CHAPTER THREE
THE
BURROW
“Ron!” breathed Harry, creeping to the window and pushing it
up so they could talk through the bars. “Ron, how did you—What the
-?”
Harry's mouth fell open as the full impact of what he was seeing hit him.
Ron was leaning out of the back window of an old turquoise car, which was parked
in midair Grinning at Harry from the front seats were Fred and George, Ron's
elder twin brothers.
“All right, Harry?” asked George.
“What's been going
on?” said Ron. “Why haven't you been answering my letters? I've asked you to
stay about twelve times, and then Dad came home and said you'd got an official
warning for using magic in front of Muggles—”
“It wasn't me—and how did he
know?”
“He works for the Ministry,” said Ron. “You know we're not supposed to
do spells outside school—”
“You should talk,” said Harry, staring at the
floating car.
“Oh, this doesn't count,” said Ron. “We're only borrowing this.
It's Dad's, we didn't enchant it. But doing magic in front of those Muggles you
live with—”
“I told you, I didn't—but it'll take too long to explain now
look, can you tell them at Hogwarts that the Dursleys have locked me up and
won't let me come back, and obviously I can't magic myself out, because the
Ministry'Il think that's the second spell I've done in three days, so—”
“Stop
gibbering,” said Ron. “We've come to take you home with us.”
“But you can't
magic me out either—”
“We don't need to,” said Ron, jerking his head toward
the front seat and grinning. “You forget who I've got with me.”
“Tie that
around the bars,” said Fred, throwing the end of a rope to Harry.
“If the
Dursleys wake up, I'm dead,” said Harry as he tied the rope tightly around a bar
and Fred revved up the car.
“Don't worry,” said Fred, “and stand
back.”
Harry moved back into the shadows next to Hedwig, who seemed to have
realized how important this was and kept still and silent. The car revved louder
and louder and suddenly, with a crunching noise, the bars were pulled clean out
of the window as Fred drove straight up in the air. Harry ran back to the window
to see the bars dangling a few feet above the ground. Panting, Ron hoisted them
up into the car. Harry listened anxiously, but there was no sound from the
Dursleys' bedroom.
When the bars were safely in the back seat with Ron, Fred
reversed as close as possible to Harry's window.
“Get in,” Ron said.
“But
all my Hogwarts stuff—my wand—my broomstick—”
“Where is it?”
“Locked in
the cupboard under the stairs, and I can't get out of this room—”
“No
problem,” said George from the front passenger seat. “Out of the way,
Harry.”
Fred and George climbed catlike through the window into Harry's room.
You had to hand it to them, thought Harry, as George took an ordinary hairpin
from his pocket and started to pick the lock.
“A lot of wizards think it's a
waste of time, knowing this sort of Muggle trick,” said Fred, “but we feel
they're skills worth learning, even if they are a bit slow.”
There was a
small click and the door swung open.
“So—we'll get your trunk—you grab
anything you need from your room and hand it out to Ron,” whispered
George.
“Watch out for the bottom stair—it creaks,” Harry whispered back as
the twins disappeared onto the dark landing.
Harry dashed around his room,
collecting his things and passing them out of the window to Ron. Then he went to
help Fred and George heave his trunk up the stairs. Harry heard Uncle Vernon
cough.
At last, panting, they reached the landing, then carried the trunk
through Harry's room to the open window. Fred climbed back into the car to pull
with Ron, and Harry and George pushed from the bedroom side. Inch by inch, the
trunk slid through the window.
Uncle Vernon coughed again.
“A bit more,”
panted Fred, who was pulling from inside the car. “One good push—”
Harry and
George threw their shoulders against the trunk and it slid out of the window
into the back seat of the car.
“Okay, let's go,” George whispered.
But as
Harry climbed onto the windowsill there came a sudden loud screech from behind
him, followed immediately by the thunder of Uncle Vernon's voice.
“THAT RUDDY
OWL!”
“I've forgotten Hedwig!”
Harry tore back across the room as the
landing light clicked on—he snatched up Hedwig's cage, dashed to the window, and
passed it out to Ron. He was scrambling back onto the chest of drawers when
Uncle Vernon hammered on the unlocked door and it crashed open.
For a split
second, Uncle Vernon stood framed in the doorway; then he let out a bellow like
an angry bull and dived at Harry, grabbing him by the ankle.
Ron, Fred, and
George seized Harry's arms and pulled as hard as they could.
“Petunia!”
roared Uncle Vernon. “He's getting away! HE'S GETTING AWAY!”
But the Weasleys
gave a gigantic tug and Harry's leg slid out of Uncle Vernon's grasp. As soon as
Harry was in the car and had slammed the door shut, Ron yelled, “Put your foot
down, Fred!” and the car shot suddenly towards the moon.
Harry couldn't
believe it—he was free. He rolled down the window, the night air whipping his
hair, and looked back at the shrinking rooftops of Privet Drive. Uncle Vernon,
Aunt Petunia, and Dudley were all hanging, dumbstruck, out of Harry's
window.
“See you next summer!” Harry yelled.
The Weasleys roared with
laughter and Harry settled back in his seat, grinning from ear to ear.
“Let
Hedwig out,” he told Ron. “She can fly behind us. She hasn't had a chance to
stretch her wings for ages.”
George handed the hairpin to Ron and, a moment
later, Hedwig soared joyfully out of the window to glide alongside them like a
ghost.
“So—what's the story, Harry?” said Ron impatiently. “What's been
happening?”
Harry told them all about Dobby, the warning he'd given Harry and
the fiasco of the violet pudding. There was a long, shocked silence when he had
finished.
“Very fishy,” said Fred finally.
“Definitely dodgy” agreed
George. “So he wouldn't even tell you who's supposed to be plotting all this
stuff?”
“I don't think he could,” said Harry. “I told you, every time he got
close to letting something slip, he started banging his head against the
wall.”
He saw Fred and George look at each other.
“What, you think he was
lying to me?” said Harry.
“Well,” said Fred, “put it this way—house-elves
have got powerful magic of their own, but they can't usually use it without
their master's permission. I reckon old Dobby was sent to stop you coming back
to Hogwarts. Someone's idea of a joke. Can you think of anyone at school with a
grudge against you?”
“Yes,” said Harry and Ron together, instantly.
“Draco
Malfoy,” Harry explained. “He hates me.”
“Draco Malfoy?” said George, turning
around. “Not Lucius Malfoy's son?”
“Must be, it's not a very common name, is
it?” said Harry. “Why?”
“I've heard Dad talking about him,” said George. “He
was a big supporter of You-Know-Who.”
“And when You-Know-Who disappeared,”
said Fred, craning around to look at Harry, “Lucius Malfoy came back saying he'd
never meant any of it. Load of dung—Dad reckons he was right in YouKnow-Who's
inner circle.”
Harry had heard these rumors about Malfoy's family before, and
they didn't surprise him at all. Draco Malfoy made Dudley Dursley look like a
kind, thoughtful, and sensitive boy.
“I don't know whether the Malfoys own a
house-elf...” said Harry.
“Well, whoever owns him will be an old wizarding
family, and they'll be rich,” said Fred.
“Yeah, Mum's always wishing we had a
house-elf to do the ironing,” said George. “But all we've got is a lousy old
ghoul in the attic and gnomes all over the garden. House-elves come with big old
manors and castles and places like that; you wouldn't catch one in our
house...”
Harry was silent. Judging by the fact that Draco Malfoy usually had
the best of everything, his family was rolling in wizard gold; he could just see
Malfoy strutting around a large manor house. Sending the family servant to stop
Harry from going back to Hogwarts also sounded exactly like the sort of thing
Malfoy would do. Had Harry been stupid to take Dobby seriously?
“I'm glad we
came to get you, anyway,” said Ron. “I was getting really worried when you
didn't answer any of my letters. I thought it was Errol's fault at
first-”
“Who's Errol?”
“Our owl. He's ancient. It wouldn't be the first
time he'd collapsed on a delivery. So then I tried to borrow
Hermes—”
“Who?”
“The owl Mum and Dad bought Percy when he was made
prefect,” said Fred from the front.
“But Percy wouldn't lend him to me,” said
Ron. “Said he needed him.”
“Percy's been acting very oddly this summer,” said
George, frowning. “And he has been sending a lot of letters and spending a load
of time shut up in his room... I mean, there's only so many times you can polish
a prefect badge... You're driving too far west, Fred,” he added, pointing at a
compass on the dashboard. Fred twiddled the steering wheel.
“So, does your
dad know you've got the car?” said Harry, guessing the answer.
“Er, no,” said
Ron, “he had to work tonight. Hopefully we'll be able to get it back in the
garage without Mum noticing we flew it.”
“What does your dad do at the
Ministry of Magic, anyway?”
“He works in the most boring department,” said
Ron. “The Misuse of Muggle Artifacts Office.”
“The what?”
“It's all to do
with bewitching things that are Muggle-made, you know, in case they end up back
in a Muggle shop or house. Like, last year, some old witch died and her tea set
was sold to an antiques shop. This Muggle woman bought it, took it home, and
tried to serve her friends tea in it. It was a nightmare—Dad was working
overtime for weeks.”
“What happened?”
“The teapot went berserk and
squirted boiling tea all over the place and one man ended up in the hospital
with the sugar tongs clamped to his nose. Dad was going frantic—it's only him
and an old warlock called Perkins in the office -and they had to do Memory
Charms and all sorts of stuff to cover it up—”
“But your dad—this
car—”
Fred laughed. “Yeah, Dad's crazy about everything to do with Muggles;
our shed's full of Muggle stuff. He takes it apart, puts spells on it, and puts
it back together again. If he raided our house he'd have to put himself under
arrest. It drives Mum mad.”
“That's the main road,” said George, peering down
through the windshield. “We'll be there in ten minutes... Just as well, it's
getting light...”
A faint pinkish glow was visible along the horizon to the
east.
Fred brought the car lower, and Harry saw a dark patchwork of fields
and clumps of trees.
“We're a little way outside the village,” said George.
“Ottery St. Catchpole.”
Lower and lower went the flying car. The edge of a
brilliant red sun was now gleaming through the trees.
“Touchdown!” said Fred
as, with a slight bump, they hit the ground. They had landed next to a
tumbledown garage in a small yard, and Harry looked out for the first time at
Ron's house.
It looked as though it had once been a large stone pigpen, but
extra rooms had been added here and there until it was several stories high and
so crooked it looked as though it were held up by magic (which, Harry reminded
himself, it probably was). Four or five chimneys were perched on top of the red
roof. A lopsided sign stuck in the ground near the entrance read, “The Burrow”.
Around the front door lay a jumble of rubber boots and a very rusty cauldron.
Several fat brown chickens were pecking their way around the yard.
“It's not
much,” said Ron.
“It's wonderful,” said Harry happily, thinking of Privet
Drive.
They got out of the car.
“Now, we'll go upstairs really quietly,”
said Fred, “and wait for Mum to call us for breakfast Then, Ron, you come
bounding downstairs going, `Mum, look who turned up in the night!' and she'll be
all pleased to see Harry and no one need ever know we flew the car.”
“Right,”
said Ron. “Come on, Harry, I sleep at the—”
Ron had gone a nasty greenish
color, his eyes fixed on the house. The other three wheeled around.
Mrs.
Weasley was marching across the yard, scattering chickens, and for a short,
plump, kind-faced woman, it was remarkable how much she looked like a
saber-toothed tiger.
“Ah, “said Fred.
“Oh, dear,” said George.
Mrs.
Weasley came to a halt in front of them, her hands on her hips, staring from one
guilty face to the next. She was wearing a flowered apron with a wand sticking
out of the pocket.
“So, “she said.
“Morning, Mum,” said George, in what he
clearly thought was a jaunty, winning voice.
“Have you any idea how worried
I've been?” said Mrs. Weasley in a deadly whisper.
“Sorry, Mum, but see, we
had to—”
All three of Mrs. Weasley's sons were taller than she was, but they
cowered as her rage broke over them.
“Beds empty! No note! Car gone—could
have crashed—out of my mind with worry—did you care?—never, as long as I've
lived—you wait until your father gets home, we never had trouble like this from
Bill or Charlie or Percy—”
“Perfect Percy,” muttered Fred.
“YOU COULD DO
WITH TAKING A LEAF OUT OF PERCY'S BOOK!” yelled Mrs. Weasley, prodding a finger
in Fred's chest. “You could have died, you could have been seen, you could have
lost your father his job—”
It seemed to go on for hours. Mrs. Weasley had
shouted herself hoarse before she turned on Harry, who backed away.
“I'm very
pleased to see you, Harry, dear,” she said. “Come in and have some
breakfast.”
She turned and walked back into the house and Harry, after a
nervous glance at Ron, who nodded encouragingly, followed her.
The kitchen
was small and rather cramped. There was a scrubbed wooden table and chairs in
the middle, and Harry sat down on the edge of his seat, looking around. He had
never been in a wizard house before.
The clock on the wall opposite him had
only one hand and no numbers at all. Written around the edge were things like
Time to make tea, Time to feed the chickens, and You're late. Books were stacked
three deep on the mantelpiece, books with titles like Charm Your Own Cheese,
Enchantment in Baking, and One Minute Feasts—It's Magic! And unless Harry's ears
were deceiving him, the old radio next to the sink had just announced that
coming up was “Witching Hour, with the popular singing sorceress, Celestina
Warbeck.”
Mrs. Weasley was clattering around, cooking breakfast a little
haphazardly, throwing dirty looks at her sons as she threw sausages into the
frying pan. Every now and then she muttered things like “don't know what you
were thinking of,” and “never would have believed it.”
“I don't blame you,
dear,” she assured Harry, tipping eight or nine sausages onto his plate. “Arthur
and I have been worried about you, too. Just last night we were saying we'd come
and get you ourselves if you hadn't written back to Ron by Friday. But really,”
(she was now adding three fried eggs to his plate) “flying an illegal car
halfway across the country—anyone could have seen you—”
She flicked her wand
casually at the dishes in the sink, which began to clean themselves, clinking
gently in the background.
“It was cloudy, Mum!” said Fred.
“You keep your
mouth closed while you're eating!” Mrs. Weasley snapped.
“They were starving
him, Mum!” said George.
“And you!” said Mrs. Weasley, but it was with a
slightly softened expression that she started cutting Harry bread and buttering
it for him.
At that moment there was a diversion in the form of a small,
redheaded figure in a long nightdress, who appeared in the kitchen, gave a small
squeal, and ran out again.
“Ginny,” said Ron in an undertone to Harry. “My
sister. She's been talking about you all summer.”
“Yeah, she'll be wanting
your autograph, Harry,” Fred said with a grin, but he caught his mother's eye
and bent his face over his plate without another word. Nothing more was said
until all four plates were clean, which took a surprisingly short
time.
“Blimey, I'm tired,” yawned Fred, setting down his knife and fork at
last. “I think I'll go to bed and—”
“You will not,” snapped Mrs. Weasley.
“It's your own fault you've been up all night. You're going to de-gnome the
garden for me; they're getting completely out of hand again—”
“Oh,
Mum—”
“And you two,” she said, glaring at Ron and Fred. “You can go up to
bed, dear,” she added to Harry. “You didn't ask them to fly that wretched
car—”
But Harry, who felt wide awake, said quickly, “I'll help Ron. I've
never seen a de-gnoming—”
“That's very sweet of you, dear, but it's dull
work,” said Mrs. Weasley. “Now, let's see what Lockhart's got to say on the
subject—”
And she pulled a heavy book from the stack on the mantelpiece.
George groaned.
“Mum, we know how to de-gnome a garden—”
Harry looked at
the cover of Mrs. Weasley's book. Written across it in fancy gold letters were
the words Gilderoy Lockhart's Guide to Household Pests. There was a big
photograph on the front of a very goodlooking wizard with wavy blond hair and
bright blue eyes. As always in the wizarding world, the photograph was moving;
the wizard, who Harry supposed was Gilderoy Lockhart, kept winking cheekily up
at them all. Mrs. Weasley beamed down at him.
“Oh, he is marvelous,” she
said. “He knows his household pests, all right, it's a wonderful
book...”
“Mum fancies him,” said Fred, in a very audible whisper.
“Don't
be so ridiculous, Fred,” said Mrs. Weasley, her cheeks rather pink. “All right,
if you think you know better than Lockhart, you can go and get on with it, and
woe betide you if there's a single gnome in that garden when I come out to
inspect it.”
Yawning and grumbling, the Weasleys slouched outside with Harry
behind them. The garden was large, and in Harry's eyes, exactly what a garden
should be. The Dursleys wouldn't have liked it—there were plenty of weeds, and
the grass needed cutting but there were gnarled trees all around the walls,
plants Harry had never seen spilling from every flower bed, and a big green pond
full of frogs.
“Muggles have garden gnomes, too, you know,” Harry told Ron as
they crossed the lawn.
“Yeah, I've seen those things they think are gnomes,”
said Ron, bent double with his head in a peony bush, “like fat little Santa
Clauses with fishing rods...”
There was a violent scuffling noise, the peony
bush shuddered, and Ron straightened up. “This is a gnome,” he said
grimly.
“Gerroff me! Gerroff me!” squealed the gnome.
It was certainly
nothing like Santa Claus. It was small and leathery looking, with a large,
knobby, bald head exactly like a potato. Ron held it at arm's length as it
kicked out at him with its horny little feet; he grasped it around the ankles
and turned it upside down.
“This is what you have to do,” he said. He raised
the gnome above his head (“Gerroff me!”) and started to swing it in great
circles like a lasso. Seeing the shocked look on Harry's face, Ron added, “It
doesn't hurt them—you've just got to make them really dizzy so they can't find
their way back to the gnomeholes.”
He let go of the gnome's ankles: It flew
twenty feet into the air and landed with a thud in the field over the
hedge.
“Pitiful,” said Fred. “I bet I can get mine beyond that
stump.”
Harry learned quickly not to feel too sorry for the gnomes. He
decided just to drop the first one he caught over the hedge, but the gnome,
sensing weakness, sank its razor-sharp teeth into Harry's finger and he had a
hard job shaking it off—until
“Wow, Harry—that must've been fifty
feet...”
The air was soon thick with flying gnomes.
“See, they're not too
bright,” said George, seizing five or six gnomes at once. “The moment they know
the de-gnoming's going on they storm up to have a look. You'd think they'd have
learned by now just to stay put.”
Soon, the crowd of gnomes in the field
started walking away in a straggling line, their little shoulders
hunched.
“They'll be back,” said Ron as they watched the gnomes disappear
into the hedge on the other side of the field. “They love it here... Dad's too
soft with them; he thinks they're funny...”
Just then, the front door
slammed.
“He's back!” said George. “Dad's home!”
They hurried through the
garden and back into the house.
Mr. Weasley was slumped in a kitchen chair
with his glasses off and his eyes closed. He was a thin man, going bald, but the
little hair he had was as red as any of his children's. He was wearing long
green robes, which were dusty and travel-worn.
“What a night,” he mumbled,
groping for the teapot as they all sat down around him. “Nine raids. Nine! And
old Mundungus Fletcher tried to put a hex on me when I had my back
turned...”
Mr. Weasley took a long gulp of tea and sighed.
“Find anything,
Dad?” said Fred eagerly.
“All I got were a few shrinking door keys and a
biting kettle,” yawned Mr. Weasley. “There was some pretty nasty stuff that
wasn't my department, though. Mortlake was taken away for questioning about some
extremely odd ferrets, but that's the Committee on Experimental Charms, thank
goodness...”
“Why would anyone bother making door keys shrink?” said
George.
“Just Muggle-baiting,” sighed Mr. Weasley. “Sell them a key that
keeps shrinking to nothing so they can never find it when they need it... Of
course, it's very hard to convict anyone because no Muggle would admit their key
keeps shrinking—they'll insist they just keep losing it. Bless them, they'll go
to any lengths to ignore magic, even if it's staring them in the face... But the
things our lot have taken to enchanting, you wouldn't believe—”
“LIKE CARS,
FOR INSTANCE?”
Mrs. Weasley had appeared, holding a long poker like a sword.
Mr. Weasley's eyes jerked open. He stared guiltily at his wife.
“C-cars,
Molly, dear?”
“Yes, Arthur, cars,” said Mrs. Weasley, her eyes flashing.
“Imagine a wizard buying a rusty old car and telling his wife all he wanted to
do with it was take it apart to see how it worked, while really he was
enchanting it to make it fly.”
Mr. Weasley blinked.
“Well, dear, I think
you'll find that he would be quite within the law to do that, even if—er—he
maybe would have done better to, um, tell his wife the truth... There's a
loophole in the law, you'll find... As long as he wasn't intending to fly the
car, the fact that the car could fly wouldn't—”
“Arthur Weasley, you made
sure there was a loophole when you wrote that law!” shouted Mrs. Weasley. “Just
so you could carry on tinkering with all that Muggle rubbish in your shed! And
for your information, Harry arrived this morning in the car you weren't
intending to fly!”
“Harry?” said Mr. Weasley blankly. “Harry who?”
He
looked around, saw Harry, and jumped.
“Good lord, is it Harry Potter? Very
pleased to meet you, Ron's told us so much about—”
“Your sons flew that car
to Harry's house and back last night.” shouted Mrs. Weasley. “What have you got
to say about that, eh?”
“Did you really?” said Mr. Weasley eagerly. “Did it
go all right? I—I mean,” he faltered as sparks flew from Mrs. Weasley's eyes,
“that—that was very wrong, boys—very wrong indeed...”
“Let's leave them to
it,” Ron muttered to Harry as Mrs. Weasley swelled like a bullfrog. “Come on,
I'll show you my bedroom.”
They slipped out of the kitchen and down a narrow
passageway to an uneven staircase, which wound its way, zigzagging up through
the house. On the third landing, a door stood ajar. Harry just caught sight of a
pair of bright brown eyes staring at him before it closed with a
snap.
“Ginny,” said Ron. “You don't know how weird it is for her to be this
shy. She never shuts up normally—”
They climbed two more flights until they
reached a door with peeling paint and a small plaque on it, saying RONALD'S
ROOM.
Harry stepped in, his head almost touching the sloping ceiling, and
blinked. It was like walking into a furnace: Nearly everything in Ron's room
seemed to be a violent shade of orange: the bedspread, the walls, even the
ceiling. Then Harry realized that Ron had covered nearly every inch of the
shabby wallpaper with posters of the same seven witches and wizards, all wearing
bright orange robes, carrying broomsticks, and waving energetically.
“Your
Quidditch team?” said Harry.
“The Chudley Cannons,” said Ron, pointing at the
orange bedspread, which was emblazoned with two giant black C's and a speeding
cannonball. “Ninth in the league.”
Ron's school spellbooks were stacked
untidily in a corner, next to a pile of comics that all seemed to feature The
Adventures of Martin Miggs, the Mad Muggle. Ron's magic wand was lying on top of
a fish tank full of frog spawn on the windowsill, next to his fat gray rat,
Scabbers, who was snoozing in a patch of sun.
Harry stepped over a pack of
Self-Shuffling playing cards on the floor and looked out of the tiny window. In
the field far below he could see a gang of gnomes sneaking one by one back
through the Weasleys' hedge. Then he turned to look at Ron, who was watching him
almost nervously, as though waiting for his opinion.
“It's a bit small,” said
Ron quickly. “Not like that room you had with the Muggles. And I'm right
underneath the ghoul in the attic; he's always banging on the pipes and
groaning...”
But Harry, grinning widely, said, “This is the best house I've
ever been in.”
Ron's ears went pink.
© Ãàððè Ïîòòåð ôàí ñàéò
À êîãäà âûðàñòåøü Àðìèÿ Ðîññèè ñäåëàåò èç òåáÿ ìóæ÷èíó.