CHAPTER SIXTEEN
PROFESSOR TRELAWNEY'S
PREDICTION
Harry's euphoria at finally winning the Quidditch Cup lasted
at least a week. Even the weather seemed to be celebrating; as June approached,
the days became cloudless and sultry, and all anybody felt like doing was
strolling onto the grounds and flopping down on the grass with several pints of
iced pumpkin juice, perhaps playing a casual game of Gobstones or watching the
giant squid propel itself dreamily across the surface of the lake.
But they
couldn't. Exams were nearly upon them, and instead of lazing around outside, the
students were forced to remain inside the castle, trying to bully their brains
into concentrating while enticing wafts of summer air drifted in through the
windows. Even Fred and George Weasley had been spotted working; they were about
to take their O. W. L. s (Ordinary Wizarding Levels). Percy was getting ready to
take his N. E. W. T. s (Nastily Exhausting Wizarding Tests), the highest
qualification Hogwarts offered. As Percy hoped to enter the Ministry of Magic,
he needed top grades. He was becoming increasingly edgy, and gave very severe
punishments to anybody who disturbed the quiet of the common room in the
evenings. In fact, the only person who seemed more anxious than Percy was
Hermione.
Harry and Ron had given up asking her how she was managing to
attend several classes at once, but they couldn't restrain themselves when they
saw the exam schedule she had drawn up for herself. The first column
read:
Monday
9 o'clock, Arithmancy
9 o'clock,
Transfiguration
Lunch
1 o'clock, Charms
1 o'clock, Ancient
Runes
“Hermione?” Ron said cautiously, because she was liable to explode when
interrupted these days. “Er—are you sure you've copied down these times
right?”
“What?” snapped Hermione, picking up the exam schedule and examining
it. “Yes, of course I have.”
“Is there any point asking how you're going to
sit for two exams at once?” said Harry.
“No,” said Hermione shortly. “Have
either of you seen my copy of Numerology and Gramatica?”
“Oh, yeah, I
borrowed it for a bit of bedtime reading,” said Ron, but very quietly. Hermione
started shifting heaps of parchment Harry, Ron, and Hermione plenty of
opportunity to speak to Hagrid.
“Beaky's gettin' a bit depressed,” Hagrid
told them, bending low on the pretense of checking that Harry's flobberworm was
still alive. “Bin cooped up too long. But still... we'll know day after
tomorrow—one way or the other —”
They had Potions that afternoon, which was
an unqualified disaster. Try as Harry might, he couldn't get his Confusing
Concoction to thicken, and Snape, standing watch with an air of vindictive
pleasure, scribbled something that looked suspiciously like a zero onto his
notes before moving away.
Then came Astronomy at midnight, up on the tallest
tower; History of Magic on Wednesday morning, in which Harry scribbled
everything Florean Fortescue had ever told him about medieval witch-hunts, while
wishing he could have had one of Fortescue's choco-nut sundaes with him in the
stifling classroom. Wednesday afternoon meant Herbology, in the greenhouses
under a baking-hot sun; then back to the common room once more, with sunburnt
necks, thinking longingly of this time next day, when it would all be
over.
Their second to last exam, on Thursday morning, was Defense Against the
Dark Arts. Professor Lupin had compiled the most unusual exam any of them had
ever taken; a sort of obstacle course outside in the sun, where they had to wade
across a deep paddling pool containing a grindylow, cross a series of potholes
full of Red Caps, squish their way across a patch of marsh while ignoring
misleading directions from a hinkypunk, then climb into an old trunk and battle
with a new boggart.
“Excellent, Harry,” Lupin muttered as Harry climbed out
of the trunk, grinning. “Full marks.”
Flushed with his success, Harry hung
around to watch Ron and Hermione. Ron did very well until he reached the
hinkypunk, which successfully confused him into sinking waist-high into the
quagmire. Hermione did everything perfectly until she reached the trunk with the
boggart in it. After about a minute inside it, she burst out again,
screaming.
“Hermione!” said Lupin, startled. “What's the
matter?”
“P—P—Professor McGonagall!” Hermione gasped, pointing into the
trunk. “Sh—she said I'd failed everything!”
It took a little while to calm
Hermione down. When at last she had regained a grip on herself, she, Harry, and
Ron went back to the castle. Ron was still slightly inclined to laugh at
Hermione's boggart, but an argument was averted by the sight that met them on
the top of the steps.
Cornelius Fudge, sweating slightly in his pinstriped
cloak, was standing there staring out at the grounds. He started at the sight of
Harry.
“Hello there, Harry!” he said. “Just had an exam, I expect? Nearly
finished?”
“Yes,” said Harry. Hermione and Ron, not being on speaking terms
with the Minister of Magic, hovered awkwardly in the background.
“Lovely
day,” said Fudge, casting an eye over the lake.
“Pity... pity...”
He
sighed deeply and looked down at Harry.
“I'm here on an unpleasant mission,
Harry. The Committee for the Disposal of Dangerous Creatures required a witness
to the execution of a mad hippogriff. As I needed to visit Hogwarts to check on
the Black situation, I was asked to step in.”
“Does that mean the appeal's
already happened?” Ron interrupted, stepping forward.
“No, no, it's scheduled
for this afternoon,” said Fudge, looking curiously at Ron.
“Then you might
not have to witness an execution at A!” said Eon stoutly. “The hippogriff might
get off!”
Before Fudge could answer, two wizards came through the castle
doors behind him. One was so ancient he appeared to be withering before their
very eyes; the other was tall and strapping, with a thin back mustache. Harry
gathered that they were representatives of the Committee for the Disposal of
Dangerous Creatures, because tie very old wizard squinted toward Hagrid's cabin
and said in a feeble voice, “Dear, dear, I'm getting too old for this... Two
o'clock, isn't it, Fudge?”
The black-mustached man was fingering something in
his belt; Harry looked and saw that he was running one broad thumb along the
blade of a shining axe. Ron opened his mouth to say something, but Hermione
nudged him hard in the ribs and jerked her head toward the entrance
hall.
“Why'd you stop me?” said Ron angrily as they entered the Great Hall
for lunch. “Did you see them? They've even got the axe ready! This isn't
justice!”
“Ron, your dad works for the Ministry, you can't go saying things
like that to his boss!” said Hermione, but she too looked very upset. “As long
as Hagrid keeps his head this time, and argue, hi case properly, they can't
possibly execute Buckbeak...”
But Harry could tell Hermione didn't really
believe what she was saying. All around them, people were talking excitedly as
they ate their lunch, happily anticipating the end of the exams that afternoon,
but Harry, Ron, and Hermione, lost in worry about Hagrid and Buckbeak, didn't
join in.
Harry's and Ron's last exam was Divination; Hermione's, Muggle
Studies. They walked up the marble staircase together; Hermione left them on the
first floor and Harry and Ron proceeded all the way up to the seventh, where
many of their class were sitting on the spiral staircase to Professor
Trelawney's classroom, trying to cram in a bit of last-minute
studying.
“She's seeing us all separately,” Neville informed them as they
went to sit down next to him. He had his copy of Unfogging the Future open on
his lap at the pages devoted to crystal gazing. “Have either of you ever seen
anything in a crystal ball?” he asked them unhappily.
“Nope,” said Ron in an
offhand voice. He kept checking his watch; Harry. knew that he was counting down
the time until Buckbeak's appeal started.
The line of people outside the
classroom shortened very slowly. As each person climbed back down the silver
ladder, the rest of the class hissed, “What did she ask? Was it okay?”
But
they all refused to say.
“She says the crystal ball's told her that if I tell
you, I'll have a horrible accident!” squeaked Neville as he clambered back down
the ladder toward Harry and Ron, who had now reached the landing.
“That's
convenient,” snorted Ron. “You know, I'm starting to think Hermione was right
about her”—he jabbed his thumb toward the trapdoor overhead—”she's a right old
fraud.”
“Yeah,” said Harry, looking at his own watch. It-was now two o'clock.
“Wish she'd hurry up...”
Parvati came back down the ladder glowing with
pride.
“She says I've got all the makings of a true Seer,” she informed Harry
and Ron. “I saw loads of stuff... Well, good luck!”
She hurried off down the
spiral staircase toward Lavender.
“Ronald Weasley,” said the familiar, misty
voice from over their heads. Ron grimaced at Harry and climbed the silver ladder
out of sight. Harry was now the only person left to be tested. He settled
himself on the floor with his back against the wall, listening to a fly buzzing
in the sunny window, his mind across the grounds with Hagrid.
Finally, after
about twenty minutes, Ron's large feet reappeared on the ladder.
“How'd it
go?” Harry asked him, standing up.
“Rubbish,” said Ron. “Couldn't see a
thing, so I made some stuff up. Don't think she was convinced,
though...”
“Meet you in the common room,” Harry muttered as Professor
Trelawney's voice called, “Harry Potter!”
The tower room was hotter than ever
before; the curtains were closed, the fire was alight, and the usual sickly
scent made Harry cough as he stumbled through the clutter of chairs and table to
where Professor Trelawney sat waiting for him before a large crystal
ball.
“Good day, my dear,” she said softly. “If you would kindly gaze into
the Orb... Take your time, now... then tell me what you see within
it...”
Harry bent over the crystal ball and stared, stared as hard as he
could, willing it to show him something other than swirling white fog, but
nothing happened.
“Well?” Professor Trelawney prompted delicately. “What do
you see?”
The heat was overpowering and his nostrils were stinging with the
perfumed smoke wafting from the fire beside them. He thought of what Ron had
just said, and decided to pretend.
“Er —” said Harry, “a dark shape...
um...”
“What does it resemble?” whispered Professor Trelawney. “Think,
now...”
Harry cast his mind around and it landed on Buckbeak.
“A
hippogriff,” he said firmly.
“Indeed!” whispered Professor Trelawney,
scribbling keenly on the parchment perched upon her knees. “My boy, you may well
be seeing the outcome of poor Hagrid's trouble with the Ministry of Magic! Look
closer... Does the hippogriff appear to... have its head?”
“Yes,” said Harry
firmly.
“Are you sure?” Professor Trelawney urged him. “Are you quite sure,
dear? You don't see it writhing on the ground, perhaps, and a shadowy figure
raising an axe behind it?”
“No!” said Harry, starting to feel slightly
sick.
“No blood? No weeping Hagrid?”
“No!” said Harry again, wanting more
than ever to leave the room and the heat. “It looks fine, it's— flying
away...”
Professor Trelawney sighed.
“Well, dear, I think we'll leave it
there... A little disappointing... but I'm sure you did your best.”
Relieved,
Harry got up, picked up his bag and turned to go, but then a loud, harsh voice
spoke behind him.
“IT WILL HAPPEN TONIGHT.”
Harry wheeled around.
Professor Trelawney had gone rigid in her armchair; her eyes were unfocused and
her mouth sagging.
“S—sorry?” said Harry.
But Professor Trelawney didn't
seem to hear him. Her eyes started to roll. Harry sat there in a panic. She
looked as though she was about to have some sort of seizure. He hesitated,
thinking of running to the hospital wing—and then Professor Trelawney spoke
again, in the same harsh voice, quite unlike her own:
“THE DARK LORD LIES
ALONE AND FRIENDLESS, ABANDONED BY HIS FOLLOWERS. HIS SERVANT HAS BEEN CHAINED
THESE TWELVE YEARS. TONIGHT, BEFORE MIDNIGHT... THE SERVANT WILL BREAK FREE AND
SET OUT TO REJOIN HIS MASTER. THE DARK LORD WILL RISE AGAIN WITH HIS SERVANTS
AID, GREATER AND MORE TERRIBLE THAN EVER HE WAS. TONIGHT... BEFORE MIDNIGHT...
THE SERVANT... WILL SET OU... TO REJOIN... HIS MASTER...
Professor
Trelawney's head fell forward onto her chest. She made a grunting sort of noise.
Harry sat there, staring at her. Then, quite suddenly, Professor Trelawney's
head snapped up again.
“I'm so sorry, dear boy,” she said dreamily, “the heat
of the day, you know... I drifted off for a moment...”
Harry sat there,
staring at her.
“Is there anything wrong, my dear?”
“You—you just told me
that the—the Dark Lord's going to rise again... that his servant's going to go
back to him.
Professor Trelawney looked thoroughly startled.
“The Dark
Lord? He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named? My dear boy, that's hardly something to joke
about... Rise again, indeed —”
,'But you just said it! You. said the Dark
Lord —”
“I think you must have dozed off too, dear!” said Professor
Trelawney. “I would certainly not presume to predict anything quite as
far-fetched as that!”
Harry climbed back down the ladder and the spiral
staircase, wondering... had he just heard Professor Trelawney make a real
prediction? Or had that been her idea of an impressive end to the test?
Five
minutes later he was dashing past the security trolls outside the entrance to
Gryffindor Tower, Professor Trelawney's words still resounding in his head.
People were striding past him in the opposite direction, laughing and joking,
heading for the grounds and a bit of long-awaited freedom; by the time he had
reached the portrait hole and entered the common room, it was almost deserted.
Over in the corner, however, sat Ron and Hermione.
“Professor Trelawney,”
Harry panted, “just told me —”
But he stopped abruptly at the sight of their
faces.
“Buckbeak lost,” said Ron weakly. “Hagrid's just sent
this.”
Hagrid's note was dry this time, no tears had splattered it, yet his
hand seemed to have shaken so much as he wrote that it was hardly
legible.
Lost appeal. They're going to execute at sunset. Nothing you can do.
Don't come down. I don't want you to see it.
Hagrid
“We've got to go,”
said Harry at once. “He can't just sit there on his own, waiting for the
executioner!”
“Sunset, though,” said Ron, who was staring out the window ill
a glazed sort of way. “We'd never be allowed... 'specially you,
Harry...”
Harry sank his head into his hands, thinking.
“If we only had
the Invisibility Cloak...”
“Where is it?” said Hermione.
Harry told her
about leaving it in the passageway under the one-eyed witch.
“...if Snape
sees me anywhere near there again, I'm in serious trouble,” he
finished.
“That's true,” said Hermione, getting to her feet. “If he sees
you... How do you open the witch's hump again?”
“You—you tap it and say,
'Dissendium,'” said Harry. “But —”
Hermione didn't wait for the rest of his
sentence; she strode across the room, pushed open the Fat Lady's portrait and
vanished from sight.
“She hasn't gone to get it?” Ron said, staring after
her.
She had. Hermione returned a quarter of an hour later with the silvery
cloak folded carefully under her robes.
“Hermione, I don't know what's
gotten, into you lately!” said Ron, astounded. “First you hit Malfoy, then you
walk out on Professor Trelawney —”
Hermione looked rather flattered.
They
went down to dinner with everybody else, but did not return to Gryffindor Tower
afterward. Harry had the cloak hidden down tie front of his robes; he had to
keep his arms folded to hide the lump. They skulked in an empty chamber off the
entrance hall, listening, until they were sure it was deserted. They heard a
last pair of people hurrying across the hall and a door slamming. Hermione poked
her head around the door.
“Okay,” she whispered, “no one there—cloak on
—”
Walking very close together so that nobody would see them, they crossed
the hall on tiptoe beneath the cloak, then walked down the stone front steps
into the grounds. The sun was already sinking behind the Forbidden Forest,
gilding the top branches of the trees.
They reached Hagrid's cabin and
knocked. He was a minute in answering, and when he did, he looked all around for
his visitor, pale-faced and trembling.
“It's us,” Harry hissed. “We're
wearing the Invisibility Cloak. Let us in and we can take it off.”
“Yeh
shouldn've come!” Hagrid whispered, but he stood back, and they stepped inside.
Hagrid shut the door quickly and Harry pulled off the cloak.
Hagrid was not
crying, nor did he throw himself upon their necks. He looked like a man who did
not know where he was or what to do. This helplessness was worse to watch than
tears.
“Wan' some tea?” he said. His great hands were shaking as he reached
for the kettle.
“Where's Buckbeak, Hagrid?” said Hermione hesitantly.
I—I
took him outside,” said Hagrid, spilling milk all over the table as he filled up
the jug. “He's tethered in me pumpkin patch. Thought he oughta see the trees
an'—an' smell fresh air—before
Hagrid's hand trembled so violently that the
milk jug slipped from his grasp and shattered all over the floor.
“I'll do
it, Hagrid,” said Hermione quickly, hurrying over and starting to clean up the
mess.
“There's another one in the cupboard,” Hagrid said, sitting down and
wiping his forehead on his sleeve. Harry glanced at Ron, who looked back
hopelessly.
“Isn't there anything anyone can do, Hagrid?” Harry asked
fiercely, sitting down next to him. “Dumbledore —”
“He's tried,” said Hagrid.
“He's got no power ter overrule the Committee. He told 'em Buckbeak's all right,
but they're scared... Yeh know what Lucius Malfoy's like... threatened 'em, I
expect... an' the executioner, Macnair, he's an old pal o' Malfoy's... but it'll
be quick an' clean... an' I'll be beside him... “
Hagrid swallowed. His eyes
were darting all over the cabin as though looking for some shred of hope or
comfort.
“Dumbledore's gonna come down while it—while it happens. Wrote me
this mornin'. Said he wants ter—ter be with me. Great man,
Dumbledore...”
Hermione, who had been rummaging in Hagrid's cupboard for
another milk jug, let out a small, quickly stifled sob. She straightened up with
the new jug in her hands, fighting back tears.
“We'll stay with you too,
Hagrid,” she began, but Hagrid shook his shaggy head.
“Yeh're ter go back up
ter the castle. I told yeh, I don' wan' yeh watchin'. An' yeh shouldn' be down
here anyway... If Fudge an' Dumbledore catch yeh out without permission, Harry,
yeh'll be in big trouble.”
Silent tears were now streaming down Hermione's
face, but she hid them from Hagrid, bustling around making tea. Then, as she
picked up the milk bottle to pour some into the jug, she let out a
shriek.
“Ron, I don't believe it—it's Scabbers!”
Ron gaped at
her.
“What are you talking about?”
Hermione carried the milk jug over to
the table and turned it upside down. With a frantic squeak, and much scrambling
to get back inside, Scabbers the rat came sliding out onto the
table.
“Scabbers!” said Ron blankly. “Scabbers, what are you doing
here?”
He grabbed the struggling rat and held him up to the light. Scabbers
looked dreadful. He was thinner than ever, large tufts of hair had fallen out
leaving wide bald patches, and he writhed in Ron's hands as though desperate to
free himself
“It's okay, Scabbers!” said Ron. “No cats! There's nothing here
to hurt you!”
Hagrid suddenly stood up, his eyes fixed on the window. His
normally ruddy face had gone the color of parchment.
“They're
comin'...”
Harry, Ron, and Hermione whipped around. A group of men was
walking down the distant castle steps. In front was Albus Dumbledore, his silver
beard gleaming in the dying sun. Next to him trotted Cornelius Fudge. Behind
them came the feeble old Committee member and the executioner, Macnair.
“Yeh
gotta go,” said Hagrid. Every inch of him was trembling. “They mustn' find yeh
here... Go now...”
Ron stuffed Scabbers into his pocket and Hermione picked
up the cloak. “I'll let yeh out the back way,” said Hagrid.
They followed him
to the door into his back garden. Harry felt strangely unreal, and even more so
when he saw Buckbeak a few yards away, tethered to a tree behind Hagrid's
Pumpkin patch. Buckbeak seemed to know something was happening. He turned his
sharp head from side to side and pawed the ground nervously.
“It's okay,
Beaky,” said Hagrid softly. “It's okay...” He turned to Harry, Ron, and
Hermione. “Go on,” he said. “Get goin'.”
But they didn't move.
“Hagrid, we
can't —”
“We'll tell them what really happened —”
“They can't kill him
—”
“Go!” said Hagrid fiercely. “It's bad enough without you lot in trouble
an' all!”
They had no choice. As Hermione threw the cloak over Harry and Ron,
they heard voices at the front of the cabin. Hagrid looked at the place where
they had just vanished from sight.
“Go quick,” he said hoarsely. “Don'
listen...”
And he strode back into his cabin as someone knocked at the front
door.
Slowly, in a kind of horrified trance, Harry, Ron, and Hermione set off
silently around Hagrid's house. As they reached the other side, the front door
closed with a sharp snap.
“Please, let's hurry,” Hermione whispered. “I can't
stand it, I can't bear it...”
They started up the sloping lawn toward the
castle. The sun was sinking fast now; the sky had turned to a clear,
purple-tinged grey, but to the west there was a ruby-red glow.
Ron stopped
dead.
“Oh, please, Ron,” Hermione began.
“It's Scabbers—he won't—stay put
—”
Ron was bent over, trying to keep Scabbers in his pocket, but the rat was
going berserk; squeaking madly, twisting and flailing, trying to sink his teeth
into Ron's hand.
“Scabbers, it's me, you idiot, it's Ron,” Ron
hissed.
They heard a door open behind them and men's voices.
“Oh, Ron,
please let's move, they're going to do it!” Hermione
breathed.
“Okay—Scabbers, stay put —”
They walked forward; Harry, like
Hermione, was trying not to listen to the rumble of voices behind them. Ron
stopped again.
“I can't hold him—Scabbers, shut up, everyone'll hear us
—”
The rat was squealing wildly, but not loudly enough to cover up the sounds
drifting from Hagrid's garden. There was a jumble of indistinct male voices, a
silence, and then, without warning, the unmistakable swish and thud of an
axe.
Hermione swayed on the spot.
“They did it!” she whispered to Harry.
“I d—don't believe it—they did it!”
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