If you've read this far into the story, the length and content
of this
chapter will more than make up for the fact that it's been so
long
in coming--for as the chapter title may indicate, the final
confrontation
between Light and Dark is fast approaching. I have no words to
thank you, my readers, for all the support you've given
me...except,
perhaps the words below.
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.
----------------------------------------------------------------
Harry Potter and the Legacy of the Light
A Harry Potter/The Dark Is Rising Sequence Fusion
By: Gramarye
Chapter Thirty-One - The Gathering Storm
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Who is the god that fashions enchantments -
- the enchantment of battle and the winds of change?
-- The Song of Amairgen, Leabhar Gabhála (Book of Invasions)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
The very first order of business that Will had planned was to
properly
bring Colin into the Six. Dumbledore's emergency meeting had
taken
priority on Monday evening, but now it was time for Colin to
experience
the more formal rituals that Harry and the others had already
gone
through.
Harry wished that he had had the foresight to talk to Colin
beforehand,
to tell him exactly what joining the Circle would entail. He knew
the
formalities wouldn't be painful, but Colin didn't know that. And
Will
Stanton was undeniably intimidating, despite his mild-mannered
nature.
Small wonder, then, that at that moment Colin was sitting very
stiffly
on the edge of his chair, awaiting whatever would come with all
the
enjoyment of a second-year student sitting Professor Snape's
first
exam of the year.
From somewhere within his robes Will produced a small,
battered leather
pouch that was immediately familiar to the other Gryffindors. He
undid the
thin cord that held it closed and tipped the pouch upside-down
over his
hand. A single light-coloured stone, no larger than the ball of
his thumb,
dropped into his open palm.
"Keep this with you at all times," he ordered,
placing the stone in Colin's
hand and curling the young boy's fingers around it. "Your
colleagues have
them as well. In the immediate presence of the Dark this
warestone will
grow very cold, too cold to touch. A special spell will also
cause it to
vibrate slightly if it detects the residual magic of an
Unforgivable Curse."
Colin glanced down at his closed fist with wary eyes, as he
might have
looked at the very first wand that Mr. Ollivander placed in his
hand.
"It won't bite you," Will said. Gentle humour warmed
his voice. "But do
take care if you try using it for anything other than its
intended purposes.
We've had one too many unexpected reactions to risk another such
incident."
Harry cringed at the carefully chosen words, sliding down a
fraction of
an inch in his seat. Hermione remained upright in her chair, but
her face
looked oddly pinched, as if she had eaten something that had
turned out
to be unexpectedly sour. Ron was scowling openly, not even
bothering
to look ashamed. Neville was pointedly avoiding all eye contact
with
his classmates. The only exception to their collective discomfort
was
Ginny, who was holding her hand in front of her mouth to conceal
what
was obviously a self-satisfied smirk.
"Thank you," Colin said, though he didn't sound at
all thankful. He slipped
the stone into his pocket.
Will tucked the empty bag back into his robes and held out a
hand, a
gesture of assistance that was both offer and command.
"There is one
thing left for you to do, if the Circle is to be completed
tonight."
Colin took the outstretched hand and got to his feet--slowly.
He allowed
Will to lead him over to stand before the fire, but he moved as
if he was
wading through chest-high water. He seemed to be feeling for each
footing,
uncertain of his steps.
Hermione, seeing Colin's uneasiness, tentatively raised her
hand and started
to say, "Shouldn't we all--"
"The five of you have already forged the link," Will
said, stopping her
question in mid-sentence. With his free hand, he swept his cloak
back
and away from one shoulder, the midnight blue material falling in
folds
across his back. "Adding one more person to it requires less
effort on
my part than trying to synchronise five others at the same time.
And Mr
Creevey will need a little time to adjust to the magic on his
own."
Colin looked like he didn't want to adjust to anything. In
fact, Harry
wouldn't have been surprised if it was only Will's firm grip on
Colin's
hand that was keeping the younger boy from outright panic.
Before Hermione or anyone else could respond, Will had taken
Colin's
other hand, and in the same movement knelt down on one knee. With
Will kneeling, the young wizard and the Old One were just eye to
eye.
"Can you stand very still for me?" he asked in a low
voice, holding Colin's
gaze steadily.
Colin gave him the tiniest of nods in reply.
The Old One nodded back. "Very good. Keep quite still,
then. Take some
nice deep breaths and allow yourself to relax."
Harry smiled inwardly. Colin was small for his age, about the
same height
as Ginny and a good half a head shorter than Harry or Neville.
Normally,
Will would have towered over him, and it didn't take any great
amount of
perceptiveness to realise that the height difference only served
to add to
Colin's nervousness. But by meeting the younger boy at eye level,
Will
made the whole thing seem less like an ordeal and more like a
secret that
would pass between friends...and equals.
The token gesture seemed to be having an effect. Colin was
visibly relaxing
with every passing second. His hunched shoulders dropped, his
breathing
evened out, and his posture went from one of awkward rigidity to
a more
easy, natural stance.
"Yes, that's right," Will said softly, voice and
face as tranquil as a still pool
of water. "You're doing quite well. Just stand very still
now and clear your
mind, let go of any outside thoughts or distractions...."
As Will continued to speak in the same hushed tones, Harry
found himself
struggling to stay awake. He was sitting nearer the fire than the
others, and
the drowsy warmth radiating from the grate blended with Will's
voice,
wrapping him in a soothing blanket of dreamy peacefulness. His
eyelids
were twin lead weights, pulling him down into a warm darkness
that was
filled with feather-light, hypnotic echoes of words that had
dissolved into
the shadows.
Yet just as he was about to nod off, he felt something click inside him.
It wasn't the kind of click he felt when he suddenly
understood or realised
something important; it was too strong, too forceful for that. He
felt the
click in his body as well as his mind--a sensation as
unmistakeable as
the feeling of a painfully dislocated joint sliding back into
place, or a
stray puzzle piece fitting neatly into its slot. It felt good,
so good that
Harry's heart gave a skip and began to pound faster.
He opened his eyes, his heartbeat singing in his ears, and his
gaze went
immediately to Colin and Will.
Will's tranquil expression had not altered by so much as a
hair, but
Colin had the look of a small boy who had woken up early on
Christmas
morning and discovered his overstuffed stocking draped neatly
across
the foot of his bed. A dazzled smile glowed on his face, but his
gaze was
strangely vacant, not focused on anything or anyone.
Harry was startled, but a moment later he understood the
reason for
Colin's unseeing eyes.
H...h...hello.
Breathy and hesitant, the younger boy's voice drifted shyly
into his mind.
Harry could feel him fumble a little as he adjusted to the
newness of it all.
Are you all right there? he heard Will ask, directing
the question to
Colin but allowing all of them to hear.
Colin's response came a little more smoothly. Fine, sir.
Will made a muted noise of approval. Good to hear it. And
just to be
absolutely certain...Miss Granger, could you hear him clearly
when
he answered my question?
Perfectly, sir, Hermione replied immediately.
"Excellent," Will said grandly, speaking aloud once
more. He patted Colin
on the shoulder. "You may sit down now, Mr Creevey."
Colin blinked once or twice, collecting himself, then
obediently trotted
the few steps back to his seat. His chair was directly opposite
Harry's,
and Harry grinned at him as he sat down. Colin returned the grin,
a
little unsteadily but no less brightly.
Will straightened up, wincing a little as he did so. Being
down on one
knee for so long could not have been comfortable. He looked glad
to
finally sit down in his chair, where he could stretch out his
legs and
feel the warmth of the fire at his back.
"Speaking with one another in that fashion works best
when all of you
are in the same room, or within sight of each other," he
said to them,
resting his elbows on the arms of the chair. "It's a very
limited form
of telepathy, but it is a means of communication that the Dark
cannot
break into. With enough practice it should come fairly easily to
you.
However, I don't recommend using it unless it is clearly an
emergency."
"Because the Dark can detect us if we use it?"
Neville guessed. A thin
line of worry creased his forehead.
"Well, that," Will said, "and you'd likely end
up with a headache if you
kept it up for too long." His mouth twitched; he couldn't
fully hide a smile.
"It has its uses, though."
He paused long enough to marshal his thoughts, then tapped his
fingers
together lightly.
"Now that the Six are together at last, we can start to
deepen your existing--"
--and he used a long, strange-sounding word that flowed into and
out of
Harry's mind like water--"to make full use of your
power."
He waited, expecting nods of confirmation and understanding,
but all he
saw were six equally blank stares.
"I...I'm sorry?" Neville stammered at last.
Will frowned at the bewilderment on their faces, but the frown
quickly
faded into an almost shamefaced expression.
"Ah," he said quietly, looking very ill at ease.
"Forgive me. I'm so used
to...the word doesn't really have a proper English equivalent. It
doesn't
have an equivalent in any modern language I can think of, either.
I
suppose the closest trans--"
"But it sounded like...." Ginny began, interrupting him.
"Yes?" he said.
"Like it was a...like you were...." Words failed
her, and she ducked her
head, embarrassed. "I don't know."
Hermione said impulsively, "It almost sounded like
something from
Charms class...but not really."
"Latin?" Now Will looked confused. "It sounded like Latin to you?"
"No!" she said hastily. She pressed her lips
together, biting down on
her thoughts. "Well, yes, sort of, but it wasn't...."
Ginny made another attempt. "It...it sounded
like a normal word, like
something I'd heard before, but it got all muddled up in my head.
Like
I wasn't hearing it right...."
She trailed off, suddenly self-conscious. "And that
didn't come out right
at all, did it."
Her response did sound strange when said aloud, but Harry knew
what
she was trying to say. Trying to describe what he had heard was
like
trying to answer a tricky question on a Charms exam--the proper
spell
was right there on the tip of his tongue, but the more he
strained to
recall it the farther the answer receded into the darker corners
of
his memory.
"She's right," he said. His voice sounded shrill in
his ears. "I felt it,
too. Like I wasn't hearing it right, I mean."
Ginny shot him a grateful look, smiling at him.
Harry tried to smile back, but what came out felt more like a
grimace.
What he hadn't said aloud was that the word Will had
used had, in
his own mind, sounded something like English, and something like
Latin...and something like Parseltongue. There was a sibilant
quality
to it that had conjured up old, bad memories of the Chamber of
Secrets and made returning Ginny's smile next to impossible.
Unable to look Ginny fully in the eye, he glanced at Will. The
Old
One had removed his glasses and was holding them up to the light,
seemingly checking for spots. He seemed to be deep in
contemplation,
so the children remained silent, waiting patiently--and
uncomfortably,
as the moments dragged on.
"Come to think of it, that doesn't surprise me," he
said after what felt
like an unnaturally long silence. "Considering that
you--well, to put it
plainly, you're hearing something in between English and the
older
languages you use for casting spells. It's your mind's way of
sorting
things out, trying to change the word into something you could
understand. Does that make any sense?"
The children nodded, cautiously. It sounded reasonable enough,
if
only because they couldn't explain it any better themselves.
Will slipped his glasses back on, resettling them on his nose.
"Truthfully, I wouldn't read too much into it if I were
you," he
said. "All languages, in a sense, come from the Old Speech,
though non-magical folk lost the ability to understand it long
ago. Even most witches and wizards would hear only nonsense
syllables. But the fact that you could understand it--even in
part--is a great comfort to me. It proves beyond a doubt that
the Light has marked you as one of its own."
He gave Harry a sidelong glance as he said the last sentence,
and
Harry felt a little better when he realised what the Old One was
trying to tell him.
"As I was saying," he continued, "the nearest
equivalent in modern
English would be something along the lines of 'contact', or
possibly
'connection'. But you could say that it goes past that,
describing
something far more complex than the simple mental link the six of
you currently possess."
He pushed his chair back and stood, drawing his robes closer
about
him. "You'll understand it more in practice, I think."
He motioned to them to stand up. Once they were on their feet,
he
raised his right arm and made a peculiar gesture with his hand.
The long table and all seven chairs vanished in the blink of an eye.
The sudden change was rather disorienting. With all the
furniture
gone, the little room didn't look so little anymore. It felt much
larger,
and the children felt much smaller standing in it.
"The basics of your magical training will come in
handy," Will said.
"Concentrating on the spell, not allowing distractions to
break your
ocus. But you need to practise together."
He stepped to one side. "If you would be so kind as to
make a circle,
facing inward, and join hands...except you, Mr Potter," he
said when
Harry started to follow his friends. "Stand here for now,
beside me."
Baffled, Harry hung back and watched as the others formed a
circle
in a manner that reminded him, oddly enough, of the Yule Ball two
Christmases before. There was a pause where no one seemed to
know how or where to move, but after a second of hanging back
Ron grabbed his sister's hand and strode into the centre of the
room,
pulling her along after him.
Once Ron had taken the initiative, everyone else followed.
Neville
quickly moved to stand beside Ron. Hermione took the empty spot
on Neville's other side, and Colin slipped in between Hermione
and
Ginny. The five of them joined hands, standing
shoulder-to-shoulder,
and craned their necks to look back at Will expectantly.
The Old One studied the arrangement with a critical eye. He
pressed
his index finger to his lips, tapping them gently as he thought.
"Hm," he said finally. "Not...quite. Mr
Creevey, if you would please
switch places with Mr Weasley? And do allow yourselves enough
space to feel comfortable--two steps backward should do it."
Colin and Ron did as they were asked. Once they were in place,
the
five of them took the requested two steps backward, widening the
circle.
"Better," Will said absently, as if he was approving
a rearrangement
of the now non-existent furniture, rather than that of the
children.
"Yes, that will do nicely."
Harry gazed hard at his friends, trying to look like he knew
exactly
what Will had in mind. Ron was now farthest away from the fire,
facing him and Will. Ginny was to her brother's right. Then
(following
the circle anti-clockwise) came Colin, then Neville, and finally
Hermione to Ron's left. He knew there was a pattern behind their
positions--Will never did anything without a reason--but try as
he
might he could not come up with one that seemed to fit.
He was sunk so deep in his search for the pattern that he only
caught the end of Will's next statement--or rather, question:
"...to explain why I made that change?"
No one's hand went up, not even Hermione's.
"No ideas?" He raised an amused eyebrow.
"Strange. Well, we'll try
a little experiment, then. Mr Creevey, Mr Weasley, if you would
be
so good as to return to your original positions?"
Colin and Ron exchanged glances, then silently changed places
again.
Now Colin was the one facing the fire, standing between Hermione
and Ginny, and Ron was on Ginny's other side.
Once they had rejoined hands, Will gave his next command.
"Close your eyes and concentrate on the hands of the
person on either
side of you," he said. "Just their hands, nothing else.
See what happens."
Harry shut his eyes as well, wondering if he would feel
anything.
He listened intently, ears pricked for any sound, but there was
only
silence. For a second, he thought about activating the mental
link
to see what he was missing, but he quickly came to the conclusion
that doing so would not be wise...certainly not with Will
standing
right next to him.
Ten seconds passed, then twenty. Half a minute had gone by and
he had neither heard nor felt a thing.
If something was supposed to happen, it would have
happened
by now, he said to himself, and opened his eyes.
Will was leaning against the mantelpiece, his arms folded
across his
chest. His friends were still standing in their circle, still
holding hands,
their expressions a mixture of bewilderment and open confusion.
Nothing had changed.
"Well?" Will said, prompting.
Colin was first to answer. "That was weird."
"It--tickled," added Ginny, taking great
care to choose the right word.
"Just a little bit."
Hermione, ever precise, tried to give a more specific
description.
"It felt rather like static electricity."
Neville blinked. "Static what?"
"Static electricity," Harry said, before Hermione
could answer. He
had been feeling left out of things; Neville's question had given
him
an excuse to leap back into the conversation. "Like when you
touch
a door handle and you get a shock."
"Oh," said Neville.
"And that was all you felt?" Will asked. He didn't
sound disappointed
or angry; he asked the question as if he already knew the answer.
Their reply came in a mixed chorus of "Yes" and "Yes, sir."
"Then Mr Creevey and Mr Weasley will switch places once
more
and you will try it again. This will be the last time, I
promise."
Shoes shuffled across stone as Colin and Ron changed
positions.
Ron took his place between Hermione and Ginny and turned around,
and in doing so met Harry's gaze. He glanced at Will, then back
at
Harry, and tilted his head a fraction of an inch as if to ask, What's
he playing at?
Harry lifted his shoulders just enough to indicate that he had
no idea,
either. He was starting to feel rather silly, standing around
like an
unwelcome party guest while Ron and Colin danced back and forth
across the room. What was more, his back was to the fire, and his
neck and shoulders had grown uncomfortably hot. He closed his
eyes and tried not to think about it.
Will cleared his throat. "As I said before, I want you to
concentrate
on the hands--"
And all of a sudden, Harry's hands began to tingle.
"--of the person next to you."
A crackle--if it was possible for one to feel a crackle
instead of
hearing it--of energy shot through his hands from wrists to
fingertips,
and the tingle intensified.
"The way their fingers feel in yours--"
The tingle became a pressure, and from the feel of it he could
have
sworn that someone, a real someone, had grasped his hands. There
was weight, and soft warmth, and an almost bony firmness between
thumb and palm and around the side where the other person's
fingers
curled--would curl--over his own.
"--the shape of their palms, the texture of their skin--"
He wanted to open his eyes, but he was afraid to, because he
knew
his brain would never be able to come to terms with the fact that
there was no one near him and nothing in his hands.
"--their hands, nothing else."
There was nothing else. The heat on his back, the
tense neck muscles
left over from Quidditch practice (could it really have been
earlier that
day?), the ache that had started to creep into the arches of his
feet
from standing for so long, all of that had dwindled down to
nothing.
"...and now...let go."
The ghost hands disappeared.
Harry nearly cried out, startled by the loss. His hands
clenched
reflexively. He grabbed only air.
He opened his eyes at the same time that the others did. Still
standing in their open circle with their hands at their sides,
his
friends looked as if they had just finished a lengthy round dance
or a children's game. Their faces were flushed, and the colour
was high in their cheeks.
"What WAS that?" Neville whispered, awe-struck.
"'That', Mr Longbottom," Will replied casually,
"was a properly
connected circuit. A far more effective use of your collective
magical abilities than 'static electricity'."
He took Harry by the shoulder and walked him forward.
"And if
Mr Potter were to join you in this particular arrangement...say,
by
standing here--"--and he guided Harry between Neville and
Colin
and gently pushed him into the centre of their
circle--"--you might
find that you've more magical ability at your command than you
could have ever imagined. But I think you've done enough for
tonight."
For the second time that night, all the children could do was
stare
blankly at him.
The Old One cocked his head to one side and gave them one of
his
more inscrutable smiles. "After all, you'll need a little
time to adjust to
the magic on your own."
Dazedly, the children drifted away from the centre of the
room,
wandering toward the door. Will waited until they had all reached
the far side of the room, and then conjured the table and chairs
back
into place with a pass of his hand.
"Come Monday, we will work with this more
intensely," he said.
In three strides, he had left his place by the fire and was
beside
the mirror. "In preparation, I want all of you to eat
properly for
the next few days. No more skipping meals, do you hear?"
Next to Harry, Ron stiffened, and Colin drew a sharp breath.
Harry
was too preoccupied rubbing his hands together, trying to get rid
of
the clutching feeling that had lingered on his palms, to actually
hear
the reprimand.
Will nodded to the six children in their huddled group,
pointed to the
mirror and uttered a single word.
The flare of white light from the intricately carved pattern
on the
wooden frame seared their eyes. By the time they had blinked and
rubbed the worst of the glare away, Will was gone, and the glass
of the mirror was ordinary reflective glass once more.
* * *
Morning post was always something of an event at Hogwarts.
Even
students who weren't expecting letters or parcels from home
looked
forward to it, eagerly awaiting the flurry of wings and the
shower of
paper. The sleepy mumble of conversation would rise in pitch and
volume as the owls rushed into the Great Hall, a steady din that
would
be punctuated with laughter and shouts once the post started to
rain
down. It was often hard to hear the voice of the person next to
you
over the thin rip of envelopes being opened, the crackling of
brown
paper wrapping being wadded up and tossed aside, and the rustle
of
fresh copies of the Daily Prophet being passed from hand
to hand.
But since most of the teachers took breakfast in their rooms in
the
morning, no one really cared about the noise. It was all part of
the
morning at Hogwarts.
At the Gryffindor table, six heads looked to the enchanted
ceiling,
watching the owls.
Hermione and Neville merely glanced up; they were first to go
back to
eating. Neither was expecting letters from home that day. Across
from
them, Ginny watched the owls in flight for a moment longer before
she
too returned to her meal. Harry never received owls, but he
always
liked watching the post come in. It was one of the most magical
sights
at Hogwarts, and no matter how many mornings went by it never
failed
to take his breath away. Most of the owls had departed by the
time he
dragged his gaze from the ceiling.
Fred and George, however, looked like they wanted nothing more
than
to chase after the owls, race after them on their brooms across
the rich
blueness of the cloud-dotted sky. Their heads stayed up longest,
and
only Harry, sitting across the table from them, heard the faint,
wistful
sighs they made when the last tawny owl disappeared.
Ron, sitting between Harry and Ginny, was the only one who had
not
looked up when the post arrived. Instead, he had been wrestling
with
an overflowing pot of honey and had come out the worse for
it--his
hands were liberally smeared with the sticky syrup. But just as
he
started to use the edge of his butter knife to scrape at his
fingers, a
plain brown post owl darted in through one of the high windows,
swooped low over the Gryffindor table, and neatly dropped a
letter
beside his plate.
He looked down at the letter, then at his hands.
"It figures," he said grumpily.
Nibbling on her toast, Ginny leaned over to get a better look
at the
envelope.
"Hey, it's from Percy!" she exclaimed.
"Well, would you look at that." George reached
across the table and
picked up the letter. He turned it over, studying the scarlet wax
seal
on the flap. "Ministry paper and all."
Fred cautiously sipped his tea, then added another lump of
sugar from
the bowl in front of him. "I'm surprised he didn't mark it
'Official: Private
and Confidential'."
"Why would he do that?" asked Harry.
"Well, let's put it this way," Fred said. "When
he started at the Ministry,
the first few times he owled a letter to say he'd be home late
for dinner
he stamped it 'Most Secret'."
Hermione nearly dropped a spoonful of marmalade into her tea.
"You're joking."
"We only wish," George said with a snort. He tossed
the letter back
onto the table.
"We went through two weeks of it before Crouch finally
found out and
put a stop to it," Ron said. He abandoned the butter knife,
and used
the tips of his little fingers to gingerly pick up his napkin.
"Said Perce
was running the Ministry owls ragged."
Fred suddenly looked thoughtful. "Speaking of owls, that
wasn't Hermes,
was it?"
George tilted his head back, searching the vaulted ceilings of
the Great
Hall, but all the post owls had departed. He turned to his twin
and
shrugged. "Didn't look like it."
"That's odd," said Ron. "Why wouldn't he use Hermes?"
"Is anyone actually going to OPEN it?" Ginny said loudly.
Ron glanced at the letter, then back down at his honey-coated
hands
and the now honey-coated napkin he held in them.
"You do it, Gin," he said. "I'll be lucky if I
can get this stuff off my
hands in time for class."
Grinning, Ginny picked up the letter and opened it. She began
to
read.
While she read, the others went on with their breakfasts and
their
breakfast conversations. Using a motley collection of salt
cellars and
pepper pots that they had pilfered from neighbouring tables, Fred
and George demonstrated to Harry their newest plan for
outflanking
an opposing team's Chaser. Neville helped himself to more bacon
and went back to reading an essay that Hermione had written for
Transfiguration. Every so often he paused to argue with her over
the
finer points of changing down pillows into Canada geese. Ron,
having
abandoned all pretence of table manners, was noisily sucking
honey
off his fingers, half-listening to the others talk.
Harry had just downed the last of his juice and was about to
leave the
table when he happened to glance over at Ginny. She was staring
down
at the letter, her eyes darting back and forth as if she was
searching for
a particular word or sentence and couldn't find it. She was also
biting
down on her lip hard enough to leave a white dent ringed with red
where teeth met flesh.
"Ginny? What's wrong?" he asked.
The twins swivelled round, turning to face their sister.
Hermione and
Neville had by that time put aside the essay and were discussing
the
reading due that day for Charms, but the worry in Harry's voice
made
them break off their conversation and look across the table at
Ginny.
Ron paused in mid-lick, and grabbed Harry's relatively clean
napkin
to finish wiping his hands.
Silently, Ginny folded the letter. It took a few tries before
she could
return it to the envelope; her hands were trembling, and the
paper
was thick and stiff. Only then did she look up, and her gaze was
troubled.
"You might want to read this, Ron," she said
faintly, and held the
envelope out for him to take.
Ron reached for it, but Fred was quicker. He leaned across the
table
and snatched it from her hand.
"Hey!" Ron shouted. "Give that here!"
Fred ignored him. Snarling, Ron made a grab for the letter,
but Fred
dodged the swipe and Ron only succeeded in tipping over his own
brimming teacup. A cascade of tea spilled across the table and
into
his lap. Fred took advantage of the accident to pass the letter
to
George, and the two of them hurriedly bent over it, reading
quickly.
"It NEVER ENDS!" Ron wailed. He tried to use Harry's
napkin to
dab at his dripping robes, but the napkin refused to unstick
itself
from his fingers long enough to be of use.
Hermione pushed her plate aside and took out her wand.
"Look,
just stop fiddling with it and hold still."
"Stupid sticky--"
Hermione gave an exasperated sigh. "Harry, would you mind--"
"I'm on it." Harry pulled out his wand and pointed
it at Ron's hands.
"Ablutio!"
A glittering blue light shot from his wand, and in the blink
of an eye
Ron's hands were clean and dry.
"There now," said Hermione, fixing Ron with a
superior smile. "Did
you completely fail the test on Cleansing Charms?"
"Could've done my robes while you were at it," Ron
said sulkily.
"You try getting your hand stuck in the honey pot and see
how well
you--"
"Damn it all!"
Harry's head shot up in time to see Fred crumple the letter in
his fist.
The crunch of parchment sounded like a gunshot.
"I knew it," he growled. His face was flushed
scarlet, and his usually
laughing eyes snapped with anger. He flung the wadded parchment
onto the table. "I knew something wasn't
right."
"Give me that!" Ron grabbed the letter, smoothing
the wrinkles and
pressing the parchment flat with his forearm as he scanned
Percy's
densely packed script.
"What does it say?" Harry demanded. The twins
scowled but said
nothing, and Ron was lost in reading, so he had no choice but to
turn to Ginny. "Gin, what did Percy say?"
Ginny picked up her fork and twirled it in her fingers, but
the absent
look on her face made it plain that she wasn't entirely aware of
what
her hands were doing.
"He's worried about Dad," she said. "He said
that Dad hasn't been
well lately."
"'Hasn't been well?'" George repeated scornfully.
"Try 'working
himself to death'--that's what he really means."
Neville gasped. "Did...did your brother actually say that?"
"Not in so many words, but it's obvious enough, isn't it?"
Harry leaned over, pretending to sop up the tea that had
spilled onto
the bench, and whispered in his best friend's ear, "Your
dad...he was
okay when you saw him in Dumbledore's office, wasn't he?"
"He said he was fine," Ron whispered back,
still staring at the letter.
"He said it was one too many late hours at the Ministry, but
he's
worked late before and he'd never looked like
that."
"Everyone at the Ministry is busy now," Hermione
told the twins.
"Your father's always worked hard...maybe he just needs
rest.
Maybe Percy's reading too much into things."
George shook his head. "If Percy's worried about
Dad working too
much, it has to be bad."
Fred picked up the empty envelope. "It's like, now that
Mum's gone,
all he ever does is work," he said. "Nights, weekends,
everything.
Percy says he's been taking every assignment that comes up, no
matter what it is. Not just raids on people with Muggle
stuff--he's
doing other things, too."
"Like what?" asked Harry.
Fred crumpled the envelope. "That's just it. Percy wouldn't say."
"Wouldn't say...or doesn't know," George added.
"But why?" Harry pressed. "Why's he doing it?"
"Dumbledore's making him," Fred said darkly.
Anger flared in Harry's heart, and he half rose out of his
seat.
"Dumbledore wouldn't do that!"
"How do you know?" Fred countered, staring him full in the face.
"Because...." He sat down heavily. Having said it
aloud, there was
no way he could possibly begin to explain...especially because he
wasn't entirely certain of it himself.
Ron shoved the letter away from him. It landed in a wet patch
on
the table, and the ink began to bleed, spreading in a rainbow-
coloured blotch across the page.
"Because he wouldn't, that's all," he said
defiantly. "Dumbledore's
not like that."
"What about Percy?" Hermione said abruptly, cutting
the budding
argument dead.
Fred switched his flat, unfriendly stare from Harry to her.
"What
about him?"
"Couldn't he do something?" She was using her most
sensible tone of
voice, the kind that always made Harry feel like he had done
something
amazingly idiotic. "Talk to your father, find out what's
really going on?"
Abruptly, Fred and George slid down the bench, away from her.
They stared at her, eyes wide with fascinated horror, as if she
had
just revealed that she had contracted some terrifically
contagious
disease.
"This IS our brother Percy you're talking about,
right?" George's
voice was incredulous. "Not some other Percy?"
Fred pushed back the sleeve of his robe and pressed the back
of his
hand to Hermione's forehead. His brow was furrowed in a mock
serious
frown.
"No, no fever," he said briskly, puckering his lips
in concentration.
He took her wrist gingerly between thumb and forefinger.
"And pulse
reads normal."
"But clearly," George said, equally mock serious,
"I believe we have
a case of TBO here."
"Ah, TBO." Fred clucked his tongue. "Traumatic
Brain Overload--of
course."
"Poor girl," said George sympathetically.
"Must've been all those books.
Terrible shame."
Fred nodded, and used one finger to tilt Hermione's chin
upward,
examining her more closely. "Nothing to be done. We'd best
notify
her parents at once."
Angrily, Hermione slapped Fred's hand away. "Stop that!"
"Oh-oh, patient showing signs of violence." Fred
made as if to jot
down a note on a pad of paper. "Might need restraints."
"Leave OFF, Fred!" Ron shouted, pounding his fist on the table.
Fred drew back, alarmed by the fury of his younger brother's
outburst.
"What's gotten into you?"
"She told you to stop, you stupid prat!" Ginny
yelled, so loudly that
heads started to turn at other tables.
"Keep your hair on, Ginny," George protested,
grinning nervously.
People were staring openly at the seven of them now, and for
perhaps
the first time in his life he found that the attention of a
curious crowd
was not something he welcomed. "It was only a joke."
"You don't ever joke about something like
that," Neville declared in
a voice as thin and cold as an icy wind. His eyes were fixed on
his
half-full plate. "Ever."
The twins glanced at each other, then back at the younger
Gryffindors.
They took in Hermione's blotchy face, Ron's murderous glare,
Neville's
frozen silence, Ginny's death grip on her knife and fork. And
then there
was Harry.
Neither Fred nor George had ever met Will Stanton. If they
had, at
that moment they might have seen an eerie similarity of
expression
in the set of Harry's jaw, in the deep lines that had formed
around
his mouth, and above all in the cold green fire of his eyes. It
wasn't
exactly the same, nowhere near identical, but anyone who had seen
Will Stanton and knew of his powers would have shrunk back from
the look on Harry Potter's face.
It was that look, more than anything else, that told the
Weasley twins
that they had crossed a line with their joking.
George spoke first. "Sorry, Hermione."
"Yeah," Fred said, with more sincerity than that
particular word
usually warranted. "Sorry about that. We didn't mean to...I
mean,
honestly, we never--"
Hermione made a weak attempt at a smile.
"No, it's all right," she said. "Don't worry about it."
"Hermione...." Ron hissed. His eyes had narrowed to furious slits.
"I'm FINE, Ron." There was an unspoken command to
drop the
subject that not even Ron Weasley could ignore
An uneasy quiet came over their small group. No one had an
appetite
for breakfast any longer; the food had already shrivelled up and
grown
cold on their plates. Ron had calmed down, though judging by the
quiver of tension in his shoulders there was a part of him that
still
seemed to be waiting for the command to leap over the table and
take on both his brothers at once
"What about Bill and Charlie?" Harry asked, anxious
to turn Ron's
attention elsewhere.
Ron said nothing, so Fred answered instead. "The only one
who could
ever make Dad do anything was Mum."
"Oh," Harry said in a small voice.
Suddenly, Ginny threw down her knife and fork, making them all jump.
"What if he goes to a raid really late one night, and he
hasn't gotten
enough sleep so he's tired, and someone lets off some really
nasty
hex or curse at him and he's so tired that he can't get out of
the way
in time, and--and--" Her voice caught in her throat.
Her brothers were saved from having to reply by an abnormally
loud cough that came from direction of the raised dais at the
front
of the Hall.
Heads turned and plates clattered as the students looked
round.
Professor McGonagall had entered the Hall from the door behind
the teachers' table. She coughed again, then cleared her throat,
and
the hall rang with the noise.
"May I have your attention please?" she said. Her
voice had been
greatly amplified, most likely by a Sonorus Spell. She walked
round
the front of the table. "Students, may I have your attention
please!"
A few first and second years stood on their seats, elbowing
each
other out of the way to get a better view. Harry was too far away
to see the expression on her face, but he could see that she was
standing very stiffly, and that her hands were clasped in front
of
her.
McGonagall waited until most of the scuffling had died down
before she spoke again.
"I regret to inform you that the Quidditch match between
Ravenclaw
and Slytherin, scheduled for tomorrow, has been indefinitely
postponed.
Will the captains of both teams please see me in my office?"
Cries of shock and indignation rose from the Slytherin and
Ravenclaw
tables, and everyone started talking at once. Not surprisingly,
the
loudest shouts came from the Quidditch teams of the affected
houses.
McGonagall paid no attention to the uproar. She crossed the
Great
Hall with long, deliberate steps--students who were in her path
scattered as she approached them--and did not pause in her stride
until she had reached the double doors at the other end of the
hall.
"NOW, gentlemen?" Her voice, sharp and ominous,
boomed in the
cavernous, high-ceilinged space.
Roger Davies bolted from the Ravenclaw breakfast table with
all the
speed and grace of a lamed rabbit. Twice, he trod on the hem of
his
robes and almost fell over his own feet, but managed to right
himself
in time to stumble up to McGonagall.
Draco, on the other hand, calmly finished the buttered,
toasted
crumpet he had been eating and dabbed at his mouth with his
napkin. He folded the napkin neatly in half, then into fourths,
and set it next to his plate. Only then did he get to his feet
and
head for the double doors, where McGonagall and Davies stood
waiting for him.
Once the doors had closed behind both professor and students,
dozens of conversations sprang up from the long tables, high-
pitched and urgent like the rustle of long grasses in a strong
wind.
"What was that all about?" Fred said to the table at
large, scratching
his head.
"Bet Malfoy's father pitches a fit when he finds out
Slytherin's had
their match cancelled," George said, rather snidely.
"Good job we're
not playing this week, right, Harry?"
But Harry wasn't listening. His eyes had followed Malfoy,
Davies, and
McGonagall as they left, and he had seen a dark blur slip through
the
doors just before they had closed completely. The blur soon
resolved
itself into the shape of large black dog, galloping toward the
section
near the middle of the Gryffindor table where he and his friends
were
sitting.
Snuffles was breathing hard by the time he reached them. Harry
bent
down to stroke the shaggy fur, but his hand stopped when he saw
that
Snuffles had something in his mouth. It was thin and flat and
white--
an envelope.
"Is that for me?" he murmured.
The dog whined softly and nudged his hand with its nose.
Harry took the envelope, not caring that part of it was damp,
and slit
it open. Keeping it between his knees, he read it as best he
could in
the darkness under the table.
The letter wasn't long, but he had to read it through twice
before the
words finally sank in.
Harry,
Urgent message from Dumbledore--Lestranges
escaped from Azkaban early this morning. Inform
Dr.Stanton as soon as possible. Don't worry about
class.
Remus
Lestranges. Azkaban.
Still staring at the paper, he reached out with his mind,
searching
for the link.
It was like gathering a handful of strings into his hand,
individual
threads that he could feel with his--well, he'd heard of people
seeing things with their mind's eye before, but never feeling
things with their mind's hand. He tugged on the strings
gently,
just enough to get their attention.
Can all of you hear me? he asked, though he knew it
wasn't
necessary.
He sensed their initial shock, the sudden quickening of
heartbeats
as they were caught off guard by his intrusion into their
conscious
thoughts.
H...Harry? Hermione's voice, breathy with fear, was
the first to
slide into his mind. What are you--
The Lestranges escaped last night, he replied,
cutting her off.
They broke out of Azkaban.
A sharp spike of fear--from Neville, a detached part of his
mind
silently registered--made Harry's scar pulse sympathetically. He
winced, but ignored the pain
Ginny, what do you have first this morning? he asked.
Ancient Runes, today, Ginny replied. I...I don't
know what
Colin has.
Speaking of Colin, where is he?
Right behind you.
Harry jumped, but didn't turn around. Faintly, he heard either
Fred
or George say, "Oi, Colin! Bad luck for Slytherin, isn't
it?"
Colin! Where were you? he asked silently.
Talking to Emma Fitzpatrick, Colin said. She's in
my Muggle
Studies class. I got away as soon as I could--who are the
Lestranges?
I... he began, but stopped. It wasn't the time to
explain. It wasn't
his place to explain, either. Something's come up, and we
have
to talk to Will. What do you have first today?
Colin hesitated. Care of Magical Creatures, but Hagrid's
away
again. My class is supposed to stay here for a study period with
Professor Sinistra.
Right. That settles it. He let go of the threads, and
said aloud,
"Hermione, can I borrow your quill?"
Wordlessly, she handed it to him. He flipped the piece of
parchment
over and, using his knee as a makeshift table, quickly scribbled
on the
back.
Remus,
Thanks. Have told others, going to let
Will know right now.
Harry
Once the smudged scrawl of ink that was supposed to be his
name
had dried, he stuffed the parchment back into the envelope.
Snuffles had been watching the proceedings closely, and when
Harry
turned back to face him he leapt to his feet, whining urgently.
He
looked as frustrated as a dog could look--not being able to speak
properly to his godson must have been driving him mad.
Harry held out the letter. "Take this to Rem...er,
Professor Lupin,
okay?"
Snuffles glanced at the envelope, then up at him.
"I'll be all right," Harry whispered. "Trust me."
The Animagus reluctantly took the letter from him, holding it
carefully in his mouth.
Harry glanced round the Great Hall. It was as good a time as
any to
leave. Classes would be starting soon, and it was better to be
out
in the corridors when other students were around than to be
caught
sneaking off to the library when none of them had any reason to
be
in that part of the castle.
He got to his feet, and the others stood up as well
"Let's go," he said firmly.
Hermione picked up her schoolbag, and Neville gathered his
books.
Ron and Ginny stacked their plates and brushed the crumbs from
their
robes. Colin stepped aside to let Harry by, and the six of them
started
for the doors as a group with Snuffles following, trotting in
their wake.
"And where are you all off to?" George called after them.
"The library!" Ron shouted back, over his shoulder.
"We've got to
study!"
Fred's confused shout followed them out of the Great Hall.
"You're
all skiving off class--to STUDY?"
* * *
Once they were safely in the corridor, they broke into a run.
Dog and children kept pace with one another until they reached
the
shifting staircases. It was there that Snuffles disappeared up
the stairs
that led to the second floor corridor and the Defence Against the
Dark
Arts office, and the children took the stairs that led to the
floors above,
and the library.
Harry saw the Animagus vanish out of the corner of his eye,
but didn't
pay much attention to where he went. Sirius Black knew the secret
passages of the castle better than almost anyone alive; Remus
would
probably get the note before they could contact Will.
Once they were in sight of the door to the room, Harry fired
off the
unlocking spell. A shower of sparkles sped ahead of them and
struck
the door. He, Ron, and Ginny were first to reach the door itself,
and
for a moment it was all elbows and feet as they fought to get
inside.
Ginny, being smallest, was first to wiggle free. She headed
directly for
the mirror, and once she had touched it she flicked her wand at
the
cold grate, kindling a fire on the coals leftover from the night
before.
The others staggered in after her, out of breath from their
long run.
Hermione and Neville looked more winded than Ron or Harry.
Neville was quite grey in the face. Hermione clung to the edge
of the long table to steady herself as she gulped lungfuls of
air.
Will was waiting for them when the mist behind the glass had
whirled
away. He had changed his shirt, but other than that he looked
exactly
as he had the day before. He held a cup of coffee in one hand. In
his
other hand was an envelope.
Harry gasped out, "Remus just had a letter from Dumble--"
"As did I." He held up the envelope. "Arrived
not five minutes ago.
I was wondering if you'd show up."
"What happened? Remus only said they'd escaped."
Will's face was grim. He set his coffee cup on his desk, and
tucked
Dumbledore's letter into the inside pocket of his suit jacket.
"They escaped well enough," he said. "And
killed an Auror in the
process."
The words had scarcely left his lips before the barrage of
questions
began.
"Who did they kill?" Ron demanded to know.
"Did anyone else escape?" Hermione asked fearfully.
"How could they get out without a wand?" asked Ginny.
Harry had a chilling thought. "They weren't Animagi, were they?"
The Old One held up his hands for quiet. "We're wasting
time.
Activate the mirror, and I'll tell you what I know."
The Six crowded round the mirror, jostling for position.
"Enter, Watchman of the Light."
"Grant to us your inner sight."
"Enter, for the time draws near."
"Power will erase our fear."
"Enter, lest the darkness win."
"We the Six now call you in."
Whether it was the urgency in their request or the myriad of
emotions
surging through the room, the carved pattern on the frame seemed
to
glow brighter than normal as Will stepped through the mirror and
into
the room.
The children fanned out and took their places round the table.
They
stood beside their chairs, waiting for Will to sit down, but the
Old One
did not approach his seat by the fire. He stood in front of the
mirror,
surveying the room.
"We won't need these," he announced. He passed his
hand through the
air in the same peculiar gesture he had used the night before,
and table
and chairs disappeared.
Hermione's schoolbag had been lying on the table, and it fell
to the floor
with a heavy thump. Hurriedly, she scooped it up and whisked it
out
of the way, setting it in the far corner of the room, and
rejoined the
others in the centre.
Will strode over to the fire, and turned to face them. The
firelight
cast a long shadow of him into the room. Illuminated from behind
ashe was, it was hard to tell where his shadow stopped and the
bottom of his robes began.
"The Minister was remarkably open when it came to
details," he said
tersely. "Some of the other prisoners created a distraction,
and the
Lestranges managed to get away in the confusion. They attacked an
Auror who was trying to watch for the Dementors, stole his wand,
and killed him with it. Presumably, they Apparated off the
island--
they'd need a wand for that. The Ministry has had squads of
Aurors
combing the coastline all through the night, but there's no trace
of
their whereabouts. It's my opinion that they had help, or at the
very
least had someone waiting for them on the mainland."
He ticked points off on his fingers. "As a result, the
Ministry is on
high alert. The number of guards at Azkaban has been tripled. The
name of the Auror they killed will not be released until his
family
has been notified. And I've heard nothing about Animagi, so I
won't speculate on that. Was that everything?"
The children were stunned speechless. Even if Will had
left
something out, they would not have been able to tell him so.
"Don't look so surprised," he said reproachfully.
"I've been
expecting something like this for some time now. If you think
on it, Azkaban is a perfect place for the Dark to launch an
attack--for more reasons than you'd imagine."
Harry found his voice. "Because of the Dementors."
"Not even that. Traditionally, the Dark has attacked from
the sea.
Read your history closely enough and you'll see what I
mean."
Hermione's hand went immediately to her schoolbag, but Will
shook his head.
"No, not that sort of history," he said,
rather dismissively. "Not
the kind they'd teach you here. All you need know is that the
Dark
has time and again come to this island, riding on the wave of
invasion,
and the Light has time and again taken arms to drive it back. It
is
the way of things."
"So how do we drive them back to Azkaban?" Ron asked.
"We don't."
Neville's mouth fell open. "What?"
"So what are we supposed to do then?" Ron didn't
bother to hide the
bitterness in his voice. "Go back to class and pretend it
didn't happen?"
Will fixed him with a stern look. "Chasing after escaped
prisoners is
not your job. Let the Aurors and the Ministry deal with Mr and
Mrs
Lestrange. You have another task." He smiled a wintry smile.
"I had
hoped we would have more time to prepare, but the Dark always was
one to spoil my best-laid plans."
Harry thought of Christmas with the Weasleys, and couldn't
decide
whether to be miserable or furious.
Best-laid plans, all right, he said to himself.
"I've given this matter a good deal of thought,"
Will went on. "As I see
it, the Dark Lord's best chance of winning revolves around one
main
problem. He must eliminate you as a threat, but he cannot kill
you
outright if he wishes to wield the full power of the Dark. And as
you
have the resources of the Light at your disposal, his options are
rather
limited. But he does have options, and one in particular troubles
me.
"There is an ancient magic that can be used by both Light
and Dark,
the same magic that the Light called upon to banish the Lords of
the
Dark for all time. Properly cast, it will blast its victim out of
Time,
into the void from which nothing can return. No power can deflect
it, no protection can block it. Once it is cast, it does not
miss.
"The Dark Lord will risk all on this spell. If he
succeeds...." For the
first time, he hesitated, and Harry could tell that it was not
because
he was searching for the right words. "Well, I have it on
good
authority that the consequences do not differ greatly from
death."
"C-couldn't you cast it, then?" Colin asked
hopefully. "Before he
does?"
Will looked stunned by the question.
"Certainly not," he said coldly. By the sound of it,
the young boy
might very well have asked the impossible, as absurd a suggestion
as
ordering a Muggle to violate the law of gravity. "I would be
breaking
the law of the High Magic if I did. No, he must cast the spell
first, and
you, in turn, must capture its power and harness it for your own
ends."
Hermione shoved her hair out of her face. "How can we do
that?
Wouldn't it--surely, we couldn't--"
"Like all magic of its kind, it can be wielded by the
party with the
greater strength," Will said. "To defeat him, you must
use your
strength to catch the spell, hold it, and send it back at him.
And
though I loathe to use such a meaningless word as 'destiny' in
this
case, it should not come as a shock to hear that the only one of
you who can send the captured spell back at the Dark Lord is
Mr Potter."
Harry swallowed. A gigantic lump had formed in his throat, and
he
had to get rid of it before it choked him. He couldn't bring
himself
to look at Will or his friends, though he knew they all were
looking
at him.
"What would happen if I...if we failed?" he asked,
his voice hardly
above a whisper.
Will sighed. "I am telling you this now because you need
to know
all of the risks. Omitting anything would be worse than lying to
you
outright. But if you--all of you--fail to capture and contain the
spell
with your own magic, you will be blasted out of Time forever. And
if you cannot send it back at him, the concentrated power of the
Dark will poison you, swiftly and lethally." His tone had
hardened;
there was no sympathy or compassion in it. "Either way, none
of
you would survive."
The children were silent, but oddly enough they were not
afraid.
Something--the power of the Light, or some deeper, underlying
Gryffindor trait--would not let them be afraid. It was too late
for worries or regrets, if they had ever had any to begin with.
It was Harry who spoke for all of them when he said,
resolutely,
"What do we have to do?"
A spark flared in Will's eyes, making the depths glow with an
eerie incandescence.
"Form the circle as you did last night, but face outwards
this time."
He addressed them harshly, a seasoned warrior instructing his
front-
line soldiers. "Mr Potter, please stand inside the circle,
in the centre.
Have your wand at ready."
They did as he ordered. Will waited until they had joined
hands, and
then he started to pace back and forth before the fire, never
taking
his eyes off them.
"The circle must act as a shield until the Dark Lord
casts the crucial
spell," he stated. "And you will know when he casts it.
All your
instincts will tell you at the moment he releases the spell. But
until
that moment you must protect yourselves--and Mr Potter--from
the full force of his power." He paused in his pacing.
"He will
doubtless try everything short of the Killing Curse to break the
circle, because he has one chance, and you have one chance,
and you will not have another.
"As for you, Mr Potter, you must not cast a single spell
of your own.
The absolute last thing you need is a Priori Incantatem
duel." He
raised an eyebrow at Harry's stricken expression. "Yes, I
know all
about it. And while having the same core material in both your
wand
and his does increase your chances for success, you also run the
risk
of having your wand rendered useless by its own magic."
Harry gripped his wand more tightly.
"Raise your shield," Will said. He pulled his cloak
more closely
about him.
As the magic crackled around them, Will took a step forward.
His
body shimmered, rippling, shifting, changing--
Suddenly, it was no longer Will, but a Dementor.
Cloaked and hooded in a dull black that seemed to suck all the
light
out of the room, the Dark creature reached out a slimy, scabbed
hand,
decaying fingers clawing the air. Its rattling breath, like the
last desperate
gurgle of a drowning man, submerged them all in icy cold horror.
It
started to glide forward, drawing nearer.
Harry reacted blindly, without thinking.
"EXPECTO PATRONUM!" he screamed, and lashed out with his wand.
CRACK!
A bolt of blinding white, bright as a streak of summer
lightning, flared
from the tip of his wand and struck the Dementor in the chest.
CRACK!
The world tilted upside-down, and just as quickly righted
itself. Harry's
legs gave out from under him, and he sank to his knees. His wand
slipped from his fingers and clattered on the floor.
"Harry!" he heard Colin shout. There was a blurry
movement on the
edge of his field of vision, and Colin gave a sharp cry of pain,
as if
someone had twisted his wrist.
"Don't break the circle!" someone--it came from
behind, so it must
have been Ron--ordered.
"What happened?" Ginny cried. "What WAS that?"
Slowly, very slowly, Harry's senses returned to him, and he
could sit
up properly and look round. A circle of very worried faces
surrounded
him--his friends were still holding hands. There was a faint
stench of
Dark magic in the air, the odour of rotting leaves and
graveyards. But
the Dementor was gone, even if its presence lingered in the room.
Will, however, was nowhere to be seen.
"Dementor..." he breathed shakily. "Where...where did--"
"It's gone," Hermione said, shuddering at the
memory. "Harry, what did
you DO?"
He couldn't think clearly. "I didn't...it wasn't...where's Will?"
At the mention of the Old One's name, the air in front of the
fire
shimmered again, and Will materialised.
He was coughing, great hacking coughs that shook his entire
body.
One hand was pressed to his heart, and his breathing was an
uneven,
ragged wheeze. Staggering backward, he slumped against the
bookshelf nearest the fire, and squeezed his eyes shut.
"Will!" Neville cried out, terrified. "Are you all right?"
The Old One coughed once more, weakly, but he gave them a rueful grin.
"If that had been a real Dementor, a creature wholly of
the Dark, you
would have vaporised it on the spot. As it stands...." He
massaged his
breastbone, wincing. "I'll be rather sore tomorrow morning,
I can tell
you that."
* * *
Will and Harry recovered rapidly from the experiment, and for
a
long time afterward the only voice heard in the little room was
Will's
occasional brusque "Again" as the five children
practised the
shielding spell they had used to guard Harry against the
Dementor.
They practised raising the shield as quickly as possible, holding
it
at full strength for the count of thirty, and lowering it again.
They
did this over and over under Will's watchful eye, and he was
quick
to admonish if he thought they weren't putting enough effort into
it.
Harry, for his part, was told to stand in the centre and feel
the magic
as it swelled and faded around him. He had to know the precise
moment when the magic reached its peak, and when he felt the
peak he would extend his arm, pointing his wand at Will.
They worked on the shield for at least forty-five minutes
before Will
took their practice a step further. He told them that they would
be
testing the strength of their shield against the spells they had
learned
so far in their schooling. Even the most simple and harmless
charms
had to be deflected.
"You need to be prepared for every possibility," he
said. "If you have
to repel the Imperius Curse, then you should certainly practise
repelling
a Cheering Charm."
He started out slowly, casting simple spells that they could
easily deflect
and he could easily block on the return. At first, he seemed to
be running
through the first five volumes of The Standard Book of Spells
chapter
by chapter, perfectly duplicating many of the spells they had
learned in
Charms class and Defence Against the Dark Arts and even some from
the long-gone duelling club that Gilderoy Lockhart had tried to
establish.
As the minutes ticked past, he made the spells more complex,
often
allowing a little of his own magic to seep in.
At first, Harry could tell when Will's magic was present in
the spells--
he would fell a burning prickle under his skin in the second
before his
friends could adjust their shield to compensate. But gradually,
the
prickle lessened and finally stopped altogether.
They were learning.
It was during one of their rest periods, where they were all
sitting
down with their backs against the bookshelves, that Colin brought
up the question that Harry had hoped would slip his mind.
"Who're the Lestranges?" he asked, propping his chin
on his knees.
"They must've done something awful for Professor Lupin to
send you
that note, Harry."
The innocent way in which the question had been put was worse
than the question itself. Colin was not the only one who did not
know the full story of Neville's parents. Harry had only told the
others as much as he felt comfortable telling: Neville's parents
had been in St Mungo's for years, victims of the insanity that
came with prolonged torture under the Cruciatus Curse. But
only he knew who had been responsible for the torture. He had
put two and two together in the graveyard the night of the last
Triwizard Tournament task--the Lestranges, whom Voldemort
had promised to honour 'beyond their wildest dreams', were in
all likelihood two of the four persons sentenced to Azkaban for
the torture of the Longbottoms.
It was Neville's story, really, and he was about to suggest
that
Neville tell it if he wanted to. But just as he was opening his
mouth
to say so, Neville dug in his pockets and took out something thin
and greyish-looking. He stood, and walked across the room to
where Colin sat.
"Here," he said flatly, holding out the greyish
thing. "This'll tell you
what you want to know."
Harry watched carefully as Colin took the object and held up
to
the light. It was yet another envelope, the same size as the
others
that had come their way so far that day, but unlike the others it
wasn't crisp and new. It was grey with dirt, and battered and
creased...and very familiar.
It was the envelope that had fallen from Neville's robes at
the
end of their testing before Dumbledore and McGonagall and Figg.
Harry had held the envelope in his hand, and would have opened
it if Will hadn't taken from him. And now Colin was opening it,
and
pulling out a folded newspaper clipping that was worn so thin
that
it was nearly transparent.
He read through the clipping. His eyes grew wider and his face
grew paler as he read, until he looked like he was going to be
sick
or faint on the spot. Will, leaning against the mantel, was
watching
Neville, who was standing over Colin. The others turned their
gaze
from Colin to Neville to Will, afraid to linger too long on any
one
of them.
Colin finally looked up, and stared at Neville. His hands were
shaking,
which made the clipping rustle noisily.
"They did this?" His voice shook as well.
"They were convicted of it," Neville said stonily.
He took the clipping
and the envelope from Colin's unresisting hands. "And now
they're--"
There was a loud knock at the door.
They're here, Harry thought wildly.
"Mr Potter," Will said, as graciously as if he had
been expecting guests
for tea, "would you please answer the door?"
Harry picked up his wand, and got to his feet. Some of Will's
calm had
rubbed off on him, because he did not feel nervous as he walked
to the
door. He opened it a crack, and peeped out.
He saw no one. The corridor was empty.
Just as he was about to close the door, a high, tinny voice
chirruped,
"Hello, Harry Potter!"
He looked down. It was Dobby the house elf.
"Dobby? What are you....what's that?" He pointed to
the two silver
domes that Dobby was balancing on his upturned hands.
"Headmistress told Dobby to bring lunch for Harry Potter
and his
friends," the house elf proclaimed proudly.
"Lunch?" Food was the farthest thing from his mind.
The very notion
of eating something...his mouth began to water, but only because
a
delicious smell was seeping from the trays and wafting upward to
his
nose.
Dobby tried to peer around Harry's leg to see into the room.
"Shall
Dobby bring the trays inside, sir?"
"NO!" he barked, but quickly regained his composure.
"I mean, no,
thank you, Dobby. I can carry it."
"Trays are very heavy, sir," Dobby said doubtfully.
"I'll be fine. Just set them down here and I'll take care
of them."
If Dobby was invited in, he'd never leave.
"As Harry Potter wishes." Dobby placed the trays on
the floor of the
corridor and sketched a small bow. "Dobby will return in one
hour for
the trays--if Harry Potter would be so kind as to leave them
outside
the door?"
"Yes, yes, fine." He was growing impatient.
"Should Dobby bring anything else?"
"No, thank you," he said, nicely but forcefully. "Goodbye, Dobby."
The house elf bowed again, then snapped his fingers and
disappeared
with a crack.
Harry let out a gusty sigh, and opened the door all the way.
"Sorry," he said to Will, who was regarding him with
no small amount
of curiosity. "Dobby--one of the house elves--brought lunch
for all of us."
"It's lunchtime?" Hermione's eyebrows went up;
apparently Harry
wasn't the only one who had completely forgotten about food.
Ron, however, hadn't. "Smashing," he said gleefully,
rubbing his
hands together. It was the happiest he'd looked all morning.
Will took out his watch. "So it is. I'm terribly
sorry--you must be
famished. Let me just take care of the seating...."
He motioned to them to move aside, and they scattered,
clearing
space in the centre of the room. Will waved his hand and conjured
the long table and the seven chairs back into place.
"Wingardium Leviosa!" With a swish and a
flick, Hermione sent the
two trays floating through the air and lowered them easily onto
the
table. With another flick of her wand she lifted the shining
silver lids
and left them suspended in mid-air, hovering over the trays.
A bowl piled high with fresh fruit, apples and bananas and
pears,
dominated one side of the first tray. Seven tall goblets and a
massive
pewter jug of something cold--it looked like pumpkin juice--took
up
the rest of the space on the other side. The juice was so cold
that a
film of condensation had formed on the rounded sides of the jug,
and
it left a wet ring on the tray when Harry picked it up to fill
the goblets.
In the middle of the second tray was an oval plate overflowing
with
still-warm bread rolls. Faint wisps of steam rose from their
golden
brown tops, carrying a delightful smell into the air. Surrounding
the
plate of rolls were other, smaller plates that held yellow bricks
of
Cheddar cheese and heaps of assorted biscuits.
The children ate for the next few minutes, taking whatever
they wanted
from the trays and not caring about crumbs. In the beginning, it
felt like
they couldn't eat quickly enough to satisfy the yowling demands
of their
stomachs. Only when the meal had taken the edge off their hunger
did
they start to talk amongst themselves.
"Sausage rolls," Colin mumbled happily around a
mouthful of the same.
"Fantastic."
"I wish there were regular ones, too," Hermione
said, setting a half-
eaten one aside. "I don't like sausage rolls."
"I'll take it," Neville offered. "Trade you for my biscuits."
"But I've already bitten it."
Neville shrugged. "So?"
Hermione made a face, but pushed the nibbled roll in his
direction
and accepted the biscuits he held out to her.
"Aren't you having anything else, sir?" Ginny asked
Will politely,
staring not-so-politely at the napkin in front of him. On it was
a
small chunk of cheese, an apple, and a handful of
biscuits--barely
half of what Ron and Harry had already devoured.
"I'm quite content, thank you," he replied. "I
don't want to take
food from your mouths."
Ginny pondered his reply for a moment, but she quickly turned
her
attention back to the plate of sausage rolls, grabbing the last
one
just before her brother could take it himself.
The simple noontime meal was a great comfort after the
relative misery
of the morning. The depressing letter from Percy, the
unpleasantness
at breakfast, the awful news of the Lestranges' escape, the hours
of
furious concentration on life-or-death magic--everything that had
gone
wrong that day had combined to cast a pall over the children's
minds.
The taste of food helped dispel some of the pressure that had
been
building up all morning. With full bellies and rested bodies, the
Six
were prepared for an afternoon of hard work.
Will, however, seemed to be in no great hurry to return to
work.
He held up his goblet. "Mr Longbottom, would you please pass
the pitcher?"
Neville handed the pitcher to Ron, who passed it on to Will.
"Thank you." He refilled his goblet from the jug and
took a careful
sip. "And you say this is pumpkin?"
"Pumpkin juice," Ron said as he refilled his own goblet. "Do you like it?"
"It...intrigues me." He took another small sip,
rolling the liquid around
in his mouth as if he was sampling a fine wine. "I never
thought that a
member of the squash family could produce a drinkable
beverage."
"You should try hot butterbeer," Colin piped up.
"It's the best thing
when it's really cold out."
Will smiled. "Butterbeer, eh? I've had butterscotch
before...it is in
any way similar?"
Colin thought for a second. "Well, it's not as sweet, and
sometimes
the foam gets up your nose. But it doesn't leave your mouth all
gummy
afterward."
Will opened his mouth, then shut it.
Harry fought to suppress a grin. Trust Colin to give a
perfectly straight
answer to a tongue-in-cheek question.
He didn't dare look at any of the others. Eye contact would
certainly
set off the laughter that was threatening to bubble over inside
of him.
He concentrated fiercely on his apple for a few moments, biting
and
chewing and swallowing, until he wasn't feeling so hysterical and
could look Will in the face once more.
When he finally did look up, he saw that the Old One's lapse
of
self-possession had been short-lived. In one deep draught, Will
finished the last of his pumpkin juice and set the empty goblet
aside.
"Let's see," he said, steepling his fingers in front
of him. "If the
fifth-year Gryffindors were supposed to have Defence Against
the Dark Arts this morning, am I right in thinking that the four
of
you would be missing both Transfiguration and History of Magic
this afternoon?"
Ron nodded. "But Professor McGonagall knows we're here,
and
Professor Binns wouldn't notice if half the class was
missing."
"With the four of us gone, half the class is
missing," Hermione
observed sardonically.
Ron grinned. "True."
Will turned to Ginny. "And your schedule, Miss Weasley?"
"Colin and I both have Herbology after lunch, then Potions," she said.
"Ick." Neville pulled a face.
"Potions?" The Old One's gaze slid away into a vague
middle distance,
then refocused with an almost audible snap. "I don't want
you missing
that."
"We can get the assignments later," Ginny said, taking another pear.
"That's not what I meant. It would not be a good idea for
you--for
any of you--to miss Potions."
Something in his tone made them all stop eating. Neville and
Harry
paused in mid-chew, while Ginny set down the pear and Colin froze
with a biscuit halfway to his mouth.
Harry swallowed hastily. "Is something...?"
Will's expression told them nothing, but his words were crisp
with the
briskness of officialdom. "One of the reasons why the
meeting was held
the Monday after classes resumed, rather than immediately after
all the
facts were known, was due to Professor Snape. For all of Easter
week
he was under strict Ministry quarantine, and the Minister's
personal
supervision."
Colin dropped his biscuit into his lap. "Wh...why?"
"Polyjuice," Hermione murmured.
"Amongst other things," Will said. "The
Department of Magical Law
Enforcement put him through a number of physical and magical
tests
to be certain that he hadn't been...well, tampered with."
The thought of Professor Snape being 'tampered with' turned
the food
to lead in Harry's stomach. He shifted uneasily in his chair.
"The tests generally require a minimum of three days, but
the Ministry
chose to stretch them out to five for greater security. That
would take
us through early Thursday. And when you factor in the day or so
that
he would need to recover from these tests--"
"Recover?" Hermione had gone very pale.
"Without going into details, I can assure you that he
needed two full
days to recover." His unemotional tone did nothing to lessen
the chill
of his words. "And even then, you saw how he was Monday
evening."
No one spoke, and Will took their silence as leave to continue.
"I want you to keep a very close watch over him," he
said. "I don't
pretend to know his current state of mind, but when last I saw
him
he was a desperate man. You have seen how the Dark can use such
desperation against a person's will and without his
knowledge."
Wearily, he raked a hand through his hair. "I am very
afraid that
Professor Snape's most secret and terrible fear has come to pass.
He has become a liability to us all."
* * *
The session continued all through that afternoon. Will did not
comment
on their progress, but dismissed them at five o'clock with a
simple "I will
see you Monday evening".
Harry was glad to leave. He was exhausted from the hours of
single-
minded concentration. The magic that had buffeted his body had
left
him feeling like he had pummelled by Beaters' bats. He couldn't
begin
to imagine how tired his friends were; they looked even more worn
out
than he felt.
Dinner wouldn't start for a while yet, so they walked slowly,
taking
their time. They had just passed the staircase that led up to the
Astronomy Tower when Ron turned to Hermione and said, out
of the blue:
"I'm sorry about Fred and George."
She stopped dead. So did Harry and the others.
"L-look, it's all right," she said, doing her best
to sound reassuring.
"They didn't know--how could they have? They were only
joking.
I know they weren't trying to be hurtful."
Ron looked down at the floor, scuffing the toe of one shoe
against the
worn stones
"They always go too far," he said sourly. "They should know better."
She tossed her head. "It's my own fault for not being
able to take a
joke. And it's not like they haven't done worse to you. Much
worse,
if half of what you and Ginny have told me is true." She
gave him a
searching look. "Why are you getting so worked up over
this?"
Ron lifted his head. The sourness that had coloured his voice
was
not reflected in his face. There was sadness in his eyes, but his
mouth
was twisted in a wry half-smile.
"You know why, Hermione," he said gruffly.
"But I...." She stared at him. A bright red flush
started to creep up
her cheeks. The tip of her tongue darted out, moistening her
lips.
"Th...thanks," she said shyly, and smiled timidly.
Ron returned her smile, the twist of his lips broadening into
a full if
shaky grin of his own.
Hermione opened her mouth, as if to say something more, but
she
suddenly shook her head. Her hair flew around her face. When the
cloud of brown frizz settled, she turned to the other four, who
had
been pretending not to notice anything beyond the portraits on
the
walls and the statues on their pedestals.
"Let's get to dinner," she said. "We don't want
to be late." She was
her old bossy self once more.
Most of the smile faded from Ron's face, but the corners of
his mouth
stayed stubbornly turned up.
They started walking again, but this time Harry hung back,
dawdling
Something didn't feel right. By the time he had realised what was
bothering him, they had arrived at the first of the staircases
that
would take them down to the Great Hall.
The staircase they wanted was one that shifted positions
depending
on where you wanted to go, and when they arrived it was just
settling
into place with a grinding of stone. They hurried down flight
after
flight until only one set of stairs was left. Going down would
take
them directly to the hall, while going up the rickety stairs on
the
other side would lead to the Defence Against the Dark Arts
office.
The others started down, but Harry took the up staircase.
"Harry, aren't you coming?" Ginny called up to him.
He glanced over his shoulder. "I don't think I want
anything," he said
airily, skipping a step to avoid one that tended to vanish
without
warning. "You go on without me."
Hermione protested, "But Will said--"
"I can get something later. Doesn't take much to sneak
down to the
kitchens, right?"
A pained expression crossed her face. She fingered her
prefect's badge.
"I didn't hear that."
"'Course you didn't." He chuckled, and kept
climbing. "See you back
in the common room."
"Harry, wait!" Colin cried. "Where are you going?"
"To see Remus," he replied. "I think he ought
to know what we worked
on today."
Hermione's eyes lit up at the mention of their professor's name.
"Will you get the homework from him?" she said
eagerly. "And could
you ask him if he's finished marking the essays we turned in
before
Easter? Please?"
Ron stared at her, thunderstruck. "You never let up, do
you? I mean,
you never--"
"I never what, Ron?"
Hermione's retort and Ron's subsequent cutting remark touched
off
another round of squabbling. Trading sharp words for all they
were
worth, they were both oblivious to the fact that the staircase
had
started moving again--and was carrying them away from their
intended
destination.
Neville, Ginny, and Colin knew better than to interfere. They
clung to
the moving staircase and waited, patiently or impatiently, for
Ron and
Hermione to wear themselves out. The argument would have to run
its
course before they stood any chance of getting dinner.
Harry chuckled, this time to himself, and started the climb
again. No
matter what trials or problems the day seemed to bring, at the
end of
the day it was a great comfort to know that some things never
changed.
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December 7th, 2002