CHAPTER FIFTEEN
THE QUIDDITCH
FINAL
He sent me this,” Hermione said, holding out the
letter.
Harry took it. The parchment was damp, and enormous teardrops had
smudged the ink so badly in places that it was very difficult to read.
Dear
Hermione, We lost. I'm allowed to bring him back to Hogwarts. Execution date to
be fixed. Beaky has enjoyed London. I won't forget all the help you gave
us.
Hagrid
“They can't do this,” said Harry. “They can't. Buckbeak isn't
dangerous.”
“Malfoy's dad's frightened the Committee into it,” said Hermione,
wiping her eyes. “You know what he's like. They're a bunch of doddery old fools,
and they were scared. There'll be an appeal, though, there always is. Only I
can't see any hope... Nothing will have changed.”
“Yeah, it will,” said Ron
fiercely. “You won't have to do all the work alone this time, Hermione. I'll
help.”
“Oh, Ron!”
Hermione flung her arms around Ron's neck and broke down
completely. Ron, looking quite terrified, patted her very awkwardly on the top
of the head. Finally, Hermione drew away.
“Ron, I'm really, really sorry
about Scabbers...” she sobbed.
“Oh—well—he was old,” said Ron, looking
thoroughly relieved that she had let go of him. “And he was a bit useless. You
never know, Mum and Dad might get me an owl now.”
The safety measures imposed
on the students since Black's second break-in made it impossible for Harry, Ron,
and Hermione to go and visit Hagrid in the evenings. Their only chance of
talking to him was during Care of Magical Creatures lessons.
He seemed numb
with shock at the verdict.
“S'all my fault. Got all tongue-tied. They was all
sittin' there in black robes an' I kep' droppin' me notes and forgettin' all
them dates yeh looked up fer me, Hermione. An' then Lucius Malfoy stood up an'
said his bit, and the Committee jus' did exac'ly what he told
'em...”
“There's still the appeal!” said Ron fiercely. “Don't give up Yet,
we're working on it!”
They were walking back up to the castle with the rest
of the class. Ahead they could see Malfoy, who was walking with Crabbe and
Goyle, and kept looking back, laughing derisively.
“S'no good, Ron,” said
Hagrid sadly as they reached the castle steps. “That Committee's in Lucius
Malfoy's pocket. I'm jus' gonna make sure the rest o' Beaky's time is the
happiest he's ever had. I owe him that...”
Hagrid turned around and hurried
back toward his cabin, his face buried in his handkerchief.
“Look at him
blubber!”
Malfoy, Crabbe, and Goyle had been standing just inside the castle
doors, listening.
“Have you ever seen anything quite as pathetic?” said
Malfoy. “And he's supposed to be our teacher!”
Harry and Ron both made
furious moves toward Malfoy, but Hermione got there first—SMACK!
She had
slapped Malfoy across the face with all the strength she could muster. Malfoy
staggered. Harry, Ron, Crabbe, and Goyle stood flabbergasted as Hermione raised
her hand again.
“Don't you dare call Hagrid pathetic, you foul—you evil
—”
“Hermione!” said Ron weakly, and he tried to grab her hand as she swung it
back.
“Get off, Ron!”
Hermione pulled out her wand. Malfoy stepped
backward. Crabbe and Goyle looked at him for instructions, thoroughly
bewildered.
“C'mon,” Malfoy muttered, and in a moment, all three of them had
disappeared into the passageway to the dungeons.
“Hermione!” Ron said again,
sounding both stunned and irnpressed.
“Harry, you'd better beat him in the
Quidditch final!” Hermione said shrilly. “You just better had, because I can't
stand it if Slytherin wins!”
“We're due in Charms,” said Ron, still goggling
at Hermione. “We'd better go.”
They hurried up the marble staircase toward
Professor Flitwick's classroom.
“You're late, boys!” said Professor Flitwick
reprovingly as Harry opened the classroom door. “Come along, quickly, wands out,
we're experimenting with Cheering Charms today, we've already divided into pairs
—”
Harry and Ron hurried to a desk at the back and opened their bags. Ron
looked behind him.
“Where's Hermione gone?”
Harry looked around too.
Hermione hadn't entered the classroom, yet Harry knew she had been right next to
him when he had opened the door.
“That's weird,” said Harry, staring at Ron.
“Maybe—maybe she went to the bathroom or something?”
But Hermione didn't turn
up all lesson.
“She could've done with a Cheering Charm on her too,” said Ron
as the class left for lunch, all grinning broadly—the Cheering Charms had left
them with a feeling of great contentment.
Hermione wasn't at lunch either. By
the time they had finished their apple pie, the after-effects of the Cheering
Charms were wearing off, and Harry and Ron had started to get slightly
worried.
“You don't think Malfoy did something to her?” Ron said anxiously as
they hurried upstairs toward Gryffindor Tower.
They passed the security
trolls, gave the Fat Lady the password (“Flibbertigibbet”), and scrambled
through the portrait hole into the common room.
Hermione was sitting at a
table, fast asleep, her head resting on an open Arithmancy book. They went to
sit down on either side of her. Harry prodded her awake.
“Wh—what?” said
Hermione, waking with a start and staring wildly around. “Is it time to go?
W—which lesson have we got now?”
“Divination, but it's not for another twenty
minutes,” said Harry. “Hermione, why didn't you come to Charms?”
“What? Oh
no!” Hermione squeaked. “I forgot to go to Charms!”
“But how could you
forget?” said Harry. “You were with us till we were right outside the
classroom!”
“I don't believe it!” Hermione wailed. “Was Professor Flitwick
angry? Oh, it was Malfoy, I was thinking about him and I lost track of
things!”
“You know what, Hermione?” said Ron, looking down at the enormous
Arithmancy book Hermione had been using as a pillow. “I reckon you're cracking
up. You're trying to do too much.”
“No, I'm not!” said Hermione, brushing her
hair out of her eyes and staring hopelessly around for her bag. “I just made a
mistake, that's all! I'd better go and see Professor Flitwick and say sorry...
I'll see you in Divination!”
Hermione joined them at the foot of the ladder
to Professor Trelawneys classroom twenty minutes later, looking extremely
harrassed.
“I can't believe I missed Cheering Charms! And I bet they come up
in our exams; Professor Flitwick hinted they might!”
Together they climbed
the ladder into the dim, stifling tower room. Glowing on every little table was
a crystal ball full of pearly white mist. Harry, Ron, and Hermione sat down
together at the same rickety table.
“I thought we weren't starting crystal
balls until next term,” Ron muttered, casting a wary eye around for Professor
Trelawney, in case she was lurking nearby.
“Don't complain, this means we've
finished palmistry,” Harry muttered back. “I was getting sick of her flinching
every time she looked at my hands.”
“Good day to you!” said the familiar,
misty voice, and Professor Trelawney made her usual dramatic entrance out of the
shadows. Parvati and Lavender quivered with excitement, their faces lit by the
milky glow of their crystal ball.
“I have decided to introduce the crystal
ball a little earlier than I had planned,” said Professor Trelawney, sitting
with her back to the fire and gazing around. “The fates have informed me that
your examination in June will concern the Orb, and I am anxious to give you
sufficient practice.”
Hermione snorted.
“Well, honestly... 'the fates have
informed her' who sets the exam? She does! What an amazing prediction!” she
said, not troubling to keep her voice low. Harry and Ron choked back
laughs.
It was hard to tell whether Professor Trelawney had heard them as her
face was hidden in shadow. She continued, however, as though she had
not.
“Crystal gazing is a particularly refined art,” she said dreamily. “I do
not expect any of you to See when first you peer into the Orb's infinite depths.
We shall start by practicing relaxing the conscious mind and external eyes”—Ron
began to snigger uncontrollably and had to stuff his fist in his mouth to stifle
the noise—”so as to clear the Inner Eye and the superconscious. Perhaps, if we
are lucky, some of you will see before the end of the class.”
And so they
began. Harry, at least, felt extremely foolish, staring blankly at the crystal
ball, trying to keep his mind empty when thoughts such as “this is stupid” kept
drifting across it. It didn't help that Ron kept breaking into silent giggles
and Hermione kept tutting.
“Seen anything yet?” Harry asked them after a
quarter of an hour's quiet crystal gazing.
“Yeah, there's a burn on this
table,” said Ron, pointing. “Someone's spilled their candle.”
“This is such a
waste of time,” Hermione hissed. “I could be practicing something useful. I
could be catching up on Cheering Charms —”
Professor Trelawney rustled
past.
“Would anyone like me to help them interpret the shadowy portents
within their Orb?” she murmured over the clinking of her bangles.
I don't
need help,” Ron whispered. “It's obvious what this means. There's going to be
loads of fog tonight.”
Both Harry and Hermione burst out laughing.
“Now,
really!” said Professor Trelawney as everyone's heads turned in their direction.
Parvati and Lavender were looking scandalized. “You are disturbing the
clairvoyant vibrations!” She approached their table and peered into their
crystal ball. Harry felt his heart sinking. He was sure he knew what was coming
—
“There is something here!” Professor Trelawney whispered, lowerng her face
to the ball, so that it was reflected twice in her huge glasses. “Something
moving... but what is it?”
Harry was prepared to bet everything he owned,
Including his Firebolt, that it wasn't good news, whatever it was. And sure
enough —
“My dear Professor Trelawney breathed, gazing up at Harry. “It is
here, plainer than ever before... my dear, stalking toward you, growing ever
closer... the Gr —”
“Oh, for goodness' sake!” said Hermione loudly. “Not that
ridiculous Grim again!”
Professor Trelawney raised her enormous eyes to
Hermione's face. Parvati whispered something to Lavender, and they both glared
at Hermione too. Professor Trelawney stood up, surveying Hermione with
unmistakable anger.
“I am sorry to say that from the moment you have arrived
in this class my dear, it has been apparent that you do not have what the noble
art of Divination requires. Indeed, I don't remember ever meeting a student
whose mind was so hopelessly mundane.”
There was a moment's silence. Then
—
“Fine!” said Hermione suddenly, getting up and cramming Unfogging the
Future back into her bag. “Fine!” she repeated, swinging the bag over her
shoulder and almost knocking Ron off his chair. “I give up! I'm leaving!”
And
to the whole class's amazement, Hermione strode over to the trapdoor, kicked it
open, and climbed down the ladder out of sight.
It took a few minutes for the
class to settle down again. Professor Trelawney seemed to have forgotten all
about the Grim. She turned abruptly from Harry and Ron's table, breathing rather
heavily as she tugged her gauzy shawl more closely to her.
“Ooooo!” said
Lavender suddenly, making everyone start. “Ooooo, Professor Trelawney, I've just
remembered! You saw her leaving, didn't you? Didn't you, Professor? 'Around
Easter, one of our number will leave us forever!' You said it ages ago,
Professor!”
Professor Trelawney gave her a dewy smile.
“Yes, my dear, I
did indeed know that Miss Granger would be leaving us. One hopes, however, that
one might have mistaken the Signs... The Inner Eye can be a burden, you
know...”
Lavender and Parvati looked deeply impressed, and moved over so that
Professor Trelawney could join their table instead.
“Some day Hermione's
having, eh?” Ron muttered to Harry, looking awed.
“Yeah...”
Harry glanced
into the crystal ball but saw nothing but swirling white mist. Had Professor
Trelawney really seen the Grim again? Would he? The last thing he needed was
another near-fatal accident, with the Quidditch final drawing ever
nearer.
The Easter holidays were not exactly relaxing. The third years had
never had so much homework. Neville Longbottom seemed close to a nervous
collapse, and he wasn't the only one.
“Call this a holiday!” Seamus Finnigan
roared at the common room one afternoon. “The exams are ages away, what're they
playing at?”
But nobody had as much to do as Hermione. Even without
Divination, she was taking more subjects than anybody else. She was usually last
to leave the common room at night, first to arrive at the library the next
morning; she had shadows like Lupin's under her eyes, and seemed constantly
close to tears.
Ron had taken over responsibility for Buckbeak's appeal. When
he wasn't doing his own work, he was poring over enormously thick volumes with
names like The Handbook of Hippogriff Psychology and Fowl or Foul? A Study of
Hippogriff Brutality. He was so absorbed, he even forgot to be horrible to
Crookshanks.
Harry, meanwhile, had to fit in his homework around Quidditch
practice every day, not to mention endless discussions of tactics with Wood. The
Gryffindor-Slytherin match would take place on the first Saturday after the
Easter holidays. Slytherin was leading the tournament by exactly two hundred
points. This meant (as Wood constantly reminded his team) that they needed to
win the match by more than that amount to win the Cup. It also meant that the
burden of winning fell largely on Harry, because capturing the Snitch was worth
one hundred and fifty points.
“So you must catch it only if we're more than
fifty points up,” Wood told Harry constantly. “Only if we're more than fifty
points up, Harry, or we win the match but lose the Cup. You've got that, Haven't
you? You must catch the Snitch only if we're —”
“I KNOW, OLIVER!” Harry
yelled.
The whole of Gryffindor House was obsessed with the coming match.
Gryffindor hadn't won the Quidditch Cup since the legendary Charlie Weasley
(Ron's second oldest brother) had been seeker. But Harry doubted whether any of
them, even Wood, wanted to win as much as he did. The enmity between Harry and
Malfoy was at its highest point ever. Malfoy was still smarting,bout the
mud-throwing incident in Hogsmeade and was even more furious that Harry had
somehow wormed his way out of punishment. Harry hadn't forgotten Malfoy's
attempt to sabotage him in the match against Ravenclaw, but it was the matter of
Buckbeak that made him most determined to beat Malfoy in front of the entire
school.
Never, in anyone's memory, had a match approached in such a highly
charged atmosphere. By the time the holidays were over, tension between the two
teams and their Houses was at the breaking point. A number of small scuffles
broke out in the corridors, culminating in a nasty incident in which a
Gryffindor fourth year and a Slytherin sixth year ended up in the hospital wing
with leeks sprouting out of their ears.
Harry was having a particularly bad
time of it. He couldn't walk to class without Slytherins sticking out their legs
and trying to trip him up; Crabbe and Goyle kept popping up wherever he went,
and slouching away looking disappointed when they saw him surrounded by people.
Wood had given instructions that Harry should be accompanied everywhere he went,
in case the Slytherins tried to put him out of action. The whole of Gryffindor
House took up the challenge enthusiastically, so that it was impossible for
Harry to get to classes on time because he was surrounded by a vast, chattering
crowd. Harry was more concerned for his Firebolt's safety than his own. When he
wasn't flying it, he locked it securely in his trunk and frequently dashed back
up to Gryffindor Tower at break times to check that it was still there.
All
usual pursuits were abandoned in the Gryffindor common room the night before the
match. Even Hermione had Put down her books.
“I can't work, I can't
concentrate,” she said nervously.
There was a great deal of noise. Fred and
George Weasley were dealing with the pressure by being louder and more exuberant
than ever. Oliver Wood was crouched over a model of a Quidditch field in the
corner, prodding little figures across it with his wand and muttering to himself
Angelina, Alicia, and Katie were laughing at Fred's and George's jokes. Harry
was sitting with Ron and Hermione, removed from the center of things, trying not
to think about the next day, because every time he did, he had the horrible
sensation that something very large was fighting to get out of his
stomach.
“You're going to be fine,” Hermione told him, though she looked
positively terrified.
“You've got a Firebolt!” said Ron.
“Yeah...” said
Harry, his stomach writhing.
It came as a relief when Wood suddenly stood up
and yelled, “Team! Bed!”
Harry slept badly. First he dreamed that he had
overslept, and that Wood was yelling, “Where were you? We had to use Neville
instead!” Then he dreamed that Malfoy and the rest of the Slytherin team arrived
for the match riding dragons. He was flying at breakneck speed, trying to avoid
a spurt of flames from Malfoy's steed's mouth, when he realized he had forgotten
his Firebolt. He fell through the air and woke with a start.
It was a few
seconds before Harry remembered that the match hadn't taken place yet, that he
was safe in bed, and that the Slytherin team definitely wouldn't be allowed to
play on dragons. He was feeling very thirsty. Quietly as he could, he got out of
his four-poster and went to pour himself some water from the silver jug beneath
the window.
The grounds were still and quiet. No breath of wind disturbed the
treetops in the Forbidden Forest; the Whomping Willow was motionless and
innocent-looking. It looked as though the conditions for the match would be
perfect.
Harry set down his goblet and was about to turn back to his bed when
something caught his eye. An animal of some kind was prowling across the silvery
lawn.
Harry dashed to his bedside table, snatched up his glasses, and put
them on, then hurried back to the window. It couldn't be the Grim—not now—not
right before the match —
He peered out at the grounds again and, after a
minute's frantic searching, spotted it. It was skirting the edge of the forest
now... It wasn't the Grim at all ...it was a cat... Harry clutched the window
ledge in relief as he recognized the bottlebrush tail. It was only
Crookshanks...
Or was it only Crookshanks? Harry squinted, pressing his nose
flat against the glass. Crookshanks seemed to have come to a halt. Harry was
sure he could see something else moving in the shadow of the trees too.
And
just then, it emerged—a gigantic, shaggy black dog, moving stealthily across the
lawn, Crookshanks trotting at its side. Harry stared. What did this mean? If
Crookshanks could see the dog as well, how could it be an omen of Harry's
death?
“Ron!” Harry hissed. “Ron! Wake up!”
“Huh?”
I need you to tell
me if you can see something!”
“S'all dark, Harry,” Ron muttered thickly.
“What're you or, about?”
“Down here —”
Harry looked quickly back out of
the window.
Crookshanks and the dog had vanished. Harry climbed onto the
windowsill to look right down into the shadows of the castle, but they weren't
there. Where had they gone?
A loud snore told him Ron had fallen asleep
again.
Harry and the rest of the Gryffindor team entered the Great Hall the
next day to enormous applause. Harry couldn't help grinning broadly as he saw
that both the Ravenclaw and Hufflepuff tables were applauding them too. The
Slytherin table hissed loudly as they passed. Harry noticed that Malfoy looked
even paler than usual.
Wood spent the whole of breakfast urging his team to
eat, while touching nothing himself Then he hurried them off to the field before
anyone else had finished, so they could get an idea of the conditions. As they
left the Great Hall, everyone applauded again.
“Good luck, Harry!” called
Cho. Harry felt himself blushing.
“Okay—no wind to speak of—sun's a bit
bright, that could impair your vision, watch out for it—ground's fairly hard,
good, that'll give us a fast kickoff —”
Wood paced the field, staring around
with the team behind him. Finally, they saw the front doors of the castle open
in the distance and the rest of the school spilling onto the lawn.
“Locker
rooms,” said Wood tersely.
None of them spoke as they changed into their
scarlet robes. Harry wondered if they were feeling like he was: as though he'd
eaten something extremely wriggly for breakfast. In what seemed like no time at
all, Wood was saying, “Okay, it's time, let's go —”
They walked out onto the
field to a tidal wave of noise. Threequarters of the crowd was wearing scarlet
rosettes, waving scarlet flags with the Gryffindor lion upon them, or
brandishing banners with slogans like “GO GRYFFINDOR!” and “LIONS FOR THE CUK'
Behind the Slytherin goal posts, however, two hundred people were wearing green;
the silver serpent of Slytherin glittered on their flags, and Professor Snape
sat in the very front row, wearing green like everyone else, and a very grim
smile.
“And here are the Gryffindors!” yelled Lee Jordan, who was acting as
commentator as usual. “Potter, Bell, Johnson, Spinnet, Weasley, Weasley, and
Wood. Widely acknowledged as the best team Hogwarts has seen in a good few years
—”
Lee's comments were drowned by a tide of “boos” from the Slytherin
end.
“And here come the Slytherin team, led by Captain Flint. He's Made some
changes in the lineup and seems to be going for size rather than skill
—”
More boos from the Slytherin crowd. Harry, however, thought Lee had a
point. Malfoy was easily the smallest person On the Slytherin team; the rest of
them were enormous.
“Captains, shake hands!” said Madam Hooch.
Flint and
Wood approached each other and grasped each other's hand very tightly; it looked
as though each was trying to break the other's fingers.
“Mount your brooms!”
said Madam Hooch. “Three... two... one...”
The sound of her whistle was lost
in the roar from the crowd as fourteen brooms rose into the air. Harry felt his
hair fly back off his forehead; his nerves left him in the thrill of the flight;
he glanced around, saw Malfoy on his tail, and sped off in search of the
Snitch.
“And it's Gryffindor in possession, Alicia Spinner of Gryffindor with
the Quaffle, heading straight for the Slytherin goal posts, looking good,
Alicia! Argh, no—Quaffle intercepted by Warrington, Warrington of Slytherin
tearing UP the field—WHAM!—nice Bludger work there by George Weasley, Warrington
drops the Quaffle, it's caught by—Johnson, Gryffindor back in possession, come
on, Angelina—nice swerve around Montague—duck, Angelina, that's a Bludger!SHE
SCORES! TEN-ZERO TO GRYFFINDOR!”
Angelina punched the air as she soared
around the end of the field; the sea of scarlet below was screaming its
delight
“OUCH!”
Angelina was nearly thrown from her broom as Marcus Flint
went smashing into her.
“Sorry!” said Flint as the crowd below booed. “Sorry,
didn't see her!”
A moment later, Fred Weasley chucked his Beater's club at
the back of Flint's head. Flint's nose smashed into the handle of his broom and
began to bleed.
“That will do!” shrieked Madam Hooch, zooming between then.
“Penalty shot to Gryffindor for an unprovoked attack on their Chaser! Penalty
shot to Slytherin for deliberate damage to their Chaser!”
“Come off it,
Miss!” howled Fred, but Madam Hooch blew her whistle and Alicia flew forward to
take the penalty.
“Come on, Alicia!” yelled Lee into the silence that had
descended on the crowd. “YES! SHE'S BEATEN THE KEEPER! TWENTY-ZERO TO
GRYFFINDOR!”
Harry turned the Firebolt sharply to watch Flint, still bleeding
freely, fly forward to take the Slytherin penalty. Wood was hovering in front of
the Gryffindor goal posts, his jaw clenched.
“'Course, Wood's a superb
Keeper!” Lee Jordan told the crowd as Flint waited for Madam Hooch's whistle.
“Superb! Very difficult to pass—very difficult indeed—YES! I DON'T BELIEVE IT!
HE'S SAVED IT!”
Relieved, Harry zoomed away, gazing around for the Snitch,
but still making sure he caught every word of Lee's commentary. It was essential
that he hold Malfoy off the Snitch until Gryffindor was more than fifty points
up —
“Gryffindor in possession, no, Slytherin in possession—no!
Gryffindor
back in possession and it's Katie Bell, Katie Bell for Gryffindor with the
Quaffle, she's streaking up the field—THAT WAS DELIBERATE!”
Montague, a
Slytherin Chaser, had swerved in front of Katie, and instead of seizing the
Quaffle had grabbed her head. Katie cart wheeled in the air, managed to stay on
her broom, but dropped the Quaffle.
Madam Hooch's whistle rang out again as
she soared over to Montague and began shouting at him. A minute later, Katie had
put another penalty past the Slytherin Seeker.
“THIRTY-ZERO! TAKE THAT, YOU
DIRTY, CHEATING —”
“Jordan, if you can't commentate in an unbiased way
—”
“I'm telling it like it is, Professor!”
Harry felt a huge jolt of
excitement. He had seen the Snitch it was shimmering at the foot of one of the
Gryffindor goal posts—but he mustn't catch it yet—and if Malfoy saw it
—
Faking a look of sudden concentration, Harry pulled his Firebolt around and
sped off toward the Slytherin end—it worked. Malfoy went haring after him,
clearly thinking Harry had seen the Snitch there...
WHOOSH.
One of the
Bludgers came streaking past Harry's right ear, hit by the gigantic Slytherin
Beater, Derrick. Then again
WHOOSH.
The second Bludger grazed Harry's
elbow. The other Beater, Bole, was closing in.
Harry had a fleeting glimpse
of Bole and Derrick zooming toward him, clubs raised —
He turned the Firebolt
upward at the last second, and Bole and Derrick collided with a sickening
crunch.
“Ha haaa!” yelled Lee Jordan as the Slytherin Beaters lurched away
from each other, clutching their heads. “Too bad, boys! You'll need to get up
earlier than that to beat a Firebold And it's Gryffindor in possession again, as
Johnson takes the Quaffle—Flint alongside her—poke him in the eye, Angelina!—it
was a joke, Professor, it was a joke—oh no—Flint in possession, Flint flying
toward the Gryffindor goal posts, come on now, Wood, save —!”
But Flint had
scored; there was an eruption of cheers from the Slytherin end, and Lee swore so
badly that Professor McGonagall tried to tug the magical megaphone away from
him.
“Sorry, Professor, sorry! WoiA happen again! So, Gryffindor in the lead,
thirty points to ten, and Gryffindor in possession —”
it was turning into the
dirtiest game Harry had ever played in. Enraged that Gryffindor had taken such
an early lead, the Slytherins were rapidly resorting to any means to take the
Quaffle. Bole hit Alicia with his club and tried to say he'd thought she was a
Bludger. George Weasley elbowed Bole in the face in retaliation. Madam Hooch
awarded both teams penalties, and Wood pulled off another spectacular save,
making the score forty-ten to Gryffindor.
The Snitch had disappeared again.
Malfoy was still keeping close to Harry as he soared over the match, looking
around for it once Gryffindor was fifty points ahead —
Katie scored.
Fifty-ten. Fred and George Weasley were swooping around her, clubs raised, in
case any of the Slytherins were thinking of revenge. Bole and Derrick took
advantage of Fred's and George's absence to aim both Bludgers at Wood; they
caught him in the stomach, one after the other, and he rolled over in the air,
clutching his broom, completely winded.
Madam Hooch was beside
herself
“YOU DO NOT ATTACK THE KEEPER UNLESS THE QUAFFLE IS WITHIN THE
SCORING AREA!” she shrieked at Bole and Derrick. “Gryffindor penalty!”
And
Angelina scored. Sixty-ten. Moments later, Fred Weasley pelted a Bludger at
Warrington, knocking the Quaffle Out of his hands; Alicia seized it and put it
through the Slytherin goal—seventy-ten.
The Gryffindor crowd below was
screaming itself hoarse—Gryffindor was sixty points in the lead, and if Harry
caught the Snitch now, the Cup was theirs. Harry could almost feel hundreds of
eyes following him as he soared around the field, high above the rest of the
game, with Malfoy speeding along behind him.
And then he saw it. The Snitch
was sparkling twenty feet above him.
Harry put on a huge burst of speed; the
wind was roaring in his ears; he stretched out his hand, but suddenly, the
Firebolt was slowing down —
Horrified, he looked around. Malfoy had thrown
himself forward, grabbed hold of the Firebolt's tail, and was pulling it
back.
“You —”
Harry was angry enough to hit Malfoy, but couldn't
reach—Malfoy was panting with the effort of holding onto the Firebolt, but his
eyes were sparkling maliciously. He had achieved what he'd wanted to do—the
Snitch had disappeared again.
“Penalty! Penalty to Gryffindor! I've never
seen such tactics.” Madam Hooch screeched, shooting up to where Malfoy was
sliding back onto his Nimbus Two Thousand and One.
“YOU CHEATING SCUM!” Lee
Jordan was howling into the megaphone, dancing out of Professor McGonagall's
reach. “YOU FILTHY, CHEATING B —”
Pprofessor McGonagall didn't even bother to
tell him off She was actually shaking her finger in Malfoys direction, her hat
had fallen off, and she too was shouting furiously.
Alicia took Gryffindor's
penalty, but she was so angry she missed by several feet. The Gryffindor team
was losing concentration and the Slytherins, delighted by Malfoy's foul on
Harry, were being spurred on to greater heights.
“Slytherin in possession,
Slytherin heading for goal—Montague scores —” Lee groaned. “Seventytwenty to
Gryffindor...”
Harry was now marking Malfoy so closely their knees kept
hitting each other. Harry wasn't going to let Malfoy anywhere near the
Snitch...
“Get out of it, Potter!” Malfoy yelled in frustration as he tried
to turn and found Harry blocking him.
“Angelina Johnson gets the Quaffle for
Gryffindor, come on, Angelina, COME ON!”
Harry looked around. Every single
Slytherin player apart from Malfoy was streaking up the pitch toward Angelina,
including the Slytherin Keeper—they were all going to block her —
Harry
wheeled the Firebolt around, bent so low he was lying flat along the handle, and
kicked it forward. Like a bullet, he shot toward the
Slytherins.
“AAAAAAARRRGH!”
They scattered as the Firebolt zoomed toward
them; Angelina's Way was clear.
“SHE SCORES! SHE SCORES! Gryffindor leads by
eighty Points to twenty!”
Harry, who had almost pelted headlong into the
stands, skidded to a halt in midair, reversed, and zoomed back into the middle
of the field.
And then he saw something to make his heart stand still. Malfoy
was diving, a look of triumph on his face—there, a few feet above the grass
below, was a tiny, golden glimmer —
Harry urged the Firebolt downward, but
Malfoy was miles ahead —
“Go! Go! Go!” Harry urged his broom. He was gaining
on Malfay—Harry flattened himself to the broom handle as Bole sent a Bludger at
him—he was at Malfoy's ankles—he was level —
Harry threw himself forward,
took both hands off his broom. He knocked Malfoy's arm out of the way and
—
“YES!”
He pulled out of his dive, his hand in the air, and the stadium
exploded. Harry soared above the crowd, an odd ringing in his ears. The tiny
golden ball was held tight in his fist, beating its wings hopelessly against his
fingers.
Then Wood was speeding toward him, half-blinded by tears; he seized
Harry around the neck and sobbed unrestrainedly into his shoulder. Harry felt
two large thumps as Fred and George hit them; then Angelina's, Alicia's, and
Katie's voices, “We've won the Cup! We've won the Cup!” Tangled together in a
many-armed hug, the Gryffindor team sank, yelling hoarsely, back to
earth.
Wave upon wave of crimson supporters was pouring over the barriers
onto the field. Hands were raining down on their backs. Harry had a confused
impression of noise and bodies pressing in on him. Then he, and the rest of the
team, were hoisted onto the shoulders of the crowd. Thrust into the light, he
saw Hagrid, Plastered with crimson rosettes—”Yeh beat 'em, Harry, yeh beat
'em!
Wait till I tell Buckbeak!” There was Percy, jumping up and down like a
maniac, all dignity forgotten. Professor McGonagall was sobbing harder even than
Wood, wiping her eyes with an enormous Gryffindor flag; and there, fighting
their way toward Harry, were Ron and Hermione. Words failed them. They simply
beamed as Harry was borne toward the stands, where Dumbledore stood waiting with
the enormous Quidditch Cup.
If only there had been a dementor around... As a
sobbing Wood passed Harry the Cup, as he lifted it into the air, Harry felt he
could have produced the world's best Patronus.
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