CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
THE HEIR OF
SLYTHERIN
He was standing at the end of a very long, dimly lit chamber.
Towering stone pillars entwined with more carved serpents rose to support a
ceiling lost in darkness, casting long, black shadows through the odd, greenish
gloom that filled the place.
His heart beating very fast, Harry stood
listening to the chill silence. Could the basilisk be lurking in a shadowy
corner, behind a pillar? And where was Ginny?
He pulled out his wand and
moved forward between the serpentine columns. Every careful footstep echoed
loudly off the shadowy walls. He kept his eyes narrowed, ready to clamp them
shut at the smallest sign of movement. The hollow eye sockets of the stone
snakes seemed to be following him. More than once, with a jolt of the stomach,
he thought he saw one stir.
Then, as he drew level with the last pair of
pillars, a statue high as the Chamber itself loomed into view, standing against
the back wall.
Harry had to crane his neck to look up into the giant face
above: It was ancient and monkey-like, with a long, thin beard that fell almost
to the bottom of the wizard's sweeping stone robes, where two enormous gray feet
stood on the smooth Chamber floor. And between the feet, facedown, lay a small,
black-robed figure with flaming-red hair.
“Ginny!” Harry muttered, sprinting
to her and dropping to his knees. “Ginny—don't be dead—please don't be dead—” He
flung his wand aside, grabbed Ginny's shoulders, and turned her over. Her face
was white as marble, and as cold, yet her eyes were closed, so she wasn't
Petrified. But then she must be
“Ginny, please wake up,” Harry muttered
desperately, shaking her. Ginny's head lolled hopelessly from side to
side.
“She won't wake,” said a soft voice.
Harry jumped and spun around on
his knees.
A tall, black-haired boy was leaning against the nearest pillar,
watching. He was strangely blurred around the edges, as though Harry were
looking at him through a misted window. But there was no mistaking
him
“Tom—Tom Riddle?”
Riddle nodded, not taking his eyes off Harry's
face.
“What d'you mean, she won't wake?” Harry said desperately. “She's
not—she's not -?”
“She's still alive,” said Riddle. “But only just.”
Harry
stared at him. Tom Riddle had been at Hogwarts fifty years ago, yet here he
stood, a weird, misty light shining about him, not a day older than
sixteen.
“Are you a ghost?” Harry said uncertainly.
“A memory,” said
Riddle quietly. “Preserved in a diary for fifty years.”
He pointed toward the
floor near the statue's giant toes. Lying open there was the little black diary
Harry had found in Moaning Myrtle's bathroom. For a second, Harry wondered how
it had got there—but there were more pressing matters to deal with.
“You've
got to help me, Tom,” Harry said, raising Ginny's head again. “We've got to get
her out of here. There's a basilisk... I don't know where it is, but it could be
along any moment... Please, help me.”
Riddle didn't move. Harry, sweating,
managed to hoist Ginny half off the floor, and bent to pick up his wand
again.
But his wand had gone.
“Did you see -?”
He looked up. Riddle was
still watching him—twirling Harry's wand between his long fingers.
“Thanks,”
said Harry, stretching out his hand for it.
A smile curled the corners of
Riddle's mouth. He continued to stare at Harry, twirling the wand
idly.
“Listen,” said Harry urgently, his knees sagging with Ginny's dead
weight. “We've got to go! If the basilisk comes—”
“It won't come until it is
called,” said Riddle calmly.
Harry lowered Ginny back onto the floor, unable
to hold her up any longer.
“What d'you mean?” he said. “Look, give me my
wand, I might need it—”
Riddle's smile broadened.
“You won't be needing
it,” he said.
Harry stared at him.
“What d'you mean, I won't be
-?”
“I've waited a long time for this, Harry Potter,” said Riddle. “For the
chance to see you. To speak to you.”
“Look,” said Harry, losing patience, “I
don't think you get it. We're in the Chamber of Secrets. We can talk
later—”
“We're going to talk now,” said Riddle, still smiling broadly, and he
pocketed Harry's wand.
Harry stared at him. There was something very funny
going on here.
“How did Ginny get like this?” he asked slowly.
“Well,
that's an interesting question,” said Riddle pleasantly. “And quite a long
story. I suppose the real reason Ginny Weasley's like this is because she opened
her heart and spilled all her secrets to an invisible stranger.”
“What are
you talking about?” said Harry.
“The diary,” said Riddle. `My diary. Little
Ginny's been writing in it for months and months, telling me all her pitiful
worries and woes—how her brothers tease her, how she had to come to school with
secondhand robes and books, how” -Riddle's eyes glinted “how she didn't think
famous, good, great Harry Potter would ever like her...”
All the time he
spoke, Riddle's eyes never left Harry's face. There was an almost hungry look in
them.
“It's very boring, having to listen to the silly little troubles of an
elevenyear-old girl,” he went on. “But I was patient. I wrote back. I was
sympathetic, I was kind. Ginny simply loved me. No one's ever understood me like
you, Tom... I'm so glad I've got this diary to confide in... It's like having a
friend I can carry around in my pocket...”
Riddle laughed, a high, cold laugh
that didn't suit him. It made the hairs stand up on the back of Harry's
neck.
“If I say it myself, Harry, I've always been able to charm the people I
needed. So Ginny poured out her soul to me, and her soul happened to be exactly
what I wanted... I grew stronger and stronger on a diet of her deepest fears,
her darkest secrets. I grew powerful, far more powerful than little Miss
Weasley. Powerful enough to start feeding Miss Weasley a few of my secrets, to
start pouring a little of my soul back into her...”
“What d'you mean?” said
Harry, whose mouth had gone very dry.
“ Haven't you guessed yet, Harry
Potter?” said Riddle softly. “Ginny Weasley opened the Chamber of Secrets. She
strangled the school roosters and daubed threatening messages on the walls. She
set the Serpent of Slytherin on four Mudbloods, and the Squib's cat.
“No,”
Harry whispered.
“Yes,” said Riddle, calmly. “Of course, she didn't know what
she was doing at first. It was very amusing. I wish you could have seen her new
diary entries... far more interesting, they became... Dear Tom,” he recited,
watching Harry's horrified face, `I think I'm losing my memory. There are
rooster feathers all over my robes and 1 don't know how they got there. Dear
Tom, l can't remember what 1 did on the night of Halloween, but a cat was
attacked and I've got paint all down my front. Dear Tom, Percy keeps telling me
I'm pale and I'm not myself. I think he suspects me... There was another attack
today and I don't know where I was. Tom, what am I going to do? I think I'm
going mad... I think I'm the one attacking everyone, Tom!”
Harry's fists were
clenched, the nails digging deep into his Palms.
“it took a very long time
for stupid little Ginny to stop trusting her diary,” said Riddle. “But she
finally became suspicious and tried to dispose of it. And that's where you came
in, Harry. You found it, and I couldn't have been more delighted. Of all the
people who could have picked it up, it was you, the very person I was most
anxious to meet...”
“And why did you want to meet me?” said Harry. Anger was
coursing through him, and it was an effort to keep his voice steady.
“Well,
you see, Ginny told me all about you, Harry,” said Riddle. “Your whole
fascinating history. “ His eyes roved over the lightning scar on Harry's
forehead, and their expression grew hungrier. “I knew I must find out more about
you, talk to you, meet you if I could. So I decided to show you my famous
capture of that great oaf, Hagrid, to gain your trust—”
“Hagrid's my friend,”
said Harry, his voice now shaking. “And you framed him, didn't you? I thought
you made a mistake, but—”
Riddle laughed his high laugh again.
“It was my
word against Hagrid's, Harry. Well, you can imagine how it looked to old Armando
Dippet. On the one hand, Tom Riddle, poor but brilliant, parentless but so
brave, school prefect, model student... on the other hand, big, blundering
Hagrid, in trouble every other week, trying to raise werewolf cubs under his
bed, sneaking off to the Forbidden Forest to wrestle trolls... but I admit, even
I was surprised how well the plan worked. I thought someone must realize that
Hagrid couldn't possibly be the Heir of Slytherin. It had taken me five whole
years to find out everything I could about the Chamber of Secrets and discover
the secret entrance... as though Hagrid had the brains, or the power!
“Only
the Transfiguration teacher, Dumbledore, seemed to think Hagrid was innocent. He
persuaded Dipper to keep Hagrid and train him as gamekeeper. Yes, I think
Dumbledore might have guessed... Dumbledore never seemed to like me as much as
the other teachers did...”
“I bet Dumbledore saw right through you,” said
Harry, his teeth gritted.
“Well, he certainly kept an annoyingly close watch
on me after Hagrid was expelled,” said Riddle carelessly. “I knew it wouldn't be
safe to open the Chamber again while I was still at school. But I wasn't going
to waste those long years Id spent searching for it. I decided to leave behind a
diary, preserving my sixteen-year-old self in its pages, so that one day, with
luck, I would be able to lead another in my footsteps, and finish Salazar
Slytherin's noble work.”
“Well, you haven't finished it,” said Harry
triumphantly. “No one's died this time, not even the cat. In a few hours the
Mandrake Draught will be ready and everyone who was Petrified will be all right
again—”
“Haven't I already told you,” said Riddle quietly, “that killing
Mudbloods doesn't matter to me anymore? For many months now, my new target has
been -you.”
Harry stared at him.
“Imagine how angry I was when the next
time my diary was opened, it was Ginny who was writing to me, not you. She saw
you with the diary, you see, and panicked. “What if you found out how to work
it, and I repeated all her secrets to you? What if, even worse, I told you who'd
been strangling roosters? So the foolish little brat waited until your dormitory
was deserted and stole it back. But I knew what I must do. It was clear to me
that you were on the trail of Slytherin's heir. From everything Ginny had told
me about you, I knew you would go to any lengths to solve the mystery
-particularly if one of your best friends was attacked. And Ginny had told me
the whole school was buzzing because you could speak Parseltongue...”
“So I
made Ginny write her own farewell on the wall and come down here to wait. She
struggled and cried and became very boring. But there isn't much life left in
her... She put too much into the diary, into me. Enough to let me leave its
pages at last... I have been waiting for you to appear since we arrived here. I
knew you'd come. I have many questions for you, Harry Potter.”
“Like what?”
Harry spat, fists still clenched.
“Well,” said Riddle, smiling pleasantly,
“how is it that you a skinny boy with no extraordinary magical talent—managed to
defeat the greatest wizard of all time? How did you escape with nothing but a
scar, while Lord Voldemort's powers were destroyed?”
There was an odd red
gleam in his hungry eyes now.
“Why do you care how I escaped?” said Harry
slowly. “Voldemort was after your time...”
“Voldemort,” said Riddle softly,
“is my past, present, and future, Harry Potter...”
He pulled Harry's wand
from his pocket and began to trace it through the air, writing three shimmering
words:
TOM MARVOLO RIDDLE
Then he waved the wand once, and the letters of
his name rearranged themselves:
I AM LORD VOLDEMORT
“You see?” he
whispered. “It was a name I was already using at Hogwarts, to my most intimate
friends only, of course. You think I was going to use my filthy Muggle father's
name forever? I, in whose veins runs the blood of Salazar Slytherin himself,
through my mother's side? I, keep the name of a foul, common Muggle, who
abandoned me even before I was born, just because he found out his wife was a
witch? No, Harry—I fashioned myself a new name, a name I knew wizards everywhere
would one day fear to speak, when I had become the greatest sorcerer in the
world!”
Harry's brain seemed to have jammed. He stared numbly at Riddle, at
the orphaned boy who had grown up to murder Harry's own parents, and so many
others... At last he forced himself to speak.
“You're not,” he said, his
quiet voice full of hatred.
“Not what?” snapped Riddle.
“Not the greatest
sorcerer in the world,” said Harry, breathing fast. “Sorry to disappoint you and
all that, but the greatest wizard in the world is Albus Dumbledore. Everyone
says so. Even when you were strong, you didn't dare try and take over at
Hogwarts. Dumbledore saw through you when you were at school and he still
frightens you now, wherever you're hiding these days—”
The smile had gone
from Riddle's face, to be replaced by a very ugly look.
“Dumbledore's been
driven out of this castle by the mere memory of me!” he hissed.
“He's not as
gone as you might think!” Harry retorted. He was speaking at random, wanting to
scare Riddle, wishing rather than believing it to be true
Riddle opened his
mouth, but froze.
Music was coming from somewhere. Riddle whirled around to
stare down the empty Chamber. The music was growing louder. It was eerie,
spine-tingling, unearthly; it lifted the hair on Harry's scalp and made his
heart feel as though it was swelling to twice its normal size. Then, as the
music reached such a pitch that Harry felt it vibrating inside his own ribs,
flames erupted at the top of the nearest pillar.
A crimson bird the size of a
swan had appeared, piping its weird music to the vaulted ceiling. It had a
glittering golden tail as long as a peacock's and gleaming golden talons, which
were gripping a ragged bundle.
A second later, the bird was flying straight
at Harry. It dropped the ragged thing it was carrying at his feet, then landed
heavily on his shoulder. As it folded its great wings, Harry looked up and saw
it had a long, sharp golden beak and a beady black eye.
The bird stopped
singing. It sat still and warm next to Harry's cheek, gazing steadily at
Riddle.
“That's a phoenix,” said Riddle, staring shrewdly back at
it.
“Fawkes?” Harry breathed, and he felt the bird's golden claws squeeze his
shoulder gently
“And that—” said Riddle, now eyeing the ragged thing that
Fawkes had dropped, “that's the old school Sorting Hat—”
So it was. Patched,
frayed, and dirty, the hat lay motionless at Harry's feet.
Riddle began to
laugh again. He laughed so hard that the dark chamber rang with it, as though
ten Riddles were laughing at once
“This is what Dumbledore sends his
defender! A songbird and an old hat! Do you feel brave, Harry Potter? Do you
feel safe now?”
Harry didn't answer. He might not see what use Fawkes or the
Sorting Hat were, but he was no longer alone, and he waited for Riddle to stop
laughing with his courage mounting.
“To business, Harry,” said Riddle, still
smiling broadly. “Twice—in your past, in my future—we have met. And twice I
failed to kill you. How did you survive? Tell me everything. The longer you
talk,” he added softly, “the longer you stay alive.”
Harry was thinking fast,
weighing his chances. Riddle had the wand. He, Harry, had Fawkes and the Sorting
Hat, neither of which would be much good in a duel. It looked bad, all right...
but the longer Riddle stood there, the more life was dwindling out of Ginny...
and in the meantime, Harry noticed suddenly, Riddle's outline was becoming
clearer, more solid... . If it had to be a fight between him and Riddle, better
sooner than later.
“No one knows why you lost your powers when you attacked
me,” said Harry abruptly. “I don't know myself But I know why you couldn't kill
me. Because my mother died to save me. My common Muggle-born mother,” he added,
shaking with suppressed rage. “She stopped you killing me. And I've seen the
real you, I saw you last year. You're a wreck. You're barely alive. That's where
all your power got you. You're in hiding. You're ugly, you're foul—”
Riddle's
face contorted. Then he forced it into an awful smile. “So. Your mother died to
save you. Yes, that's a powerful counter-charm. I can see now... there is
nothing special about you, after all. I wondered, you see. There are strange
likenesses between us, after all. Even you must have noticed. Both half-bloods,
orphans, raised by Muggles. Probably the only two Parselmouths to come to
Hogwarts since the great Slytherin himself. We even look something alike... But
after all, it was merely a lucky chance that saved you from me. That's all I
wanted to know.”
Harry stood, tense, waiting for Riddle to raise his wand.
But Riddle's twisted smile was widening again.
“Now, Harry, I'm going to
teach you a little lesson. Let's match the powers of Lord Voldemort, Heir of
Salazar Slytherin, against famous Harry Potter, and the best weapons Dumbledore
can give him...”
He cast an amused eye over Fawkes and the Sorting Hat, then
walked away. Harry, fear spreading up his numb legs, watched Riddle stop between
the high pillars and look up into the stone face of Slytherin, high above him in
the half-darkness. Riddle opened his mouth wide and hissed—but Harry understood
what he was saying...
“Speak to me, Slytherin, greatest of the Hogwarts
Four. “
Harry wheeled around to look up at the statue, Fawkes swaying on his
shoulder.
Slytherin's gigantic stone face was moving. Horrorstruck, Harry saw
his mouth opening, wider and wider, to make a huge black hole.
And something
was stirring inside the statue's mouth. Something was slithering up from its
depths.
Harry backed away until he hit the dark Chamber wall, and as he shut
his eyes tight he felt Fawkes' wing sweep his cheek as he took flight. Harry
wanted to shout, “Don't leave me!” but what chance did a phoenix have against
the king of serpents?
Something huge hit the stone floor of the Chamber.
Harry felt it shudder—he knew what was happening, he could sense it, could
almost see the giant serpent uncoiling itself from Slytherin's mouth. Then he
heard Riddle's hissing voice: “Kill him.”
The basilisk was moving toward
Harry; he could hear its heavy body slithering heavily across the dusty floor.
Eyes still tightly shut, Harry began to run blindly sideways, his hands
outstretched, feeling his way—Voldemort was laughing...
Harry tripped. He
fell hard onto the stone and tasted blood the serpent was barely feet from him,
he could hear it coming.
There was a loud, explosive spitting sound right
above him, and then something heavy hit Harry so hard that he was smashed into
the wall. Waiting for fangs to sink through his body he heard more mad hissing,
something thrashing wildly off the pillars.
He couldn't help it—he opened his
eyes wide enough to squint at what was going on.
The enormous serpent,
bright, poisonous green, thick as an oak trunk, had raised itself high in the
air and its great blunt head was weaving drunkenly between the pillars. As Harry
trembled, ready to close his eyes if it turned, he saw what had distracted the
snake.
Fawkes was soaring around its head, and the basilisk was snapping
furiously at him with fangs long and thin as sabers.
Fawkes dived. His long
golden beak sank out of sight and a sudden shower of dark blood spattered the
floor. The snake's tail thrashed, narrowly missing Harry, and before Harry could
shut his eyes, it turned—Harry looked straight into its face and saw that its
eyes, both its great, bulbous yellow eyes, had been punctured by the phoenix;
blood was streaming to the floor, and the snake was spitting in agony.
“NO!”
Harry heard Riddle screaming. “LEAVE THE BIRD! LEAVE THE BIRD! THE BOY IS BEHIND
YOU. YOU CAN STILL SMELL HIM. KILL HIM!”
The blinded serpent swayed,
confused, still deadly. Fawkes was circling its head, piping his eerie song,
jabbing here and there at its scaly nose as the blood poured from its ruined
eyes.
“Help me, help me,” Harry muttered wildly, “someone—anyone!”
The
snake's tail whipped across the floor again. Harry ducked. Something soft hit
his face.
The basilisk had swept the Sorting Hat into Harry's arms. Harry
seized it. It was all he had left, his only chance—he rammed it onto his head
and threw himself flat onto the floor as the basilisk's tail swung over him
again.
“Help me—help me—” Harry thought, his eyes screwed tight under the
hat. “Please help me!”
There was no answering voice. Instead, the hat
contracted, as though an invisible hand was squeezing it very
tightly.
Something very hard and heavy thudded onto the top of Harry's head,
almost knocking him out. Stars winking in front of his eyes, he grabbed the top
of the hat to pull it off and felt something long and hard beneath it.
A
gleaming silver sword had appeared inside the hat, its handle glittering with
rubies the size of eggs.
“KILL THE BOY! LEAVE THE BIRD! THE BOY IS BEHIND
YOU. SNIFF—SMELL HIM.”
Harry was on his feet, ready. The basilisk's head was
falling, its body coiling around, hitting pillars as it twisted to face him. He
could see the vast, bloody eye sockets, see the mouth stretching wide, wide
enough to swallow him whole, lined with fangs long as his sword, thin,
glittering, venomous...
It lunged blindly. Harry dodged and it hit the
Chamber wall. It lunged again, and its forked tongue lashed Harry's side. He
raised the sword in both his hands.
The basilisk lunged again, and this time
its aim was true—Harry threw his whole weight behind the sword and drove it to
the hilt into the roof of the serpent's mouth.
But as warm blood drenched
Harry's arms, he felt a searing pain just above his elbow. One long, poisonous
fang was sinking deeper and deeper into his arm and it splintered as the
basilisk keeled over sideways and fell, twitching, to the floor.
Harry slid
down the wall. He gripped the fang that was spreading poison through his body
and wrenched it out of his arm. But he knew it was too late. White-hot pain was
spreading slowly and steadily from the wound. Even as he dropped the fang and
watched his own blood soaking his robes, his vision went foggy. The Chamber was
dissolving in a whirl of dull color.
A patch of scarlet swam past, and Harry
heard a soft clatter of claws beside him.
“Fawkes,” said Harry thickly. “You
were fantastic, Fawkes...” He felt the bird lay its beautiful head on the spot
where the serpent's fang had pierced him.
He could hear echoing footsteps and
then a dark shadow moved in front of him.
“You're dead, Harry Potter,” said
Riddle's voice above him. “Dead. Even Dumbledore's bird knows it. Do you see
what he's doing, Potter? He's crying.”
Harry blinked. Fawkes's head slid in
and out of focus. Thick, pearly tears were trickling down the glossy
feathers.
“I'm going to sit here and watch you die, Harry Potter. Take your
time. I'm in no hurry.”
Harry felt drowsy. Everything around him seemed to be
spinning.
“So ends the famous Harry Potter,” said Riddle's distant voice.
“Alone in the Chamber of Secrets, forsaken by his friends, defeated at last by
the Dark Lord he so unwisely challenged. You'll be back with your dear Mudblood
mother soon, Harry... She bought you twelve years of borrowed time... but Lord
Voldemort got you in the end, as you knew he must...”
If this is dying,
thought Harry, it's not so bad. Even the pain was leaving him...
But was
this dying? Instead of going black, the Chamber seemed to be coming back into
focus. Harry gave his head a little shake and there was Fawkes, still resting
his head on Harry's arm. A pearly patch of tears was shining all around the
wound—except that there was no wound.
“Get away, bird,” said Riddle's voice
suddenly. “Get away from him—I said, get away!”
Harry raised his head. Riddle
was pointing Harry's wand at Fawkes; there was a bang like a gun, and Fawkes
took flight again in a whirl of gold and scarlet.
“Phoenix tears...” said
Riddle quietly, staring at Harry's arm. “Of course... healing powers... I
forgot...”
He looked into Harry's face. “But it makes no difference. In fact,
I prefer it this way. Just you and me, Harry Potter... you and me...”
He
raised the wand.
Then, in a rush of wings, Fawkes had soared back overhead
and something fell into Harry's lap—the diary.
For a split second, both Harry
and Riddle, wand still raised, stared at it. Then, without thinking, without
considering, as though he had meant to do it all along, Harry seized the
basilisk fang on the floor next to him and plunged it straight into the heart of
the book.
There was a long, dreadful, piercing scream. Ink spurted out of the
diary in torrents, streaming over Harry's hands, flooding the floor. Riddle was
writhing and twisting, screaming and flailing and then...
He had gone.
Harry's wand fell to the floor with a clatter and there was silence. Silence
except for the steady drip drip of ink still oozing from the diary. The basilisk
venom had burned a sizzling hole right through it.
Shaking all over, Harry
pulled himself up. His head was spinning as though he'd just traveled miles by
Floo powder. Slowly, he gathered together his wand and the Sorting Hat, and,
with a huge tug, retrieved the glittering sword from the roof of the basilisk's
mouth.
Then came a faint moan from the end of the Chamber. Ginny was
stirring. As Harry hurried toward her, she sat up. Her bemused eyes traveled
from the huge form of the dead basilisk, over Harry, in his blood-soaked robes,
then to the diary in his hand. She drew a great, shuddering gasp and tears began
to pour down her face.
“Harry—oh, Harry—I tried to tell you at b-breakfast,
but I c-couldn't say it in front of Percy—it was me, Harry—but I—I s-swear I
d-didn't mean to—R-Riddle made me, he t-took me over—and—how did you kill
that—that thing? W-where's Riddle? The last thing I rremember is him coming out
of the diary—”
“ It's all right,” said Harry, holding up the diary, and
showing Ginny the fang hole, “Riddle's finished. Look! Him and the basilisk.
C'mon, Ginny, let's get out of here—”
“I'm going to be expelled!” Ginny wept
as Harry helped her awkwardly to her feet. “I've looked forward to coming to
Hogwarts ever since B-Bill came and n-now I'll have to leave and—w-what'll Mum
and Dad say?”
Fawkes was waiting for them, hovering in the Chamber entrance.
Harry urged Ginny forward; they stepped over the motionless coils of the dead
basilisk, through the echoing gloom, and back into the tunnel. Harry heard the
stone doors close behind them with a soft hiss.
After a few minutes' progress
up the dark tunnel, a distant sound of slowly shifting rock reached Harry's
ears.
“Ron!” Harry yelled, speeding up. “Ginny's okay! I've got her!”
He
heard Ron give a strangled cheer, and they turned the next bend to see his eager
face staring through the sizable gap he had managed to make in the rock
fall.
“Ginny!” Ron thrust an arm through the gap in the rock to pull her
through first. “You're alive! I don't believe it! What happened?” How—what—where
did that bird come from?”
Fawkes had swooped through the gap after
Ginny.
“He's Dumbledore's,” said Harry, squeezing through himself
“How
come you've got a sword?” said Ron, gaping at the glittering weapon in Harry's
hand.
“I'll explain when we get out of here,” said Harry with a sideways
glance at Ginny, who was crying harder than ever.
“But—”
“Later,” Harry
said shortly. He didn't think it was a good idea to tell Ron yet who'd been
opening the Chamber, not in front of Ginny, anyway. “Where's Lockhart?”
“Back
there,” said Ron, still looking puzzled but jerking his head up the tunnel
toward the pipe. “He's in a bad way. Come and see.”
Led by Fawkes, whose wide
scarlet wings emitted a soft golden glow in the darkness, they walked all the
way back to the mouth of the pipe. Gilderoy Lockhart was sitting there, humming
placidly to himself.
“His memory's gone,” said Ron. “The Memory Charm
backfired. Hit him instead of us. Hasn't got a clue who he is, or where he is,
or who we are. I told him to come and wait here. He's a danger to
himself”
Lockhart peered good-naturedly up at them all.
“Hello,” he said.
“Odd sort of place, this, isn't it? Do you live here?”
“No,” said Ron,
raising his eyebrows at Harry.
Harry bent down and looked up the long, dark
pipe.
“Have you thought how we're going to get back up this?” he said to
Ron.
Ron shook his head, but Fawkes the phoenix had swooped past Harry and
was now fluttering in front of him, his beady eyes bright in the dark. He was
waving his long golden tail feathers. Harry looked uncertainly at him.
“He
looks like he wants you to grab hold ..” said Ron, looking perplexed. “But
you're much too heavy for a bird to pull up there—”
“Fawkes,” said Harry,
“isn't an ordinary bird.” He turned quickly to the others. “We've got to hold on
to each other. Ginny, grab Ron's hand. Professor Lockhart—”
“He means you,”
said Ron sharply to Lockhart.
“You hold Ginny's other hand—”
Harry tucked
the sword and the Sorting Hat into his belt, Ron took hold of the back of
Harry's robes, and Harry reached out and took hold of Fawkes's strangely hot
tail feathers.
An extraordinary lightness seemed to spread through his whole
body and the next second, in a rush of wings, they were flying upward through
the pipe. Harry could hear Lockhart dangling below him, saying, “Amazing!
Amazing! This is just like magic!” The chill air was whipping through Harry's
hair, and before he'd stopped enjoying the ride, it was over—all four of them
were hitting the wet floor of Moaning Myrtle's bathroom, and as Lockhart
straightened his hat, the sink that hid the pipe was sliding back into
place.
Myrtle goggled at them.
“You're alive,” she said blankly to
Harry.
“There's no need to sound so disappointed,” he said grimly, wiping
flecks of blood and slime off his glasses.
“Oh, well... Id just been
thinking... if you had died, you'd have been welcome to share my toilet,” said
Myrtle, blushing silver.
“Urgh!” said Ron as they left the bathroom for the
dark, deserted corridor outside. “Harry! I think Myrtle's grown fond of you!
You've got competition, Ginny!”
But tears were still flooding silently down
Ginny's face.
“Where now?” said Ron, with an anxious look at Ginny. Harry
pointed.
Fawkes was leading the way, glowing gold along the corridor. They
strode after him, and moments later, found themselves outside Professor
McGonagall's office.
Harry knocked and pushed the door open.
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