And so it begins...eight chapters in.
Standard disclaimers apply. Harry Potter, all related
characters, and
various media incarnations are copyright of the very talented J.
K.
Rowling, Scholastic, and other international companies involved
in its
creation and distribution. Will Stanton and "The Dark Is
Rising" series
are both copyright of the wonderful Susan Cooper.
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Harry Potter and the Legacy of the Light
A Harry Potter/The Dark Is Rising Sequence Fusion
By: Gramarye
Chapter Eight - King's Cross Station
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You can discover what your enemy fears most by observing the
means
he uses to frighten you.
-- Eric Hoffer
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Mrs Weasley, determined that absolutely nothing would go wrong
with
her brood's scheduled departure from King's Cross, had arranged
for
herself, the twins, Ron, Ginny, and Harry to spend their last
night at the
Leaky Cauldron. The room arrangements worked out as could be
expected, and Harry found himself sharing a room with Ron.
It took him a long time to fall asleep, and as the minutes
ticked by he
found himself getting more and more agitated. He berated himself
for
being so stupid--fretting about not being able to sleep would
only make
it less likely that he actually would fall asleep.
Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep. He said the word over and
over in
his head until it dissolved into a random noise and completely
stopped
making sense.
After several hours of staring at the water-stained ceiling,
he tried a
different tactic, one that had often worked at school when he
couldn't
sleep on the nights before Quidditch matches. Willing himself to
be
still, he focused on Ron's deep, rhythmic breathing. In and out,
very
slowly. He allowed himself to fall into the rhythm, and gradually
his
tense muscles relaxed. Just a few minutes more, and he would be
able to drift off--
"...that is all you have to tell me?"
Voldemort.
The high, cold voice was faint, but unmistakable.
It wasn't speaking directly into his mind, but he felt as
though he
was listening to a radio programme that happened to be playing in
another room. Straining to hear it only made it grow far away,
fading
into nothing. But if lay very still and let the words come to
him, he
could hear everything quite clearly.
"My lord, I swear...there was something...or someone...with him!"
It was a woman, a young woman from the sound. What might have
been
an otherwise pretty voice was muddied with pain, cracking and
indistinct.
"And whatever it was, my lord, it stopped us from
following him." A
man's nasal tone this time, on the ragged edge of hysteria.
"What's more,
it wouldn't let us leave the car at all, not even at the next
station. We had
to stay on until the end of the line."
"So Potter slipped past you not an hour after he boarded,
and the three
of you were forced to travel all the way to...Penzance?"
Voldemort said
the place name as though the word tasted foul in his mouth.
"Yes, my lord." A second man's voice, deeper and
less nasal than the
first man's. Though his comrades had sounded panicked, the second
man was completely calm, almost resigned to the punishment that
he
knew would follow.
"I see." Voldemort's sibilant response was thickly
laced with irony. "I
sincerely doubt that even the word 'incompetence' properly
describes
this obvious failure."
The woman tried a last desperate plea. "Master...please believe...."
"Silence!" came the sharp command.
Harry heard her whimper. One of the men cleared his throat nervously.
After a long, thoughtful pause, the Dark Lord continued.
"I grow weary
of these roundabout methods. I think...I think it is time for a
change
of plans. I do believe that we must stop focusing on the ends
and
concentrate for a while on the means. Wouldn't you
agree?"
"Yes, Master. Of course, Master," the three said eagerly.
Voldemort sniffed. Then he said, almost offhandedly:
"Crucio."
Three separate screams shrilled in Harry's head, doubling and
redoubling as their pain grew until their anguished cries cut off
abruptly as Harry sat upright in bed, sweating and breathing
hard.
His scar throbbed angrily.
Ron was still asleep, fortunately. The vision, or dream, or
whatever
it was, hadn't awakened him. He hadn't heard it.
Carefully, Harry crept out of bed and flopped onto the floor,
wearily
resting his head against the cool sheets and down-filled
mattress.
The sounds of early morning traffic on Charing Cross Road drifted
through the room's thin walls.
He knew he hadn't been dreaming. And even if he had been
dreaming,
it was been the most vivid dream he had had in a long time. He
didn't
need to see Voldemort's face or know what the three Death Eaters
looked like to understand exactly what they had planned to do.
Hearing
his near-capture being discussed in such casual terms was
intensely
disturbing. He didn't want to think about what would have
happened
if Professor Stanton hadn't been on the train.
He tucked his pyjama-clad legs underneath him and propped his
chin
on his hands, turning Voldemort's words over in his mind. This
was not
something he could just set aside and deal with later. Every time
he had
tried to brush off or dismiss his feelings and dreams, no matter
how
unimportant they might have seemed to him, someone ended up
getting
hurt.
What was worse, this one was far more ominous than any he had
heard
before. There was simply no ignoring such a deliberate threat,
especially
one that involved a potential "change of plans".
For all his desire to act immediately, it was too late to do
much about it.
A letter to Dumbledore would arrive only a little while before he
did.
A letter to Sirius at Lupin's wouldn't be very useful, except
maybe as
an early warning. The best option would be to go to Dumbledore as
soon as he arrived at school, right after he got off the train.
He would
have to miss the Sorting Ceremony entirely, but it wasn't as if
he hadn't
missed previous ones--for far less important reasons. In any
case,
Dumbledore would certainly appreciate the warning. He could alert
the necessary people--perhaps even that "old crowd" he
had mentioned
last year.
Yes. That was it. He would see Dumbledore first thing and let
him
know about the threat.
As soon as he got to Hogwarts--not twelve hours away.
Comforted by the thought, he climbed back into bed, rolled
onto his
side, and fell into a deep, dreamless sleep.
* * *
King's Cross Station was its usual busy place, packed with
witches and
wizards in Muggle dress seeing their children off to school. Mrs
Weasley
accompanied them into the station and helped them load all their
luggage
onto a small fleet of trolleys, then quickly kissed them all
goodbye and
left. She had planned to meet Mr Weasley at the Ministry of Magic
so
they could have a nice, quiet lunch together, and she didn't want
to be late.
As soon as she was gone, Fred and George pulled out a large
brown
paper bag and disappeared into the crowd, dragging their luggage
with
them. Harry had heard them whispering and snickering in the taxi
on the
way to the station, and he knew they were up to something. The
safest
plan would be to stay as far away from them as possible.
Out of the corner of his eye, he saw Colin Creevey and his
younger brother
Dennis walking toward him. He knelt down and quickly pretended to
be
tightening the cord on his trunk. The two of them jumped up and
down,
trying to get his attention, but when he didn't acknowledge their
presence
they soon gave up and went away. Harry felt a little guilty, but
he didn't
want to deal with Colin at the moment. Hero worship was the last
thing
he needed.
Together with Ron and Ginny, he pushed his trolley out of the
thickest
part of the crowd. They waved hello to a few fellow Hogwarts
students,
and Ginny paused to direct a group of lost-looking first years
toward
the barrier that led to Platform Nine and Three-Quarters.
"Hermione said she was going to meet us here,
right?" Ron asked once
Ginny had returned.
Harry pulled her most recent letter out of his pocket.
"Entrance to
Platform Eight," he read, jabbing at the paper with his
finger. "That's
what it says. And that's where we are."
"Maybe she got held up by traffic." Ginny was on her
tiptoes, trying
to look over other people's heads.
"Maybe," Harry said absently. A funny, gurgling
feeling had begun to
grow in the pit of his stomach. He chalked it up to nervousness,
as
well as the huge but indifferently-cooked breakfast they had
eaten at
the Leaky Cauldron.
Ginny tapped her brother on the shoulder. "Ron, I'm going
to get a
copy of a Muggle newspaper for Dad. Before we left, he told me to
buy one here and send it to him as soon as we got to
school." She
stuck her hand into her pocket and pulled out a pound coin.
Ron snorted. "Why didn't he just ask Mum to get it?"
Ginny gave him a look that would have done Hermione proud.
"Could
you see Mum spending money on a Muggle paper? Or better yet,
could
you see Dad asking her to?"
"All right, all right," her brother said.
"Hurry up, though--we don't have
much time."
As Ginny was swallowed up by the crowd, Harry looked up at the
clock
on the station wall. Ron was right...it was quarter to eleven.
Only fifteen
minutes before the Hogwarts Express would depart--where was
Hermione?
He turned to Ron, about to ask if there was any sign of her,
when
a flash of blinding pain shot through his scar with such violence
that
he staggered and nearly fell.
"Ron! Get down!" he shouted, and without waiting for
his startled
friend to react dove forward in a flying tackle that sent them
tumbling
behind a row of empty trolleys.
Ron's surprised yell was drowned out by a tremendous explosion
that
rocked the station, deafening echoes bouncing off the high metal
girders.
They rolled to a sudden stop against the wall. Harry grunted
as Ron's
elbow landed firmly on his solar plexus, knocking the wind out of
him.
He stumbled, gasping, to his knees, keeping his head down to take
advantage of the cover of the trolleys. He didn't dare lift his
head
any higher, so the cages of metal in front of him severely
restricted
his vision. But the little he could see was not pleasant.
A small group of black-robed and masked figures, not more than
five
people, stood in the centre of the crowded terminus, firing
spells and
hexes in every direction. Muggles and wizards alike were
shouting,
screaming, running around in panic. Even those who couldn't see
the
actual cause of the terror fled for their lives, abandoning
luggage and
knocking down others in their mad dash to save themselves.
The sight sent a wave of deja vu rippling through Harry's
mind. It was
last year's Quidditch World Cup all over again...only worse.
There
was no playing this time, no sense that the whole thing was just
a cruel
joke. There was only malice, a horrible desire to hurt and cause
fear.
And it wasn't directed solely at Muggles this time, though Harry
knew
that if any Muggles were injured during this raid, Voldemort
would be
only too pleased.
Something clutched at his sleeve. He whipped around, hands
poised to
deliver a blow, but the sight of Ron's frightened face stopped
him short.
"Are you all right?" asked Harry, trying to detach
himself from Ron's
frantic grip.
Ron wouldn't let go of Harry's shirt. "What's going--"
A body crashed into the wall not five feet away from them,
knocking
over the trolleys that shielded them and cutting off the rest of
Ron's
question.
Harry felt a sharp pain in his left ankle as the edge of one
of the trolleys
landed on top of him. From somewhere behind him, he heard a loud,
vicious curse and the scraping of metal on metal as Ron tried to
crawl
out from beneath the pile of trolleys. Ignoring the pain, he
shoved the
metal cart aside, and was about to reach out and pull the wounded
person behind their make-shift barricade when he froze, arm
outstretched.
There was no mistaking that bush of brown hair.
Hermione lay on the ground in a heap, one arm twisted
underneath her
body. Her face had a bad, bloodless look to it, and her wand
dangled
from the limp fingers of her other hand. She wasn't moving.
Before Harry could think to move, Ron saw her. All the colour
drained
from his face, leaving it a sick mottled grey.
"Hermione? HERMIONE!" he shouted, and stood up,
leaving himself
completely exposed.
"Ron, get hold of yourself!" Harry grabbed him by
the wrist, yanking him
back down and away from Hermione. He pointed to her chest, which
was rising and falling in a slow but even rhythm. "Look,
look, she's
breathing all right...probably just knocked out. Where's
Ginny?"
Ron was still trying to break free, to get to Hermione before
someone
else did. "What?" he said, distracted.
"GINNY!" Harry screamed, shaking him so hard his
teeth chattered.
"Your sister! Where is she?"
"Don't...don't know." Ron's eyes were glazed over.
His face was
vacant.
It took all of Harry's self-control to keep from throttling
his friend.
"Stay here," he said loudly, giving Ron another shake
for good measure.
"I'll find her. Just keep trying to wake Hermione."
Ron didn't need to be reminded. The moment Harry let go of his
arms,
he scuttled over to the fallen girl and dragged her behind the
trolley
barricade.
While Ron tried to rouse their friend, Harry got down on his
hands and
knees and crept out from behind the trolleys. His ankle still
hurt, and
he didn't trust his ability to walk on it. The pain itself was
bearable.
He couldn't see the robed attackers, but he was in more
immediate
danger of being stepped on or trampled than hexed. He kept to the
wall, staying well away from the running and screaming crowds.
He saw a bit of bright red hair poking out from behind the
deserted
newspaper kiosk and crawled toward it, praying that he wouldn't
find
Ginny unconscious...or worse.
The relief he felt when he finally reached her made him dizzy.
Ginny
was curled into a tight ball, hands over her ears and face buried
in
her knees. She had apparently just purchased the newspaper when
the attack took place, because it was next to her on the ground,
unopened, along with her change. She was rocking back and forth,
very slowly.
Harry realised that touching her would be a bad idea--in her
state,
she was liable to claw his eyes out if she thought he was an
attacker.
"Ginny!" he said loudly, staying a safe distance away. "Ginny!"
Somehow, his voice penetrated her defences. She lifted her
head just
enough to peep over her knees, eyes wide with terror.
"Harry..." she whispered, as a dying person in a
desert might say
'Water....'
He crept over to her and wrapped his arms around her.
"Shh..." he
said, stroking her hair. "It's all right."
"Where's Ron?" she wailed.
"Ron's fine. Hermione got knocked out, but she'll be all
right," he added
quickly as he saw tears start to roll down her face. "Where
are Fred and
George?"
She gulped. "I think they went through the barrier...Harry, what--"
"Death Eaters." He was surprised at how grim he sounded.
Ginny began to shake convulsively.
"I want Mummy," she said softly.
That scared him. He'd never heard Ginny call her mother
anything but
'Mum'. The helpless plea of the normally self-possessed girl
filled him
with horror, followed closely by anger.
Suddenly, he heard a series of loud, explosive pops close by.
With the
greatest caution, he poked his head out from behind the kiosk.
The robed figures were gone, but the Dark Mark floated in the
air,
a glimmering skull with a serpent tongue looming ominously over
the
crowd. Muggles were pointing and staring at it, while the witches
and
wizards in the crowd could only look away in disgust and sadness.
He grabbed Ginny's hand, and together they ran, skirting the
wall to
arrive back at the pile of trolleys. Harry grimaced every time he
had
to put weight on his injured ankle. They collapsed behind the
safety
of the carts.
Ron was still there, Hermione's head resting on his knees as
he gently
patted her cheek. Ginny quickly joined him in his efforts to wake
her.
Harry looked up at the clock on the wall. Not even five
minutes had
passed since he had last checked it. It felt like a lifetime.
Before he could move to check on Hermione, a long, drawn-out
cry
split the air, chilling him to the bone. It was a heart-stopping
howl that
silenced all the other cries of terror and alarm.
He looked at Ron, then Ginny, seeing identical expressions of
incomprehension and fear on their faces. Very slowly, the three
of
them lifted their heads and peered over the top of the barricade.
Ginny screamed and buried her face in Ron's shoulder.
Ron made an unintelligible, choked noise, pulling his sister close.
Harry could only stare.
Colin Creevey was kneeling on the grimy concrete of the
platform,
sobbing as though he could bring down the high vaulted ceiling of
King's Cross Station upon all of them to crush his grief.
Cradled in his arms, crumpled like a child's broken doll, was
his
younger brother.
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Gramarye
gramarye@postmaster.co.uk
http://gramarye.freehosting.net/
February 23rd, 2002