CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
OWL POST
AGAIN
Harry!”
Hermione was tugging at his sleeve, staring at her
watch. “We've got exactly ten minutes to get back down to the hospital wing
without anybody seeing us—before Dumbledore locks the door —”
“Okay,” said
Harry, wrenching his gaze from the sky, “let's go...”
They slipped through
the doorway behind them and down a tightly spiraling stone staircase. As they
reached the bottom of it, they heard voices. They flattened themselves against
the wall and listened. It sounded like Fudge and Snape. They were walking
quickly along the corridor at the foot of the staircase.
“...only hope
Dumbledore's not going to make difficulties,” Snape was saying. “The Kiss will
be performed immediately?”
“As soon as Macnair returns with the dementors.
This whole Black affair has been highly embarrassing. I can't tell you how much
I'm looking forward to informing the Daily Prophet that we've got him at last...
I daresay they'll want to interview you, Snape... and once young Harry's back in
his right mind, I expect he'll want to tell the Prophet exactly how you saved
him...”
Harry clenched his teeth. He caught a glimpse of Snape's smirk as he
and Fudge passed Harry and Hermione's hiding place. Their footsteps died away.
Harry and Hermione waited a few moments to make sure they'd really gone, then
started to run in the opposite direction. Down one staircase, then another,
along a new,corridor—then they heard a cackling ahead.
“Peeves!” Harry
muttered, grabbing Hermione's wrist. “In here!”
They tore into a deserted
classroom to their left just in time. Peeves seemed to be bouncing along the
corridor in boisterous good spirits, laughing his head off.
“Oh, he's
horrible,” whispered Hermione, her ear to the door. “I bet he's all excited
because the dementors are going to finish off Sirius...” She checked her watch.
“Three minutes, Harry!”
They waited until Peeves's gloating voice had faded
into the distance, then slid back out of the room and broke into a run
again.
“Hermione—what'll happen—if we don't get back inside before Dumbledore
locks the door?” Harry panted.
I don't want to think about it!” Hermione
moaned, checking her watch again. “One minute!”
They had reached the end of
the corridor with the hospital wing entrance. “Okay—I can hear Dumbledore,” said
Hermione tensely. “Come on, Harry!”
They crept along the corridor. The door
opened. Dumbledore's back appeared.
“I am going to lock you in,” they heard
him saying. “it is five minutes to midnight. Miss Granger, three turns should do
It. Good luck.”
Dumbledore backed out of the room, closed the door, and took
out his wand to magically lock it. Panicking, Harry and Hermione ran forward.
Dumbledore looked up, and a wide smile appeared under the long silver mustache.
“Well?” he said quietly.
“We did it!” said Harry breathlessly. “Sirius has
gone, on Buckbeak...”
Dumbledore beamed at them.
“Well done. I think —” He
listened intently for any sound within the hospital wing. “Yes, I think you've
gone too—get inside—I'll lock you in —”
Harry and Hermione slipped back
inside the dormitory. It was empty except for Ron, who was still lying
motionless in the end bed. As the lock clicked behind them, Harry and Hermione
crept back to their own beds, Hermione tucking the Time-Turner back under her
robes. A moment later, Madam Pomfrey came striding back out of her
office.
“Did I hear the headmaster leaving? Am I allowed to look after my
patients now?”
She was in a very bad mood. Harry and Hermione thought it best
to accept their chocolate quietly. Madam Pomfrey stood over them, making sure
they ate it. But Harry could hardly swallow. He and Hermione were waiting,
listening, their nerves jangling... And then, as they both took a fourth piece
of chocolate from Madam Pomfrey, they heard a distant roar of fury echoing from
somewhere above them...
“What was that?” said Madam Pomfrey in alarm.
Now
they could hear angry voices, growing louder and louder. Madam Pomfrey was
staring at the door.
“Really—they'll wake everybody up! What do they think
they're doing?”
Harry was trying to hear what the voices were saying. They
were drawing nearer —
“He must have Disapparated, Severus. We should have
left somebody in the room with him. When this gets out —”
“HE DIDN'T
DISAPPARATE!” Snape roared, now very close at hand. “YOU CAN'T APPARATE OR
DISAPPARATE INSIDE THIS CASTLE!
THIS—HAS—SOMETHING—TO—DO—WITH—POTTER!”
“Severus—be reasonable—Harry has been
locked up —”
BAM.
The door of the hospital wing burst open.
Fudge,
Snape, and Dumbledore came striding into the ward. Dumbledore alone looked calm.
Indeed, he looked as though he was quite enjoying himself. Fudge appeared angry.
But Snape was beside himself.
“OUT WITH IT, POTTER!” he bellowed. “WHAT DID
YOU DO?”
“Professor Snape!” shrieked Madam Pomfrey. “Control
yourself!”
“See here, Snape, be reasonable,” said Fudge. “This door's been
locked, we just saw —”
“THEY HELPED HIM ESCAPE, I KNOW IT!” Snape howled,
pointing at Harry and Hermione. His face was twisted; spit was flying from his
mouth.
“Calm down, man!” Fudge barked. “You're talking nonsense!”
“YOU
DON'T KNOW POTTER!” shrieked Snape. “HE DID IT, I KNOW HE DID IT —”
“That
will do, Severus,” said Dumbledore quietly. “Think about what you are saying.
This door has been locked since I left the ward ten minutes ago. Madam Pomfrey,
have these students left their beds?”
“Of course not!” said Madam Pomfrey,
bristling. “I would have heard them!”
“Well, there you have it, Severus,”
said Dumbledore calmly. “Unless you are suggesting that Harry and Hermione are
able to be in two places at once, I'm afraid I don't see any point in troubling
them further.”
Snape stood there, seething, staring from Fudge, who looked
thoroughly shocked at his behavior, to Dumbledore, whose eyes were twinkling
behind his glasses. Snape whirled about, robes swishing behind him, and stormed
out of the ward.
“Fellow seems quite unbalanced,” said Fudge, staring after
him. “I'd watch out for him if I were you, Dumbledore.”
“Oh, he's not
unbalanced,” said Dumbledore quietly. “He's just suffered a severe
disappointment.”
“He's not the only one!” puffed Fudge. “The Daily Prophet's
going to have a field day! We had Black cornered and he slipped through our
fingers yet again! All it needs now is for the story of that hippogriff's escape
to get out, and I'll be a laughingstock! Well... I'd better go and notify the
Ministry...
“And the dementors?” said Dumbledore. “They'll be removed from
the school, I trust?”
“Oh yes, they'll have to go,” said Fudge, running his
fingers
distractedly through his hair. “Never dreamed they'd attempt to
administer the Kiss on an innocent boy... Completely out of control... no, I'll
have them packed off back to Azkaban tonight... Perhaps we should think about
dragons at the school entrance...”
“Hagrid would like that,” said Dumbledore,
smiling at Harry and Hermione. As he and Fudge left the dormitory, Madam Pomfrey
hurried to the door and locked it again. Muttering angrily to herself, she
headed back to her office.
There was a low moan from the other end of the
ward. Ron had woken up. They could see him sitting up, rubbing his head, looking
around.
“What—what happened?” he groaned. “Harry? Why are we in here? Where's
Sirius? Where's Lupin? What's going on?”
Harry and Hermione looked at each
other.
“You explain,” said Harry, helping himself to some more
chocolate.
When Harry, Ron, and Hermione left the hospital wing at noon the
next day, it was to find an almost deserted castle. The sweltering, heat and the
end of the exams meant that everyone was taking full advantage of another
Hogsmeade visit. Neither Ron nor Hermione felt like going, however, so they and
Harry wandered onto the grounds, still talking about the extraordinary events of
the previous night and wondering where Sirius and Buckbeak were now. Sitting
near the lake, watching the giant squid waving its tentacles lazily above the
water, Harry lost the thread of the conversation as he looked across to the
opposite bank. The stag had galloped toward him from there just last
night...
A shadow fell across them and they looked 'tip to see a very
bleary-eyed Hagrid, mopping his sweaty face with one of his tablecloth-sized
handkerchiefs and beaming down at them.
“Know I shouldn' feel happy, after
wha' happened las' night,” he said. “I mean, Black escapin' again, an,
everythin'—but guess what?”
“What?” they said, pretending to look
curious.
“Beaky! He escaped! He's free! Bin celebratin' all
night!”
“That's wonderful!” said Hermione, giving Ron a reproving look
because he looked as though he was close to laughing.
“Yeah... can't've tied
him up properly,” said Hagrid, gazing happily out over the grounds. “I was
worried this mornin', mind... thought he mighta met Professor Lupin on the
grounds, but Lupin says he never ate anythin' las' night...”
“What?” said
Harry quickly.
“Blimey, haven' yeh heard?” said Hagrid, his smile fading a
little. He lowered his voice, even though there was nobody in sight. “Er—Snape
told all the Slytherins this mornin'... Thought everyone'd know by now...
Professor Lupin's a werewolf, see. An' he was loose on the grounds las' night...
He's packin' now, o' course.
“He's packing?” said Harry, alarmed.
“Why?”
“Leavin', isn' he?” said Hagrid, looking surprised that Harry had to
ask. “Resigned firs' thing this mornin'. Says he can't risk it happenin
again.
Harry scrambled to his feet.
“I'm going to see him,” he said to Ron
and Hermione.
“But if he's resigned —”
“— doesn't sound like there's
anything we can do —”
“I don't care. I still want to see him. I'll meet you
back here.”
Lupin's office door was open. He had already packed most of his
things. The grindylow's empty tank stood next to his battered old suitcase,
which was open and nearly full. Lupin was bending over something on his desk and
looked up only when Harry knocked on the door.
“I saw you coming,” said
Lupin, smiling. He pointed to the parchment he had been poring over. It was the
Marauder's Map.
“I just saw Hagrid,” said Harry. “And he said you'd resigned.
It's not true, is it?”
“I'm afraid it is,” said Lupin. He started opening his
desk drawers and taking out the contents.
“Why?” said Harry. “The Ministry of
Magic don't think you were helping Sirius, do they?”
Lupin crossed to the
door and closed it behind Harry.
“No. Professor Dumbledore managed to
convince Fudge that I was trying to save your lives.” He sighed. “That was the
final straw for Severus. I think the loss of the Order of Merlin hit him hard.
So he—er—accidentally let slip that I am a werewolf this morning at
breakfast.”
“You're not leaving just because of that!” said Harry.
Lupin
smiled wryly.
“This time tomorrow, the owls will start arriving from
parents... They will not want a werewolf teaching their children, Harry. And
after last night, I see their point. I could have bitten any of you... That must
never happen again.”
“You're the best Defense Against the Dark Artsteacher
we've ever had!” said Harry. “Don't go!”
Lupin shook his head and didn't
speak. He carried on emptying his drawers. Then, while Harry was trying to think
of a good argument to make him stay, Lupin said, “From what the headmaster told
me this morning, you saved a lot of lives last night, Harry. if I'm proud of
anything I've done this year, it's how much you've learned... Tell me about your
Patronus.”
“How d'you know about that?” said Harry, distracted.
“What else
could have driven the dementors back?”
Harry told Lupin what had happened.
When he'd finished, Lupin was smiling again.
“Yes, your father was always a
stag when he transformed,” he said. “You guessed right... that's why we called
him Prongs.”
Lupin threw his last few books into his case, closed the desk
drawers, and turned to look at Harry.
“Here—I brought this from the Shrieking
Shack last night,” he said, handing Harry back the Invisibility Cloak. “And...”
He hesitated, then held out the Marauder's Map too. “I am no longer your
teacher, so I don't feel guilty about giving you back this as well. It's no use
to me, and I daresay you, Ron, and Hermione will find uses for it.”
Harry
took the map and grinned.
“You told me Moony, Wormtail, Padfoot, and Prongs
would've wanted to lure me out of school... you said they'd have thought it was
funny.”
“And so we would have,” said Lupin, now reaching down to close his
case. “I have no hesitation in saying that James would have been highly
disappointed if his son had never found any of the secret passages out of the
castle.”
There was a knock on the door. Harry hastily stuffed the Marauder's
Map and the Invisibility Cloak into his pocket.
It was Professor Dumbledore.
He didn't look surprised to see Harry there.
“Your carriage is at the gates,
Remus,” he said.
“Thank You, Headmaster.”
Lupin picked up his old suitcase
and the empty grindylow tank.
“Well—good-bye, Harry,” he said, smiling. “It
has been a real pleasure teaching you. I feel sure we'll meet again sometime.
Headmaster, there is no need to see me to the gates, I can manage...”
Harry
had the impression that Lupin wanted to leave as quickly as
possible.
“Good-bye, then, Remus,” said Dumbledore soberly. Lupin shifted the
grindylow tank slightly so that he and Dumbledore could shake hands. Then, with
a final nod to Harry and a swift smile, Lupin left the office.
Harry sat down
in his vacated chair, staring glumly at the floor. He heard the door close and
looked up. Dumbledore was still there.
“Why so miserable, Harry?” he said
quietly. “You should be very proud of yourself after last night.”
“It didn't
make any difference,” said Harry bitterly. “Pettigrew got away.”
“Didn't make
any difference?” said Dumbledore quietly, “It made all the difference in the
world, Harry. You helped uncover the truth. You saved an innocent man from a
terrible fate.”
Terrible. Something stirred in Harry's memory. Greater and
more terrible than ever before... Professor Trelawney's
prediction!
“Professor Dumbledore—yesterday, when I was having my Divination
exam, Professor Trelawney went very—very strange.”
“Indeed?” said Dumbledore.
“Er—stranger than usual, you mean?”
“Yes... her voice went all deep and her
eyes rolled and she said ...she said Voldemort's servant was going to set out to
return to him before midnight... She said the servant would help him come back
to power.” Harry stared up at Dumbledore. “And then she sort of became normal
again, and she couldn't remember anything she'd said. Was it—was she making a
real prediction?”
Dumbledore looked mildly impressed.
“Do you know, Harry,
I think she might have been.” he said thoughtfully. “Who'd have thought it? That
brings her total of real predictions up to two. I should offer her a pay
raise...”
“But —” Harry looked at him, aghast. How could Dumbledore take this
so calmly?
“But—I stopped Sirius and Professor Lupin from killing Pettigrew!
That makes it my fault if Voldemort comes back!”
“It does not,” said
Dumbledore quietly. “Hasn't your experience with the Time-Turner taught you
anything, Harry? The consequences of our actions are always so complicated, so
diverse, that predicting the future is a very difficult business indeed...
Professor Trelawney, bless her, is living proof of that... You did a very noble
thing, in saving Pettigrew's life.”
“But if he helps Voldemort back to
power
“Pettigrew owes his life to you. You have sent Voldemort a deputy who
is in your debt... When one wizard saves another wizard's life, it creates a
certain bond between them... and I'm much mistaken if Voldemort wants his
servant in the debt of Harry Potter.”
“I don't want a connection with
Pettigrew!” said Harry. “He betrayed my parents!”
“This is magic at its
deepest, its most impenetrable, Harry. But trust me... the time may come when
you will be very glad you saved Pettigrew's life.”
Harry couldn't imagine
when that would be. Dumbledore looked as though he knew what Harry was
thinking.
“I knew your father very well, both at Hogwarts and later, Harry,”
he said gently. “He would have saved Pettigrew too, I am sure of it.”
Harry
looked up at him. Dumbledore wouldn't laugh—he could tell Dumbledore...
“I
thought it was my dad who'd conjured my Patronus. I mean, when I saw myself
across the lake ...I thought I was seeing him.” “An easy mistake to make,” said
Dumbledore softly. “I expect you'll tire of hearing it, but you do look
extraordinarily like James. Except for the eyes... you have your mother's
eyes.
Harry shook his head.
“It was stupid, thinking it was him,” he
muttered. “I mean, I knew he was dead.”
“You think the dead we loved ever
truly leave us? You think that we don't recall them more clearly than ever in
times of great trouble? Your father is alive in you, Harry, and shows himself
most plainly when you have need of him. How else could you produce that
particular Patronus? Prongs rode again last night.”
It took a moment for
Harry to realize what Dumblefore had said.
Last night Sirius told me all
about how they became Animagi,” said Dumbledore, smiling. “An extraordinary
achievement—not least, keeping it quiet from me. And then I remembered the most
unusual form your Patronus took, when it charged Mr. Malfoy down at your
Quidditch match against Ravenclaw. You know, Harry, in a way, you did see your
father last night... You found him inside yourself.”
And Dumbledore left the
office, leaving Harry to his very confused thoughts.
Nobody at Hogwarts now
knew the truth of what had happened the night that Sirius, Buckbeak, and
Pettigrew had vanished except Harry, Ron, Hermione, and Professor Dumbledore. As
the end of term approached, Harry heard many different theories about what had
really happened, but none of them came close to the truth.
Malfoy was furious
about Buckbeak. He was convinced that Hagrid had found a way of smuggling the
hippogriff to safety, and seemed outraged that he and his father had been
outwitted by a gamekeeper. Percy Weasley, meanwhile, had much to say on the
subject of Sirius's escape.
“If I manage to get into the Ministry, I'll have
a lot of proposals to make about Magical Law Enforcement!” he told the only
person who would listen—his girlfriend, Penelope.
Though the weather was
perfect, though the atmosphere was so
cheerful, though he knew they had
achieved the near impossible in helping Sirius to freedom, Harry had never
approached the end of a school year in worse spirits.
He certainly wasn't the
only one who was sorry to see Professor Lupin go. The whole of Harry's Defense
Against the Dark Arts class was miserable about his resignation.
“Wonder what
they'll give us next year?” said Seamus Finnigan gloomily.
“Maybe a vampire,”
suggested Dean Thomas hopefully.
It wasn't only Professor Lupin's departure
that was weighing on Harry's mind. He couldn't help thinking a lot about
Professor Trelawney's prediction. He kept wondering where Pettigrew was now,
whether he had sought sanctuary with Voldemort yet. But the thing that was
lowering Harry's spirits most of all was the prospect of returning to the
Dursleys. For maybe half an hour, a glorious half hour, he had believed he would
be living with Sirius from now on... his parents' best friend... It would have
been the next best thing to having his own father back. And while no news of
Sirius was definitely good news, because it meant he had successfully gone into
hiding, Harry couldn't help feeling miserable when he thought of the home he
might have had, and the fact that it was now impossible.
The exam results
came out on the last day of term. Harry, Ron, and Hermione had passed every
subject. Harry was amazed that he had got through Potions. He had a shrewd
suspicion that Dumbledore might have stepped in to stop Snape failing him on
purpose. Snape's behavior toward Harry over the past week had been quite
alarming. Harry wouldn't have thought it possible that Snape's dislike for him
could increase, but it certainly had. A muscle twitched unpleasantly at the
corner of Snape's thin mouth every time he looked at Harry, and he was
constantly flexing his fingers, as though itching to place them around Harry's
throat.
Percy had got his top-grade N. E. W. T. s; Fred and George had
scraped a handful of O. W. L. s each. Gryffindor House, meanwhile, largely
thanks to their spectacular performance in the Quidditch Cup, had won the House
championship for the third year running. This meant that the end of term feast
took place amid decorations of scarlet and gold, and that the Gryffindor table
was the noisiest of the lot, as everybody celebrated. Even Harry managed to
forget about the journey back to the Dursleys the next day as he ate, drank,
talked, and laughed with the rest.
As the Hogwarts Express pulled out of the
station the next mornIng, Hermione gave Harry and Ron some surprising
news.
“I went to see Professor McGonagall this morning, just before
breakfast. I've decided to drop Muggle Studies.”
“But you passed your exam
with three hundred and twenty percent!” said Ron.
“I know,” sighed Hermione,
“but I can't stand another year like this one. That Time-Turner, it was driving
me mad. I've handed it in. Without Muggle Studies and Divination, I'll be able
to have a normal schedule again.”
I still can't believe you didn't tell us
about it,” said Ron grumpily. “We're supposed to be your friends.”
“I
promised I wouldn't tell anyone,” said Hermione severely. She looked around at
Harry, who was watching Hogwarts disappear from view behind a mountain. Two
whole months before he'd see it again...
“Oh, cheer up, Harry!” said Hermione
sadly.
“I'm okay,” said Harry quickly. “Just thinking about the
holidays.”
“Yeah, I've been thinking about them too,” said Ron. “Harry,
you've got to come and stay with us. I'll fix it up with Mum and Dad, then I'll
call you. I know how to use a fellytone now —”
“A telephone, Ron,” said
Hermione. “Honestly, you should take Muggle Studies next year...”
Ronignored
her.
“It's the Quidditch World Cup this summer! How about it, Harry? Come and
stay, and we'll go and see it! Dad can usually get tickets from work.”
This
proposal had the effect of cheering Harry up a great deal.
“Yeah... I bet the
Dursleys'd be pleased to let me come... especially after what I did to Aunt
Marge...”
Feeling considerably more cheerful, Harry joined Ron and Hermione
in several games of Exploding Snap, and when the witch with the tea cart
arrived, he bought himself a very large lunch, though nothing with chocolate in
it.
But it was late in the afternoon before the thing that made him truly
happy turned up...
“Harry,” said Hermione suddenly, peering over his
shoulder. “What's that thing outside your window?”
Harry turned to look
outside. Something very small and gray was bobbing in and out of sight beyond
the glass. He stood up for a better look and saw that it was a tiny owl,
carrying a letter that was much too big for it. The owl was so small, in fact,
that it kept tumbling over in the air, buffeted this way and that in the train's
slipstream. Harry quickly pulled down the window, stretched out his arm, and
caught it. It felt like a very fluffy Snitch. He brought it carefully inside.
The owl dropped its letter onto Harry's seat and began zooming around their
compartment, apparently very pleased with itself for accomplishing its task.
Hedwig clicked her beak with a sort of dignified disapproval. Crookshanks sat up
in his seat, following the owl with his great yellow eyes. Ron, noticing this,
snatched the owl safely out of harm's way.
Harry picked up the letter. It was
addressed to him. He ripped open the letter, and shouted, “It's from
Sirius!”
“What?” said Ron and Hermione excitedly. “Read it aloud!”
Dear
Harry,
I hope this finds you before you reach your aunt and uncle. I don't
know whether they're used to owl post.
Buckbeak and I are in hiding. I won't
tell you where, in case this owl falls into the wrong hands. I have some doubt
about his reliability, but he is the best I could find, and he did seem eager
for the job.
I believe the dementors are still searching for me, but they
haven't a hope of finding me here. I am planning to allow some Muggles to
glimpse me soon, a long way from Hogwarts, so that the security on the castle
will be lifted.
There is something I never got around to telling you during
our brief meeting. It was I who sent you the Firebolt —
“Ha!” said Hermione
triumphantly. “See! I told you it was from him!”
“Yes, but he hadn't jinxed
it, had he?” said Ron. “Ouch!” The tiny owl, now hooting happily in his hand,
had nibbled one of his fingers in what it seemed to think was an affectionate
way.
Crookshanks took the order to the Owl Office for me. I used your name
but told them to take the gold from my own Gringotts vault. Please consider it
as thirteen birthdays' worth of presents from your godfather.
I would also
like to apologize for the fright I think I gave you that night last year when
you left your uncle's house. I had only hoped to get a glimpse of you before
starting my journey north, but I think the sight of me alarmed you.
I am
enclosing something else for you, which I think will make your next year at
Hogwarts more enjoyable.
If ever you need me, send word. Your owl will find
me.
I'll write again soon.
Sirius
Harry looked eagerly inside the
envelope. There was another piece of parchment in there. He read it through
quickly and felt suddenly as warm and contented as though he'd swallowed a
bottle of hot butterbeer in one gulp.
I, Sirius Black, Harry Potter's
godfather, hereby give him permission to visit Hogsmeade on
weekends.
“That'll be good enough for Dumbledore!” said Harry happily. He
looked back at Sirius's letter. “Hang on, there's a RS...”
I thought your
ftiend Ron might like to keep this owl, as it's my fault he no longer has a
rat.
Ron's eyes widened. The minute owl was still hooting excitedly. “Keep
him?” he said uncertainly. He looked closely at the owl for a moment; then, to
Harry's and Hermione's great surprise, he held him out for Crookshanks to
sniff.
“What do you reckon?” Ron asked the cat. “Definitely an
owl?”
Crookshanks purred.
“That's good enough for me,” said Ron happily.
“He's mine.”
Harry read and reread the letter from Sirius all the way back
into King's Cross station. It was still clutched tightly in his hand as he, Ron,
and Hermione stepped back through the barrier of platform nine an('
three-quarters. Harry spotted Uncle Vernon at once. He was standing a good
distance from Mr. and Mrs. Weasley, eyeing them suspiciously, and when Mrs.
Weasley hugged Harry in greeting, his worst suspicions about them seemed
confirmed.
“I'll call about the World Cup!” Ron yelled after Harry as Harry
bid him and Hermione good-bye, then wheeled the trolley bearing his trunk and
Hedwig's cage toward Uncle Vernon, who greeted him in his usual
fashion.
“What's that?” he snarled, staring at the envelope Harry was still
clutching in his hand. “If it's another form for me to sign, you've got another
—”
“It's not,” said Harry cheerfully. “It's a letter from my
godfather.”
“Godfather?” sputtered Uncle Vernon. “You haven't got a
godfather!”
“Yes, I have,” said Harry brightly. “He was my mum and dad's best
friend. He's a convicted murderer, but he's broken out of wizard prison and he's
on the run. He likes to keep in touch with me, though... keep up with my news...
check if I'm happy...”
And, grinning broadly at the look of horror on Uncle
Vernon's face, Harry set off toward the station exit, Hedwig rattling along in
front of him, for what looked like a much better summer than the
last.
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