he flung his arms over his head, hardly knowing whether he was trying
to hold in his anger or protect himself from the weight of his own
disillusionment. “Look what he asked from me, Hermione! Risk your
life, Harry! And again! And again! And don’t expect me to explain
everything, just trust me blindly, trust that I know what I’m
doing, trust me even though I don’t trust you! Never the whole
truth! Never!”
His voice cracked with the strain, and
they stood looking at each other in the whiteness and the emptiness,
and Harry felt they were as insignificant as insects beneath that
wide sky.
“He loved you,” Hermione whispered.
“I know he loved you.”
Harry dropped his arms.
“I don’t know who he loved,
Hermione, but it was never me. This isn’t love, the mess he’s
left me in. He shared a damn sight more of what he was really
thinking with Gellert Grindelwald than he ever shared with me.”
Harry picked up Hermione’s wand,
which he had dropped in the snow, and sat back down in the entrance
of the tent.
“Thanks for the tea. I’ll finish
the watch. You get back in the warm.”
She hesitated, but recognized the
dismissal. She picked up the book and then walked back past him into
the tent, but as she did so, she brushed the top of his head lightly
with her hand. He closed his eyes at her touch, and hated himself for
wishing that what she said was true: that Dumbledore had really
cared.
Chapter 19
The Silver Doe
It was snowing by the time Hermione
took over the watch at midnight. Harry’s dreams were confused and
disturbing: Nagini wove in and out of them, first through a gigantic,
cracked ring, then through a wreath of Christmas roses. He woke
repeatedly, panicky, convinced that somebody had called out to him in
the distance, imagining that the wind whipping around the tent was
footsteps or voices.
Finally he got up in the darkness and
joined Hermione, who was huddled in the entrance to the tent reading
A History of Magic by the light of her wand. The snow was still
falling thickly, and she greeted with relief his suggestion of
packing up early and moving on.
“We’ll go somewhere more
sheltered,” she agreed, shivering as she pulled on a sweatshirt
over her pajamas. “I kept thinking I could hear people moving
outside. I even thought I saw somebody once or twice.”
Harry paused in the act of pulling on a
jumper and glanced at the silent, motionless Sneakoscope on the
table.
“I’m sure I imagined it,” said
Hermione, looking nervous. “The snow in the dark, it plays tricks
on your eyes… But perhaps we ought to Disapparate under the
Invisibility Cloak, just in case?”
Half an hour later, with the tent
packed, Harry wearing the Horcrux, and Hermione clutching the beaded
bag, they Disapparated. The usual tightness engulfed them; Harry’s
feet parted company with the snowy ground, then slammed hard onto
what felt like frozen earth covered with leaves.
“Where are we?” he asked, peering
around at a fresh mass of trees as Hermione opened the beaded bag and
began tugging out tent poles.
“The Forest of Dean,” she said. “I
came camping here once with my mum and dad.”
Here too snow lay on the trees all
around and it was bitterly cold, but they were at least protected
from the wind. They spent most of the day inside the tent, huddled
for warmth around the useful bright blue flames that Hermione was so
adept at producing, and which could be scooped up and carried around
in a jar. Harry felt as though he was recuperating from some brief
but severe illness, an impression reinforced by Hermione’s
solicitousness. That afternoon fresh flakes drifted down upon them,
so that even their sheltered clearing had a fresh dusting of powdery
snow.
After two nights of little sleep,
Harry’s senses seemed more alert than usual. Their escape from
Godric’s Hollow had been so narrow that Voldemort seemed somehow
closer than before, more threatening. As darkness drew in again Harry
refused Hermione’s offer to keep watch and told her to go to bed.
Harry moved an old cushion into the
tent mouth and sat down, wearing all the sweaters he owned but even
so, still shivery. The darkness deepened with the passing hours until
it was virtually impenetrable. He was on the point of taking out the
Marauder’s Map, so as to watch Ginny’s dot for a while, before he
remembered that it was the Christmas holidays and that she would be
back at the Burrow.
Every tiny movement seemed magnified in
the vastness of the forest. Harry knew that it must be full of living
creatures, but he wished they would all remain still and silent so
that he could separate their innocent scurryings and prowlings from
noises that might proclaim other, sinister movements. He remembered
the sound of a cloak slithering over dead leaves many years ago, and
at once thought he heard it again before mentally shaking himself.
Their protective enchantments had worked for weeks; why should they
break now? And yet he could not throw off the feeling that something
was different tonight.
Several times he jerked upright, his
neck aching because he had fallen asleep, slumped at an awkward angle
against the side of the tent. The night reached such a depth of
velvety blackness that he might have been suspended in limbo between
Disapparition and Apparition. He had just held up a hand in front of
his face to see whether he could make out his fingers when it
happened.
A bright silver light appeared right
ahead of him, moving through the trees. Whatever the source, it was
moving soundlessly. The light seemed simply to drift toward him.
He jumped to his feet, his voice frozen
in his throat, and raised Hermione’s wand. He screwed up his eyes
as the light became blinding, the trees in front of it pitch-black in
silhouette, and still the thing came closer…
And then the source of the light
stepped out from behind an oak. It was a silver-white doe,
moon-bright and dazzling, picking her way over the ground, still
silent, and leaving no hoofprints in the fine powdering of snow. She
stepped toward him, her beautiful head with its wide, long-lashed
eyes held high.
Harry stared at the creature, filled
with wonder, not at her strangeness, but at her inexplicable
familiarity. He felt that he had been waiting for her to come, but
that he had forgotten, until this moment, that they had arranged to
meet. His impulse to shout for Hermione, which had been so strong a
moment ago, had gone. He knew, he would have staked his life on it,
that she had come for him, and him alone.
They gazed at each other for several
long moments and then she turned and walked away.
“No,” he said, and his voice was
cracked with lack of use. “Come back!”
She continued to step deliberately
through the trees, and soon her brightness was striped by their thick
black trunks. For one trembling second he hesitated. Caution murmured
it could be a trick, a lure, a trap. But instinct, overwhelming
instinct, told him that this was not Dark Magic. He set off in
pursuit.
Snow crunched beneath his feet, but the
doe made no noise as she passed through the trees, for she was
nothing but light. Deeper and deeper into the forest she led him, and
Harry walked quickly, sure that when she stopped, she would allow him
to approach her properly. And then she would speak and the voice
would tell him what he needed to know.
At last, she came to a halt. She turned
her beautiful head toward him once more, and he broke into a run, a
question burning in him, but as he opened his lips to ask it, she
vanished.
Though the darkness had swallowed her
whole, her burnished image was still imprinted on his retinas; it
obscured his vision, brightening when he lowered his eyelids,
disorienting him. Now fear came: Her presence had meant safety.
“Lumos!” he whispered, and the
wand-tip ignited.
The imprint of the doe faded away with
every blink of his eyes as he stood there, listening to the sounds of
the forest, to distant crackles of twigs, soft swishes of snow. Was
he about to be attacked? Had she enticed him into an ambush? Was he
imagining that somebody stood beyond the reach of the wandlight,
watching him?
He held the wand higher. Nobody ran out
at him, no flash of green light burst from behind a tree. Why, then,
had she led him to this spot?
Something gleamed in the light of the
wand, and Harry spun about, but all that was there was a small,
frozen pool, its cracked black surface glittering as he raised the
wand higher to examine it.
He moved forward rather cautiously and
looked down. The ice reflected his distorted shadow and the beam of
wandlight, but deep below the thick, misty gray carapace, something
else glinted. A great silver cross…
His heart skipped into his mouth: He
dropped to his knees at the pool’s edge and angled the wand so as
to flood the bottom of the pool with as much light as possible. A
glint of deep red… It was a sword with glittering rubies in its
hilt… The sword of Gryffindor was lying at the bottom of the forest
pool.
Barely breathing, he stared down at it.
How was this possible? How could it have come to be lying in a forest
pool, this close to the place where they were camping? Had some
unknown magic drawn Hermione to this spot, or was the doe, which he
had taken to be a Patronus, some kind of guardian of the pool? Or had
the sword been put into the pool after they had arrived, precisely
because they were here? In which case, where was the person who had
wanted to pass it to Harry? Again he directed the wand at the
surrounding trees and bushes, searching for a human outline, for the
glint of an eye, but he could not see anyone there. All the same, a
little more fear leavened his exhilaration as he returned his
attention to the sword reposing upon the bottom of the frozen pool.
He pointed the wand at the silvery
shape and murmured, “Accio Sword.”
It did not stir. He had not expected it
to. If it had been that easy, the sword would have lain on the ground
for him to pick up, not in the depths of a frozen pool. He set off
around the circle of ice, thinking hard about the last time the sword
had delivered itself to him. He had been in terrible danger then, and
had asked for help.
“Help,” he murmured, but the sword
remained upon the pool bottom, indifferent, motionless.
What was it, Harry asked himself
(walking again), that Dumbledore had told him the last time he had
retrieved the sword? Only a true Gryffindor could have pulled that
out of the hat. And what were the qualities that defined a
Gryffindor? A small voice inside Harry’s head answered him: Their
daring, nerve, and chivalry set Gryffindors apart.
Harry stopped walking and let out a
long sigh, his smoky breath dispersing rapidly upon the frozen air.
He knew what he had to do. If he was honest with himself, he had
thought it might come to this from the moment he had spotted the
sword through the ice.
He glanced around at the surrounding
trees again, but was convinced now that nobody was going to attack
him. They had had their chance as he walked alone through the forest,
had had plenty of opportunity as he examined the pool. The only
reason to delay at this point was because the immediate prospect was
so deeply uninviting.
With fumbling fingers Harry started to
remove his many layers of clothing. Where “chivalry” entered into
this, he thought ruefully, he was not entirely sure, unless it
counted as chivalrous that he was not calling for Hermione to do it
in his stead.
An owl hooted somewhere as he stripped
off, and he thought with a pang of Hedwig. He was shivering now, his
teeth chattering horribly, and yet he continued to strip off until at
last he stood there in his underwear, barefooted in the snow. He
placed the pouch containing his wand, his mother’s letter, the
shard of Sirius’s mirror, and the old Snitch on top of his clothes,
then he pointed Hermione’s wand at the ice.
“Diffindo.”
It cracked with a sound like a bullet
in the silence: The surface of the pool broke and chunks of dark ice
rocked on the ruffled water. As far as Harry could judge, it was not
deep, but to retrieve the sword he would have to submerge himself
completely.
Contemplating the task ahead would not
make it easier or the water warmer. He stepped to the pool’s edge
and placed Hermione’s wand on the ground, still lit. Then, trying
not to imagine how much colder he was about to become or how
violently he would soon be shivering, he jumped.
Every pore of his body screamed in
protest: The very air in his lungs seemed to freeze solid as he was
submerged to his shoulders in the frozen water. He could hardly
breathe; trembling so violently the water lapped over the edges of
the pool, he felt for the blade with his numb feet. He only wanted to
dive once.
Harry put off the moment of total
submersion from second to second, gasping and shaking, until he told
himself that it must be done, gathered all his courage, and dived.
The cold was agony: It attacked him
like fire. His brain itself seemed to have frozen as he pushed
through the dark water to the bottom and reached out, groping for the
sword. His fingers closed around the hilt; he pulled it upward.
Then something closed tight around his
neck. He thought of water weeds, though nothing had brushed him as he
dived, and raised his empty hand to free himself. It was not weed:
The chain of the Horcrux had tightened and was slowly constricting
his windpipe.
Harry kicked out wildly, trying to push
himself back to the surface, but merely propelled himself into the
rocky side of the pool. Thrashing, suffocating, he scrabbled at the
strangling chain, his frozen fingers unable to loosen it, and now
little lights were popping inside his head, and he was going to
drown, there was nothing left, nothing he could do, and the arms that
closed around his chest were surely Death’s…
Choking and retching, soaking and
colder than he had ever been in his life, he came to facedown in the
snow. Somewhere close by, another person was panting and coughing and
staggering around. Hermione had come again, as she had come when the
snake attacked… Yet it did not sound like her, not with those deep
coughs, not judging by the weight of the footsteps…
Harry had no strength to lift his head
and see his savior’s identity. All he could do was raise a shaking
hand to his throat and feel the place where the locket had cut
tightly into his flesh. It was gone: Someone had cut him free. Then a
panting voice spoke from over his head.
“Are—you—mental?”
Nothing but the shock of hearing that
voice could have given Harry the strength to get up. Shivering
violently, he staggered to his feet. There before him stood Ron,
fully dressed but drenched to the skin, his hair plastered to his
face, the sword of Gryffindor in one hand and the Horcrux dangling
from its broken chain in the other.
“Why the hell,” panted Ron, holding
up the Horcrux, which swung backward and forward on its shortened
chain in some parody of hypnosis, “didn’t you take this thing off
before you dived?”
Harry could not answer. The silver doe
was nothing, nothing compared with Ron’s reappearance; he could not
believe it. Shuddering with cold, he caught up the pile of clothes
still lying at the water’s edge and began to pull them on. As he
dragged sweater after sweater over his head, Harry stared at Ron,
half expecting him to have disappeared every time he lost sight of
him, and yet he had to be real: He had just dived into the pool, he
had saved Harry’s life.
“It was y-you?” Harry said at last,
his teeth chattering, his voice weaker than usual due to his
near-strangulation.
“Well, yeah,” said Ron, looking
slightly confused.
“Y-you cast that doe?”
“What? No, of course not! I thought
it was you doing it!”
“My Patronus is a stag.”
“Oh yeah. I thought it looked
different. No antlers.”
Harry put Hagrid’s pouch back around
his neck, pulled on a final sweater, stooped to pick up Hermione’s
wand, and faced Ron again.
“How come you’re here?”
Apparently Ron had hoped that this
point would come up later, if at all.
“Well, I’ve—you know—I’ve
come back. If—” He cleared his throat. “You know. You still
want me.”
There was a pause, in which the subject
of Ron’s departure seemed to rise like a wall between them. Yet he
was here. He had returned. He had just saved Harry’s life.
Ron looked down at his hands. He seemed
momentarily surprised to see the things he was holding.
“Oh yeah, I got it out,” he said,
rather unnecessarily, holding up the sword for Harry’s inspection.
“That’s why you jumped in, right?”
“Yeah,” said Harry. “But I don’t
understand. How did you get here? How did you find us?”
“Long story,” said Ron. “I’ve
been looking for you for hours, it’s a big forest, isn’t it? And
I was just thinking I’d have to kip under a tree and wait for
morning when I saw that deer coming and you following.”
“You didn’t see anyone else?”
“No,” said Ron. “I—”
But he hesitated, glancing at two trees
growing close together some yards away.
“I did think I saw something move
over there, but I was running to the pool at the time, because you’d
gone in and you hadn’t come up, so I wasn’t going to make a
detour to—hey!”
Harry was already hurrying to the place
Ron had indicated. The two oaks grew close together; there was a gap
of only a few inches between the trunks at eye level, an ideal place
to see but not be seen. The ground around the roots, however, was
free of snow, and Harry could see no sign of footprints. He walked
back to where Ron stood waiting, still holding the sword and the
Horcrux.
“Anything there?” Ron asked.
“No,” said Harry.
“So how did the sword get in that
pool?”
“Whoever cast the Patronus must have
put it there.”
They both looked at the ornate silver
sword, its rubied hilt glinting a little in the light from Hermione’s
wand.
“You reckon this is the real one?”
asked Ron.
“One way to find out, isn’t there?”
said Harry.
The Horcrux was still swinging from
Ron’s hand. The locket was twitching slightly. Harry knew that the
thing inside it was agitated again. It had sensed the presence of the
sword and had tried to kill Harry rather than let him possess it. Now
was not the time for long discussions; now was the moment to destroy
the locket once and for all. Harry looked around, holding Hermione’s
wand high, and saw the place: a flattish rock lying in the shadow of
a sycamore tree.
“Come here,” he said, and he led
the way, brushed snow from the rock’s surface, and held out his
hand for the Horcrux. When Ron offered the sword, however, Harry
shook his head.
“No, you should do it.”
“Me?” said Ron, looking shocked.
“Why?”
“Because you got the sword out of the
pool. I think it’s supposed to be you.”
He was not being kind or generous. As
certainly as he had known that the doe was benign, he knew that Ron
had to be the one to wield the sword. Dumbledore had at least taught
Harry something about certain kinds of magic, of the incalculable
power of certain acts.
“I’m going to open it,” said
Harry, “and you stab it. Straightaway, okay? Because whatever’s
in there will put up a fight. The bit of Riddle in the diary tried to
kill me.”
“How are you going to open it?”
asked Ron. He looked terrified.
“I’m going to ask it to open, using
Parseltongue,” said Harry. The answer came so readily to his lips
that he thought that he had always known it deep down: Perhaps it had
taken his recent encounter with Nagini to make him realize it. He
looked at the serpentine S, inlaid with glittering green stones: It
was easy to visualize it as a minuscule snake, curled upon the cold
rock.
“No!” said Ron. “No, don’t open
it! I’m serious!”
“Why not?” asked Harry. “Let’s
get rid of the damn thing, it’s been months—”
“I can’t, Harry, I’m serious—you
do it—”
“But why?”
“Because that thing’s bad for me!”
said Ron, backing away from the locket on the rock. “I can’t
handle it! I’m not making excuses, Harry, for what I was like, but
it affects me worse than it affected you and Hermione, it made me
think stuff—stuff I was thinking anyway, but it made everything
worse, I can’t explain it, and then I’d take it off and I’d get
my head on straight again, and then I’d have to put the effing
thing back on—I can’t do it, Harry!”
He had backed away, the sword dragging
at his side, shaking his head.
“You can do it,” said Harry, “you
can! You’ve just got the sword, I know it’s supposed to be you
who uses it. Please, just get rid of it, Ron.”
The sound of his name seemed to act
like a stimulant. Ron swallowed, then, still breathing hard through
his long nose, moved back toward the rock.
“Tell me when,” he croaked.
“On three,” said Harry, looking
back down at the locket and narrowing his eyes, concentrating on the
letter S, imagining a serpent, while the contents of the locket
rattled like a trapped cockroach. It would have been easy to pity it,
except that the cut around Harry’s neck still burned.
“One… two… three… open.”
The last word came as a hiss and a
snarl and the golden doors of the locket swung wide with a little
click.
Behind both of the glass windows within
blinked a living eye, dark and handsome as Tom Riddle’s eyes had
been before he turned them scarlet and slit-pupiled.
“Stab,” said Harry, holding the
locket steady on the rock.
Ron raised the sword in his shaking
hands: The point dangled over the frantically swiveling eyes, and
Harry gripped the locket tightly, bracing himself, already imagining
blood pouring from the empty windows.
Then a voice hissed from out of the
Horcrux.
“I have seen your heart, and it is
mine.”
“Don’t listen to it!” Harry said
harshly. “Stab it!”
“I have seen your dreams, Ronald
Weasley, and I have seen your fears. All you desire is possible, but
all that you dread is also possible…”
“Stab!” shouted Harry; his voice
echoed off the surrounding trees, the sword point trembled, and Ron
gazed down into Riddle’s eyes.
“Least loved, always, by the mother
who craved a daughter… Least loved, now, by the girl who prefers
your friend… Second best, always, eternally overshadowed…”
“Ron, stab it now!” Harry bellowed:
He could feel the locket quivering in his grip and was scared of what
was coming. Ron raised the sword still higher, and as he did so,
Riddle’s eyes gleamed scarlet.
Out of the locket’s two windows, out
of the eyes, there bloomed, like two grotesque bubbles, the heads of
Harry and Hermione, weirdly distorted.
Ron yelled in shock and backed away as
the figures blossomed out of the locket, first chests, then waists,
then legs, until they stood in the locket, side by side like trees
with a common root, swaying over Ron and the real Harry, who had
snatched his fingers away from the locket as it burned, suddenly,
white-hot.
“Ron!” he shouted, but the
Riddle-Harry was now speaking with Voldemort’s voice and Ron was
gazing, mesmerized, into its face.
“Why return? We were better without
you, happier without you, glad of your absence… We laughed at your
stupidity, your cowardice, your presumption—”
“Presumption!” echoed the
Riddle-Hermione, who was more beautiful and yet more terrible than
the real Hermione: She swayed, cackling, before Ron, who looked
horrified yet transfixed, the sword hanging pointlessly at his side.
“Who could look at you, who would ever look at you, beside Harry
Potter? What have you ever done, compared with the Chosen One? What
are you, compared with the Boy Who Lived?”
“Ron, stab it, STAB IT!” Harry
yelled, but Ron did not move: His eyes were wide, and the
Riddle-Harry and the Riddle-Hermione were reflected in them, their
hair swirling like flames, their eyes shining red, their voices
lifted in an evil duet.
“Your mother confessed,” sneered
Riddle-Harry, while Riddle-Hermione jeered, “that she would have
preferred me as a son, would be glad to exchange…”
“Who wouldn’t prefer him, what
woman would take you, you are nothing, nothing, nothing to him,”
crooned Riddle-Hermione, and she stretched like a snake and entwined
herself around Riddle-Harry, wrapping him in a close embrace: Their
lips met.
On the ground in front of them, Ron’s
face filled with anguish. He raised the sword high, his arms shaking.
“Do it, Ron!” Harry yelled.
Ron looked toward him, and Harry
thought he saw a trace of scarlet in his eyes.
“Ron—?”
The sword flashed, plunged: Harry threw
himself out of the way, there was a clang of metal and a long,
drawn-out scream. Harry whirled around, slipping in the snow, wand
held ready to defend himself: but there was nothing to fight.
The monstrous versions of himself and
Hermione were gone: There was only Ron, standing there with the sword
held slackly in his hand, looking down at the shattered remains of
the locket on the flat rock.
Slowly, Harry walked back to him,
hardly knowing what to say or do. Ron was breathing heavily: His eyes
were no longer red at all, but their normal blue; they were also wet.
Harry stooped, pretending he had not
seen, and picked up the broken Horcrux. Ron had pierced the glass in
both windows: Riddle’s eyes were gone, and the stained silk lining
of the locket was smoking slightly. The thing that had lived in the
Horcrux had vanished; torturing Ron had been its final act.
The sword clanged as Ron dropped it. He
had sunk to his knees, his head in his arms. He was shaking, but not,
Harry realized, from cold. Harry crammed the broken locket into his
pocket, knelt down beside Ron, and placed a hand cautiously on his
shoulder. He took it as a good sign that Ron did not throw it off.
“After you left,” he said in a low
voice, grateful for the fact that Ron’s face was hidden, “she
cried for a week. Probably longer, only she didn’t want me to see.
There were loads of nights when we never even spoke to each other.
With you gone…”
He could not finish; it was only now
that Ron was here again that Harry fully realized how much his
absence had cost them.
“She’s like my sister,” he went
on. “I love her like a sister and I reckon she feels the same way
about me. It’s always been like that. I thought you knew.”
Ron did not respond, but turned his
face away from Harry and wiped his nose noisily on his sleeve. Harry
got to his feet again and walked to where Ron’s enormous rucksack
lay yards away, discarded as Ron had run toward the pool to save
Harry from drowning. He hoisted it onto his own back and walked back
to Ron, who clambered to his feet as Harry approached, eyes bloodshot
but otherwise composed.
“I’m sorry,” he said in a thick
voice. “I’m sorry I left. I know I was a—a—”
He looked around at the darkness, as if
hoping a bad enough word would swoop down upon him and claim him.
“You’ve sort of made up for it
tonight,” said Harry. “Getting the sword. Finishing off the
Horcrux. Saving my life.”
“That makes me sound a lot cooler
than I was,” Ron mumbled.
“Stuff like that always sounds cooler
than it really was,” said Harry. “I’ve been trying to tell you
that for years.”
Simultaneously they walked forward and
hugged, Harry gripping the still-sopping back of Ron’s jacket.
“And now,” said Harry as they broke
apart, “all we’ve got to do is find the tent again.”
But it was not difficult. Though the
walk through the dark forest with the doe had seemed lengthy, with
Ron by his side the journey back seemed to take a surprisingly short
time. Harry could not wait to wake Hermione, and it was with
quickening excitement that he entered the tent, Ron lagging a little
behind him.
It was gloriously warm after the pool
and the forest, the only illumination the bluebell flames still
shimmering in a bowl on the floor. Hermione was fast asleep, curled
up under her blankets, and did not move until Harry had said her name
several times.
“Hermione!”
She stirred, then sat up quickly,
pushing her hair out of her face.
“What’s wrong? Harry? Are you all
right?”
“It’s okay, everything’s fine.
More than fine. I’m great. There’s someone here.”
“What do you mean? Who—?”
She saw Ron, who stood there holding
the sword and dripping onto the threadbare carpet. Harry backed into
a shadowy corner, slipped off Ron’s rucksack, and attempted to
blend in with the canvas.
Hermione slid out of her bunk and moved
like a sleepwalker toward Ron, her eyes upon his pale face. She
stopped right in front of him, her lips slightly parted, her eyes
wide. Ron gave a weak, hopeful smile and half raised his arms.
Hermione launched herself forward and
started punching every inch of him that she could reach.
“Ouch—ow—gerroff! What the—?
Hermione—OW!”
“You—complete—arse—Ronald—Weasley!”
She punctuated every word with a blow:
Ron backed away, shielding his head as Hermione advanced.
“You—crawl—back—here—after—weeks—and—weeks—oh,
where’s my wand?”
She looked as though ready to wrestle
it out of Harry’s hands and he reacted instinctively.
“Protego!”
The invisible shield erupted between
Ron and Hermione: The force of it knocked her backward onto the
floor. Spitting hair out of her mouth, she leapt up again.
“Hermione!” said Harry. “Calm—”
“I will not calm down!” she
screamed. Never before had he seen her lose control like this; she
looked quite demented. “Give me back my wand! Give it back to me!”
“Hermione, will you please—”
“Don’t you tell me what to do,
Harry Potter!” she screeched. “Don’t you dare! Give it back
now! And YOU!”
She was pointing at Ron in dire
accusation: It was like a malediction, and Harry could not blame Ron
for retreating several steps.
“I came running after you! I called
you! I begged you to come back!”
“I know,” Ron said, “Hermione,
I’m sorry, I’m really—”
“Oh, you’re sorry!”
She laughed, a high-pitched,
out-of-control sound; Ron looked at Harry for help, but Harry merely
grimaced his helplessness.
“You come back after weeks—weeks—and
you think it’s all going to be all right if you just say sorry?”
“Well, what else can I say?” Ron
shouted, and Harry was glad that Ron was fighting back.
“Oh, I don’t know!” yelled
Hermione with awful sarcasm. “Rack your brains, Ron, that should
only take a couple of seconds—”
“Hermione,” interjected Harry, who
considered this a low blow, “he just saved my—”
“I don’t care!” she screamed. “I
don’t care what he’s done! Weeks and weeks, we could have been
dead for all he knew—”
“I knew you weren’t dead!”
bellowed Ron, drowning her voice for the first time, and approaching
as close as he could with the Shield Charm between them. “Harry’s
all over the Prophet, all over the radio, they’re looking for you
everywhere, all these rumors and mental stories, I knew I’d hear
straight off if you were dead, you don’t know what it’s been
like—”
“What it’s been like for you?”
Her voice was now so shrill only bats
would be able to hear it soon, but she had reached a level of
indignation that rendered her temporarily speechless, and Ron seized
his opportunity.
“I wanted to come back the minute I’d
Disapparated, but I walked straight into a gang of Snatchers,
Hermione, and I couldn’t go anywhere!”
“A gang of what?” asked Harry, as
Hermione threw herself down into a chair with her arms and legs
crossed so tightly it seemed unlikely that she would unravel them for
several years.
“Snatchers,” said Ron. “They’re
everywhere—gangs trying to earn gold by rounding up Muggle-borns
and blood traitors, there’s a reward from the Ministry for everyone
captured. I was on my own and I look like I might be school age; they
got really excited, thought I was a Muggle-born in hiding. I had to
talk fast to get out of being dragged to the Ministry.”
“What did you say to them?”
“Told them I was Stan Shunpike. First
person I could think of.”
“And they believed that?”
“They weren’t the brightest. One of
them was definitely part troll, the smell off him…”
Ron glanced at Hermione, clearly
hopeful she might soften at this small instance of humor, but her
expression remained stony above her tightly knotted limbs.
“Anyway, they had a row about whether
I was Stan or not. It was a bit pathetic to be honest, but there were
still five of them and only one of me and they’d taken my wand.
Then two of them got into a fight and while the others were
distracted I managed to hit the one holding me in the stomach,
grabbed his wand, Disarmed the bloke holding mine, and Disapparated.
I didn’t do it so well, Splinched myself again”—Ron held up his
right hand to show two missing fingernails; Hermione raised her
eyebrows coldly—“and I came out miles from where you were. By the
time I got back to that bit of riverbank where we’d been… you’d
gone.”
“Gosh, what a gripping story,”
Hermione said in the lofty voice she adopted when wishing to wound.
“You must have been simply terrified. Meanwhile we went to Godric’s
Hollow and, let’s think, what happened there, Harry? Oh yes,
You-Know-Who’s snake turned up, it nearly killed both of us, and
then You-Know-Who himself arrived and missed us by about a second.”
“What?” Ron said, gaping from her
to Harry, but Hermione ignored him.
“Imagine losing fingernails, Harry!
That really puts our sufferings into perspective, doesn’t it?”
“Hermione,” said Harry quietly,
“Ron just saved my life.”
She appeared not to have heard him.
“One thing I would like to know,
though,” she said, fixing her eyes on a spot a foot over Ron’s
head. “How exactly did you find us tonight? That’s important.
Once we know, we’ll be able to make sure we’re not visited by
anyone else we don’t want to see.”
Ron glared at her, then pulled a small
silver object from his jeans pocket.
“This.”
She had to look at Ron to see what he
was showing them.
“The Deluminator?” she asked, so
surprised she forgot to look cold and fierce.
“It doesn’t just turn the lights on
and off,” said Ron. “I don’t know how it works or why it
happened then and not any other time, because I’ve been wanting to
come back ever since I left. But I was listening to the radio really
early on Christmas morning and I heard… I heard you.”
He was looking at Hermione.
“You heard me on the radio?” she
asked incredulously.
“No, I heard you coming out of my
pocket. Your voice,” he held up the Deluminator again, “came out
of this.”
“And what exactly did I say?” asked
Hermione, her tone somewhere between skepticism and curiosity.
“My name. ‘Ron.’ And you said…
something about a wand…”
Hermione turned a fiery shade of
scarlet. Harry remembered: It had been the first time Ron’s name
had been said aloud by either of them since the day he had left;
Hermione had mentioned it when talking about repairing Harry’s
wand.
“So I took it out,” Ron went on,
looking at the Deluminator, “and it didn’t seem different or
anything, but I was sure I’d heard you. So I clicked it. And the
light went out in my room, but another light appeared right outside
the window.”
Ron raised his empty hand and pointed
in front of him, his eyes focused on something neither Harry nor
Hermione could see.
“It was a ball of light, kind of
pulsing, and bluish, like that light you get around a Portkey, you
know?”
“Yeah,” said Harry and Hermione
together automatically.
“I knew this was it,” said Ron. “I
grabbed my stuff and packed it, then I put on my rucksack and went
out into the garden.
“The little ball of light was
hovering there, waiting for me, and when I came out it bobbed along a
bit and I followed it behind the shed and then it… well, it went
inside me.”
“Sorry?” said Harry, sure he had
not heard correctly.
“It sort of floated toward me,”
said Ron, illustrating the movement with his free index finger,
“right to my chest, and then—it just went straight through. It
was here,” he touched a point close to his heart, “I could feel
it, it was hot. And once it was inside me I knew what I was supposed
to do, I knew it would take me where I needed to go. So I
Disapparated and came out on the side of a hill. There was snow
everywhere…”
“We were there,” said Harry. “We
spent two nights there, and the second night I kept thinking I could
hear someone moving around in the dark and calling out!”
“Yeah, well, that would’ve been
me,” said Ron. “Your protective spells work, anyway, because I
couldn’t see you and I couldn’t hear you. I was sure you were
around, though, so in the end I got in my sleeping bag and waited for
one of you to appear. I thought you’d have to show yourselves when
you packed up the tent.”
“No, actually,” said Hermione.
“We’ve been Disapparating under the Invisibility Cloak as an
extra precaution. And we left really early, because, as Harry says,
we’d heard somebody blundering around.”
“Well, I stayed on that hill all
day,” said Ron. “I kept hoping you’d appear. But when it
started to get dark I knew I must have missed you, so I clicked the
Deluminator again, the blue light came out and went inside me, and I
Disapparated and arrived here in these woods. I still couldn’t see
you, so I just had to hope one of you would show yourselves in the
end—and Harry did. Well, I saw the doe first, obviously.”
“You saw the what?” said Hermione
sharply.
They explained what had happened, and
as the story of the silver doe and the sword in the pool unfolded,
Hermione frowned from one to the other of them, concentrating so hard
she forgot to keep her limbs locked together.
“But it must have been a Patronus!”
she said. “Couldn’t you see who was casting it? Didn’t you see
anyone? And it led you to the sword! I can’t believe this! Then
what happened?”
Ron explained how he had watched Harry
jump into the pool and had waited for him to resurface; how he had
realized that something was wrong, dived in, and saved Harry, then
returned for the sword. He got as far as the opening of the locket,
then hesitated, and Harry cut in.
“—and Ron stabbed it with the
sword.”
“And… and it went? Just like that?”
she whispered.
“Well, it—it screamed,” said
Harry with half a glance at Ron. “Here.”
He threw the locket into her lap;
gingerly she picked it up and examined its punctured windows.
Deciding that it was at last safe to do
so, Harry removed the Shield Charm with a wave of Hermione’s wand
and turned to Ron.
“Did you just say you got away from
the Snatchers with a spare wand?”
“What?” said Ron, who had been
watching Hermione examining the locket. “Oh—oh yeah.”
He tugged open a buckle on his rucksack
and pulled a short, dark wand out of its pocket. “Here. I figured
it’s always handy to have a backup.”
“You were right,” said Harry,
holding out his hand. “Mine’s broken.”
“You’re kidding?” Ron said, but
at that moment Hermione got to her feet, and he looked apprehensive
again.
Hermione put the vanquished Horcrux
into the beaded bag, then climbed back into her bed and settled down
without another word.
Ron passed Harry the new wand.
“About the best you could hope for, I
think,” murmured Harry.
“Yeah,” said Ron. “Could’ve
been worse. Remember those birds she set on me?”
“I still haven’t ruled it out,”
came Hermione’s muffled voice from beneath her blankets, but Harry
saw Ron smiling slightly as he pulled his maroon pajamas out of his
rucksack.
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