CHAPTER FOURTEEN
SNAPE'S
GRUDGE
No one in Gryffindor Tower slept that night. They knew that
the castle was being searched again, and the whole House stayed awake in the
common room, waiting to hear whether Black had been caught. Professor McGonagall
came back at dawn, to tell them that he had again escaped.
Throughout the
day, everywhere they went they saw signs of tighter security; Professor Flitwick
could be seen teaching the front doors to recognize a large picture of Sirius
Black; Filch was suddenly bustling up and down the corridors, boarding up
everything from tiny cracks in the walls to mouse holes. Sir Cadogan had been
fired. His portrait had been taken back to its lonely landing on the seventh
floor, and the Fat Lady was back. She had been expertly restored, but was still
extremely nervous, and had agreed to return to her job only on condition that
she was given extra protection. A bunch of surly security trolls had been hired
to guard her. They paced the corridor in a menacing group, talking in grunts and
comparing the size of their clubs.
Harry couldn't help noticing that the
statue of the one-eyed witch on the third floor remained unguarded and
unblocked. It seemed that Fred and George had been right in thinking that
they—and now Harry, Ron, and Hermione—were the only ones who knew about the
hidden passageway within it.
“D'you reckon we should tell someone?” Harry
asked Ron.
“We know he's not coming in through Honeyduke's,” said Ron
dismissively. “We'd've heard if the shop had been broken into.”
Harry was
glad Ron took this view. If the one-eyed witch was boarded up too, he would
never be able to go into Hogsmeade again.
Ron had become an instant
celebrity. For the first time in his life, people were paying more attention to
him than to Harry, and it was clear that Ron was rather enjoying the experience.
Though still severely shaken by the night's events, he was happy to tell anyone
who asked what had happened, with a wealth of detail.
“...I was asleep, and I
heard this ripping noise, and I thought it was in my dream, you know? But then
there was this draft... I woke up and one side of the hangings on my bed had
been pulled down... I rolled over... and I saw him standing over me... like a
skeleton, with loads of filthy hair ...holding this great long knife, must've
been twelve inches... and he looked at me, and I looked at him, and then I
yelled, and he scampered.
“Why, though?” Ron added to Harry as the group of
secondyear girls who had been listening to his chilling tale departed. “Why did
he run?”
Harry had been wondering the same thing. Why had Black, having got
the wrong bed, not silenced Ron and proceeded to Harry? Black had proved twelve
years ago that he didn't mind murdering innocent people, and this time he had
been facing five unarmed boys, four of whom were asleep.
“He must've known
he'd have a job getting back out of the castle once you'd yelled and woken
people up,” said Harry thoughtfully. “He'd've had to kill the whole House to get
back through the portrait hole... then he would' ve met the
teachers...”
Neville was in total disgrace. Professor McGonagall was so
furious with him she had banned him from all future Hogsmeade visits, given him
a detention, and forbidden anyone to give him the password into the tower. Poor
Neville was forced to wait. outside the common room every night for somebody to
let him in, while the security trolls leered unpleasantly at him. None of these
punishments, however, came close to matching the one his grandmother had in
store for him. Two days after Black's break-in, she sent Neville the very worst
thing a Hogwarts student could receive over breakfast—a Howler.
The school
owls swooped into the Great Hall carrying the mail as usual, and Neville choked
as a huge barn owl landed in front of him, a scarlet envelope clutched in its
beak. Harry and Ron, who were sitting opposite him, recognized the letter as a
Howler at once—Ron had got one from his mother the year before.
“Run for it,
Neville,” Ron advised.
Neville didn't need telling twice. He seized the
envelope, and holding it before him like a bomb, sprinted out of the hall, while
the Slytherin table exploded with laughter at the sight of him. They heard the
Howler go off in the entrance hall—Neville's grandmother's voice, magically
magnified to a hundred times its Usual volume, shrieking about how he had
brought shame on the whole family.
Harry was too busy feeling sorry for
Neville to notice immediately that he had a letter too. Hedwig got his attention
by nipping him sharply on the wrist.
“Ouch! Oh—thanks, Hedwig.”
Harry tore
open the envelope while Hedwig helped herself to some of Neville's cornflakes.
The note inside said:
Dear Harry and Ron, How Abut having tea with me this
afternoon 'round six? I'll come collect you from the castle. WAIT FOR ME IN THE
ENTRANCE HALL; YOU'RE NOT ALLOWED OUT ON YOUR OWN. Cheers, Hagrid
“He
probably wants to hear all about Black!” said Ron.
So at six o'clock that
afternoon, Harry and Ron left Gryffindor Tower, passed the security trolls at a
run, and headed down to the entrance hall.
Hagrid was already waiting for
them.
“All right, Hagrid!” said Ron. “S'pose you want to hear about Saturday
night, do you?”
“I've already heard all abou' it,” said Hagrid, opening the
front doors and leading them outside.
“Oh,” said Ron, looking slightly put
out.
The first thing they saw on entering Hagrid's cabin was Buckbeak, who
was stretched out on top of Hagrid's patchwork quilt, his enormous wings folded
tight to his body, enjoying a large plate of dead ferrets. Averting his eyes
from this unpleasant sight, Harry saw a gigantic, hairy brown suit and a very
horrible yellow-and-orange tie hanging from the top of Hagrid's wardrobe
door.
“What are they for, Hagrid?” said Harry.
“Buckbeaks case against the Committee fer the Disposal o'
Dangerous Creatures,” said Hagrid. “This Friday. Him an' me'll be goin' down ter
London together. I've booked two beds on the Knight Bus...”
Harry felt a
nasty pang of guilt. He had completely forgotten that Buckbeak's trial was so
near, and judging by the uneasy look on Ron's face, he had too. They had also
forgotten their promise about helping him prepare Buckbeak's defense; the
arrival of the Firebolt had driven it clean out of their minds.
Hagrid poured
them tea and offered them a plate of Bath buns but they knew better than to
accept; they had had too much experience with Hagrid's cooking.
I got
somethin' ter discuss with you two,” said Hagrid, sitting himself between them
and looking uncharacteristically serious.
“What?” said Harry.
“Hermione,”
said Hagrid.
“What about her?” said Ron.
“She's in a righ' state, that's
what. She's bin comin' down ter visit me a lot since Chris'mas. Bin feelin'
lonely. Firs' yeh weren' talking to her because o' the Firebolt, now yer not
talkin' to her because her cat —”
“— ate Scabbers!” Ron interjected
angrily.
“Because her cat acted like all cats do,” Hagrid continued doggedly.
“She's cried a fair few times, yeh know. Goin' through a rough time at the
moment. Bitten off more'n she can chew, if yeh ask me, all the work she's tryin'
ter do. Still found time ter help me with Buckbeak's case, mind... She's found
some really good stuff fer me... reckon he'll stand a good chance
now...”
“Hagrid, we should've helped as well—sorry —” Harry began
awkwardly.
“I'm not blamin' yeh!” said Hagrid, waving Harry's apology aside.
“Gawd knows yeh've had enough ter be gettin' on with. I've seen yeh practicin'
Quidditch ev'ry hour o' the day an' night—but I gotta tell yeh, I thought you
two'd value yer friend more'n broomsticks or rats. Tha's all.”
Harry and Ron
exchanged uncomfortable looks.
“Really upset, she was, when Black nearly
stabbed yeh, Ron. She's got her heart in the right place, Hermione has, an' you
two not talkin' to her —”
“If she'd just get rid of that cat, I'd speak to
her again!” Ron said angrily. “But she's still sticking up for it! It's a
maniac, and she won't hear a word against it!”
“Ah, well, people can be a bit
stupid abou' their pets,” said Hagrid wisely. Behind him, Buckbeak spat a few
ferret bones onto Hagrid's pillow.
They spent the rest of their visit
discussing Gryffindor's improved chances for the Quidditch Cup. At nine o'clock,
Hagrid walked them back up to the castle.
A large group of people was bunched
around the bulletin board when they returned to the common room.
“Hogsmeade,
next weekend!” said Ron, craning over the heads to read the new notice. “What
d'you reckon?” he added quietly to Harry as they went to sit down.
“Well,
Filch hasn't done anything about the passage into Honeydukes...” Harry said,
even more quietly.
“Harry!” said a voice in his right ear. Harry started and
looked around at Hermione, who was sitting at the table right behind them and
clearing a space in the wall of books that had been hiding her.
“Harry, if
you go into Hogsmeade again... I'll tell Professor McGonagall about that map!”
said Hermione.
“Can you hear someone talking, Harry?” growled Ron, not
looking at Hermione.
“Ron, how can you let him go with you? After what Sirius
Black nearly did to you! I mean it, I'll tell —”
“So now you're trying to get
Harry expelled!” said Ron furiously. “Haven't you done enough damage this
year?”
Hermione opened her mouth to respond, but with a soft hiss,
Crookshanks leapt onto her lap. Hermione took one frightened look at the
expression on Ron's face, gathered up Crookshanks, and hurried away toward the
girls' dormitories.
“So how about it?” Ron said to Harry as though there had
been no interruption. “Come on, last time we went you didn't see anything. You
haven't even been inside Zonko's yet!”
Harry looked around to check that
Hermione was well out of earshot.
“Okay,” he said. “But I'm taking the Invisibility Cloak this
time.”
On Saturday morning, Harry packed his Invisibility Cloak in his bag,
slipped the Marauder's Map into his pocket, and went down to breakfast with
everyone else. Hermione kept shooting suspicious looks down the table at him,
but he avoided her eye and was careful to let her see him walking back up the
marble staircase in the entrance hall as everybody else proceeded to the front
doors.
“'Bye!” Harry called to Ron. “See you when you get back!”
Ron
grinned and winked.
Harry hurried up to the third floor, slipping the
Marauder's Map out of his pocket as he went. Crouching behind the one-eyed
witch, he smoothed it out. A tiny dot was moving in his direction. Harry
squinted at it. The minuscule writing next to it read Neville
Longbottom.
Harry quickly pulled out his wand, muttered, “Dissendium!” and
shoved his bag into the statue, but before he could climb in himself, Neville
came around the corner.
“Harry! I forgot you weren't going to Hogsmeade
either!”
“Hi, Neville,” said Harry, moving swiftly away from the statue and
pushing the map back into his pocket. “What are you up to?”
“Nothing,”
shrugged Neville. “Want a game of Exploding Snap?”
“Er—not now—I was going to
go to the library and do that vampire essay for Lupin —”
“I'll come with
you!” said Neville brightly. I haven't done it either!”
“Er—hang on—yeah, I
forgot, I finished it last night!”
“Great, you can help me!” said Neville,
his round face anxious. “I don't understand that thing about the garlic at
all—do they have to eat it, or —”
He broke off with a small gasp, looking
over Harry's shoulder.
It was Snape. Neville took a quick step behind
Harry.
“And what are you two doing here?” said Snape, coming to a halt and
looking from one to the other. “An odd place to meet —”
To Harry's immense
disquiet, Snape's black eyes flicked to the doorways on either side of them, and
then to the one-eyed witch.
“We're not—meeting here,” said Harry. “We
just—met here.”
“Indeed?” said Snape. “You have a habit of turning up in
unexpected places, Potter, and you are very rarely there for no good reason... I
suggest the pair of you return to Gryffindor Tower, where you belong.”
Harry
and Neville set off without another word. As they turned the corner, Harry
looked back. Snape was running one of his hands over the one-eyed witch's head,
examining it closely.
Harry managed to shake Neville off at the Fat Lady by
telling him the password, then pretending he'd left his vampire essay in the
library and doubling back. Once out of sight of the security trolls, he pulled
out the map again and held it close to his nose.
The third floor corridor
seemed to be deserted. Harry scanned the map carefully and saw, with a leap of
relief, that the tiny dot labeled Severus Snape was now back in its
office.
He sprinted back to the one-eyed witch, opened her hump, heaved
himself inside, and slid down to meet his bag at the bottom of the stone chute.
He wiped the Marauder's Map blank again, then set off at a run.
Harry,
completely hidden beneath the Invisibility Cloak, emerged into the sunlight
outside Honeydukes and prodded Ron in the back.
It's me,” he
muttered.
“What kept you?” Ron hissed.
“Snape was hanging around.”
They
set off up the High Street.
“Where are you?” Ron kept muttering out of the
corner of his mouth. “Are you still there? This feels weird...”
They went to
the post office; Ron pretended to be checking the price of an owl to Bill in
Egypt so that Harry could have a good look around. The owls sat hooting softly
down at him, at least three hundred of them; from Great Grays right down to tiny
little Scops owls (“Local Deliveries Only”), which were so small they could have
sat in the palm of Harry's hand.
Then they visited Zonko's, which was so
packed with students Harry had to exercise great care not to tread on anyone and
cause a panic. There were jokes and tricks to fulfill even Fred's and George's
wildest dreams; Harry gave Ron whispered orders and passed him some gold from
under the cloak. They left Zonko's with their money bags considerably lighter
than they had been on entering, but their pockets bulging with Dungbombs, Hiccup
Sweets, Frog Spawn Soap, and a Nose-Biting Teacup apiece.
The day was fine
and breezy, and neither of them felt like staying indoors, so they walked past
the Three Broomsticks and climbed a slope to visit the Shrieking Shack, the most
haunted dwelling in Britain. It stood a little way above the rest of the
village, and even in daylight was slightly creepy, with its boarded windows and
dank overgrown garden.
“Even the Hogwarts ghosts avoid it,” said Ron as they
leaned on the fence, looking up at it. “I asked Nearly Headless Nick... he says
he's heard a very rough crowd lives here. No one can get in. Fred and George
tried, obviously, but all the entrances are sealed shut...”
Harry, feeling
hot from their climb, was just considering taking off the cloak for a few
minutes when they heard voices nearby. Someone was climbing toward the house
from the other side of the hill; moments later, Malfoy had appeared, followed
closely by Crabbe and Goyle. Malfoy was speaking.
“...should have an owl from
Father any time now. He had to go to the hearing to tell them about my arm...
about how I couldn't use it for three months...”
Crabbe and Goyle
sniggered.
“I really wish I could hear that great hairy moron trying to
defend himself... 'There's no 'arm in 'im, 'onest that hippogriff's as good as
dead —”
Malfoy suddenly caught sight of Ron. His pale face split in a
malevolent grin.
“What are you doing, Weasley?”
Malfoy looked up at the
crumbling house behind Ron.
“Suppose You'd love to live here, wouldn't you,
Weasley? Dreaming about having your own bedroom? I heard your family all sleep
in one room—is that true?”
Harry seized the back of Ron's robes to stop him
from leaping on Malfoy. “Leave him to me,” he hissed in Ron's ear.
The
opportunity was too perfect to miss. Harry crept silently around behind Malfoy,
Crabbe, and Goyle, bent down, and scooped a large handful of mud out of the
path.
“We were just discussing your friend Hagrid,” Malfoy said to Ron. “Just
trying to imagine what he's saying to the Committee for the Disposal of
Dangerous Creatures. D'you think he'll cry when they cut off his
hippogriff's
SPLAT.
Malfoy's head jerked forward as the mud hit him; his
silverblond hair was suddenly dripping in muck.
“What the —?”
Ron had to
hold onto the fence to keep himself standing, he was laughing so hard. Malfoy,
Crabbe, and Goyle spun stupidly on the spot, staring wildly around, Malfoy
trying to wipe his hair clean.
“What was that? 'Who did that?”
“Very
haunted up here, isn't it?” said Ron, with the air of one commenting on the
weather.
Crabbe and Goyle were looking scared. Their bulging muscles were no
use against ghosts. Malfoy was staring madly around at the deserted
landscape.
Harry sneaked along the path, where a particularly sloppy puddle
yielded some foul-smelling, green sludge.
SPLATTER.
Crabbe and Goyle
caught some this time. Goyle hopped furiously on the spot, trying to rub it out
of his small, dull eyes.
“It came from over there!” said Malfoy, wiping his
face, and staring at a spot some six feet to the left of Harry.
Crabbe
blundered forward, his long arms outstretched like a zombie. Harry dodged around
him, picked up a stick, and lobbed it at Crabbe's back. Harry doubled up with
silent laughter as Crabbe did a kind of pirouette in midair, trying to see who
had thrown it. As Ron was the only person Crabbe could see, it was Ron he
started toward, but Harry stuck out his leg. Crabbe stumbled—and his huge, flat
foot caught the hem of Harry's cloak. Harry felt a great tug, then the cloak
slid off his face.
For a split second, Malfoy stared at him.
“AAARGH!” he
yelled, pointing at Harry's head. Then he turned tail and ran, at breakneck
speed, back down the hill, Crabbe and Goyle behind him.
Harry tugged the
cloak up again, but the damage was done.
“Harry!” Ron said, stumbling forward
and staring hopelessly at the point where Harry had disappeared, “you'd better
run for it! If Malfoy tells anyone—you'd better get back to the castle, quick —”
“See you later,” said Harry, and without another word, he tore back down the
path toward Hogsmeade.
Would Malfoy believe what he had seen? Would anyone
believe
Malfoy? Nobody knew about the Invisibility Cloak—nobody except
Dumbledore. Harry's stomach turned over—Dumbledore would know exactly what had
happened, if Malfoy said anything —
Back into Honeydukes, back down the
cellar steps, across the stone floor, through the trapdoor—Harry pulled off the
cloak, tucked it under his arm, and ran, flat out, along the passage... Malfoy
would get back first... how long would it take him to find a teacher? Panting, a
sharp pain in his side, Harry didn't slow down until he reached the stone slide.
He would have to leave the cloak where it was, it was too much of a giveaway in
case Malfoy had tipped off a teacher—he hid it in a shadowy corner, then started
to climb, fast as he could, his sweaty hands slipping on the sides of the chute.
He reached the inside of the witch's hump, tapped it with his wand, stuck his
head through, and hoisted himself out; the hump closed, and just as Harry jumped
out from behind the statue, he heard quick footsteps approaching.
It was
Snape. He approached Harry at a swift walk, his black robes swishing, then
stopped in front of him.
“So,” he said.
There was a look of surpressed
triumph about him. Harry tried to look innocent, all too aware of his sweaty
face and his muddy hands, which he quickly hid in his pockets.
“Come with me,
Potter,” said Snape.
Harry followed him downstairs, trying to wipe his hands
clean on the inside of his robes without Snape noticing. They walked down the
stairs to the dungeons and then into Snape's office.
Harry had been in here
only once before, and he had been in very serious trouble then too. Snape had
aquired a few more slimy horrible things in jars since last time, all standing
on shelves behind his desk, glinting in the firelight and adding to the
threatening atmosphere.
“Sit,” said Snape.
Harry sat. Snape, however,
remained, standing.
“Mr. Malfoy has just been to see me with a strange story,
Potter,” said Snape.
Harry didn't say anything.
“He tells me that he was
up by the Shrieking Shack when he ran into Weasley—apparently alone.”
Still,
Harry didn't speak.
“Mr. Malfoy states that he was standing talking to
Weasley, when a large amount of mud hit him in the back of the head. How do you
think that could have happened?”
Harry tried to look mildly surprised.
“I
don't know, Professor.”
Snape's eyes were boring into Harry's. It was exactly
like trying to stare down a hippogriff. Harry tried hard not to blink.
“Mr.
Malfoy then saw an extraordinary apparition. Can you imagine what it might have
been, Potter?”
“No,” said Harry, now trying to sound innocently
curious.
“It was your head, Potter. Floating in midair.”
There was a long
silence.
“Maybe he'd better go to Madam Pomfrey,” said Harry. “If he's seeing
things like —”
“What would your head have been doing in Hogsmeade, Potter?”
said Snape softly. “Your head is not allowed in Hogsmeade. No part of your body
has permission to be in Hogsmeade.”
“I know that,” said Harry, striving to
keep his face free of guilt or fear. “It sounds like Malfoy's having hallucin
—”
“Malfoy is not having hallucinations,” snarled Snape, and he bent down, a
hand on each arm of Harry's chair, so that their faces were a foot apart. “If
your head was in Hogsmeade, so was the rest of you.”
“I've been up in
Gryffindor Tower,” said Harry. “Like you told —” “Can anyone confirm
that?”
Harry didn't say anything. Snape's thin mouth curled into a horrible
smile.
“So,” he said, straightening up again. “Everyone from the Minister of
Magic downward has been trying to keep famous Harry Potter safe from Sirius
Black. But famous Harry Potter is a law unto himself Let the ordinary people
worry about his safety! Famous Harry Potter goes where he wants to, with no
thought for the consequences.
Harry stayed silent. Snape was trying to
provoke him into telling the truth. He wasn't going to do it. Snape had no
proof—yet.
“How extraordinarily like your father you are, Potter,” Snape said
suddenly, his eyes glinting. “He too was exceedingly arrogant. A small amount of
talent on the Quidditch field made him think he was a cut above the rest of us
too. Strutting around the place with his friends and admirers... The resemblance
between you is uncanny.”
“My dad didn't strut,” said Harry, before he could
stop himself. “And neither do I.”
“Your father didn't set much store by rules
either,” Snape went on, pressing his advantage, his thin face full of malice.
“Rules were for lesser mortals, not Quidditch Cup-winners. His head was so
swollen —”
“SHUT UP!”
Harry was suddenly on his feet. Rage such as he had
not felt since his last night in Privet Drive was coursing through him. He
didn't care that Snape's face had gone rigid, the black eyes flashing
dangerously.
“What did you say to me, Potter?”
“I told you to shut up
about my dad!” Harry yelled. I know the truth, all right? He saved your life!
Dumbledore told me! You wouldn't even be here if it wasn't for my
dad!”
Snape's sallow skin had gone the color of sour milk.
“And did the
headmaster tell you the circumstances in which your father saved my life?” he
whispered. “Or did he consider the details too unpleasant for precious Potter's
delicate ears?”
Harry bit his lip. He didn't know what had happened and
didn't want to admit it—but Snape seemed to have guessed the truth.
I would
hate for you to run away with a false idea of your father, Potter,” he said, a
terrible grin twisting his face. “Have you been imagining some act of glorious
heroism? Then let me correct you—your saintly father and his friends played a
highly amusing joke on me that would have resulted in my death if your father
hadn't got cold feet at the last moment. There was nothing brave about what he
did. He was saving his own skin as much as mine. Had their joke succeeded, he
would have been expelled from Hogwarts.”
Snape's uneven, yellowish teeth were
bared.
“Turn out your pockets, Potter!” he spat suddenly.
Harry didn't
move. There was a pounding in his ears.
“Turn out your pockets, or we go
straight to the headmaster! Pull them out, Potter!”
Cold with dread, Harry
slowly pulled out the bag of Zonko's tricks and the Marauder's Map.
Snap
picked up the Zonko's bag.
“Ron gave them to me,” said Harry, praying he'd
get a chance to tip Ron off before Snape saw him. “He -brought them back from
Hogsmeade last time —”
“Indeed? And you've been carrying them around ever
since? How very touching... and what is this?”
Snape had picked up the map.
Harry tried with all his might to keep his face impassive.
“Spare bit of
parchment,” he said with a shrug.
Snape turned it over, his eyes on
Harry.
“Surely you don't need such a very old piece of parchment?” he said.
“Why don't I just—throw this away?”
His hand moved toward the fire.
“No!”
Harry said quickly.
“So!” said Snape, his long nostrils quivering. “Is this
another treasured gift from Mr. Weasley? Or is it—something else? A letter,
perhaps, written in invisible ink? Or—instructions to get into Hogsmeade without
passing the dementors?”
Harry blinked. Snape's eyes gleamed.
“Let me see,
let me see...” he muttered, taking out his wand and smoothing the map out on his
desk. “Reveal your secret!” he said, touching the wand to the
parchment.
Nothing happened. Harry clenched his hands to stop them from
shaking.
“Show yourself!” Snape said, tapping the map sharply.
It stayed
blank. Harry was taking deep, calming breaths.
“Professor Severus Snape,
master of this school, commands you to yield the information you conceal!” Snape
said, hitting the map with his wand.
As though an invisible hand were writing
upon it, words appeared on the smooth surface of the map.
Mooney presents his
compliments to Professor Snape, and begs him to keep his abnormally large nose
out of other people's business.”
Snape froze. Harry stared, dumbstruck, at
the message. But the map didn't stop there. More writing was appearing beneath
the first.
“Mr. Prongs agrees with Mr. Moony and would like to add that
Professor Snape is an ugle git.”
It would have been very funny if the
situation hadn't been so serious. And there was more...
“Mr. Padfoot would
like to register his astonishment that an idiot like that ever became a
professor.”
Harry closed his eyes in horror. When he'd opened them, the map
had had its last word.
“Mr. Wormtail bids Professor Snape good day, and
advises him to wash his hair, the slimeball.”
Harry waited for the blow to
fall.
“So...” said Snape softly. “We'll see about this...”
He strode
across to his fire, seized a fistful of glittering powder from a jar on the
fireplace, and threw it into the flames.
“Lupin!” Snape called into the fire.
“I want a word!”
Utterly bewildered, Harry stared at the fire. A large shape
had appeared in it, revolving very fast. Seconds later, Professor Lupin was
clambering out of the fireplace, brushing ash off his shabby robes.
“You
called, Severus?” said Lupin mildly.
“I certainly did,” said Snape, his face contorted with fury as
he strode back to his desk. “I have just asked Potter to empty his pockets. He
was carrying this.”
Snape pointed at the parchment, on which the words of
Messrs. Moony, Wormtail, Padfoot, and Prongs were still shining. An odd, closed
expression appeared on Lupin's face.
“Well?” said Snape.
Lupin continued
to stare at the map. Harry had the impression that Lupin was doing some very
quick thinking.
“Well?” said Snape again. “This parchment is plainly full of
Dark Magic. This is supposed to be your area of expertise, Lupin. Where do you
imagine Potter got such a thing?”
Lupin looked up and, by the merest
half-glance in Harry's direction, warned him not to interrupt.
“Full of Dark
Magic?” he repeated mildly. “Do you really think so, Severus? It looks to me as
though it is merely a piece of parchment that insults anybody who reads it.
Childish, but surely not dangerous? I imagine Harry got it from a joke shop
—”
“Indeed?” said Snape. His jaw had gone rigid with anger. “You think a joke
shop could supply him with such a thing? You don't think it more likely that he
got it directly from the manufacturers?”
Harry didn't understand what Snape
was talking about. Nor, apparently, did Lupin.
“You mean, by Mr. Wormtail or
one of these people?” he said. “Harry, do you know any of these men?”
“No,”
said Harry quickly.
“You see, Severus?” said Lupin, turning back to Snape.
“It looks like a Zonko product to me —”
Right on cue, Ron came bursting into the office. He was
completely out of breath, and stopped just short of Snape's desk, clutching the
stitch in his chest and trying to speak.
“I—gave—Harry—that—stuff,” he
choked. “Bought—it... in Zonko's... ages—ago...”
“Well!” said Lupin, clapping
his hands together and looking around cheerfully. “That seems to clear that up!
Severus, I'll take this back, shall I?” He folded the map and tucked it inside
his robes. “Harry, Ron, come with me, I need a word about my vampire
essay—excuse us, Severus —”
Harry didn't dare look at Snape as they left his
office. He. Ron, and Lupin walked all the way back into the entrance hall before
speaking. Then Harry turned to Lupin.
“Professor, I —”
“I don't want to
hear explanations,” said Lupin shortly. He glanced around the empty entrance
hall and lowered his voice. “I happen to know that this map was confiscated by
Mr. Filch many years ago. Yes, I know it' s a map,” he said as Harry and Ron
looked amazed. “I don't want to know how it fell into your possession. I am,
however, astounded that you didn't hand it in. Particularly after what happened
the last time a student left information about the castle lying around. And I
can't let you have it back, Harry.”
Harry had expected that, and was too keen
for explanations to protest.
“Why did Snape think I'd got it from the
manufacturers?”
“Because...,” Lupin hesitated, “because these mapmakers would
have wanted to lure you out of school. They'd think it extremely
entertaining.”
“Do you know them?” said Harry, impressed.
“We've met,” he
said shortly. He was looking at Harry more seriously than ever before.
“Don't
expect me to cover up for you again, Harry. I cannot make you take Sirius Black
seriously. But I would have thought that what you have heard when the dementors
draw near you would have had more of an effect on you. Your parents gave their
lives to keep you alive, Harry. A poor way to repay them—gambling their
sacrifice for a bag of magic tricks.”
He walked away, leaving Harry feeling
worse by far than he had at any point in Snape's office. Slowly, he and Ron
mounted the marble staircase. As Harry passed the one-eyed witch, he remembered
the Invisibility Cloak—it was still down there, but he didn't dare go and get
it.
“It's my fault,” said Ron abruptly. “I persuaded you to go. Lupin's
right, it was stupid, we shouldn't've done it —”
He broke off; they reached
the corridor where the security trolls were pacing, and Hermione was walking
toward them. One look at her face convinced Harry that she had heard what had
happened. His heart plummeted—had she told Professor McGonagall?
“Come to
have a good gloat?” said Ron savagely as she stopped in front of them. “Or have
you just been to tell on us?”
“No,” said Hermione. She was holding a letter
in her hands and her lip was trembling. “I just thought you ought to know...
Hagrid lost his case. Buckbeak is going to be executed.”
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