CHAPTER THREE
THE KNIGHT
BUS
Harry was several streets away before he collapsed onto a low
wall in Magnolia Crescent, panting from the effort of dragging his trunk. He sat
quite still, anger still surging through him, listening to the frantic thumping
of his heart.
But after ten minutes alone in the dark street, a new emotion
overtook him: panic. Whichever way he looked at it, he had never been in a worse
fix. He was stranded, quite alone, in the dark Muggle world, with absolutely
nowhere to go. And the worst of it was, he had just done serious magic, which
meant that he was almost certainly expelled from Hogwarts. He had broken the
Decree for the Restriction of Underage Wizardry so badly, he was surprised
Ministry of Magic representatives weren't swooping down on him where he
sat.
Harry shivered and looked up and down Magnolia Crescent.
What, was
going to happen to him? Would he be arrested, or would he simply be outlawed
from the wizarding world? He thought of Ron and Hermione, and his heart sank
even lower. Harry was sure that, criminal or not, Ron and Hermione would want to
help him now, but they were both abroad, and with Hedwig gone, he had no means
of contacting them.
He didn't have any Muggle money, either. There was a
little wizard gold in the money bag at the bottom of his trunk, but the rest of
the fortune his parents had left him was stored in a vault at Gringotts
Wizarding Bank in London. He'd never be able to drag his trunk all the way to
London. Unless...
He looked down at his wand, which he was still clutching in
his hand. If he was already expelled (his heart was. now thumping painfully
fast), a bit more magic couldn't hurt. He had the Invisibility Cloak he had
inherited from his father—what if he bewitched the trunk to make it
feather-light, tied it to his broomstick, covered himself in the cloak, and flew
to London? Then he could get the rest of his money out of his vault and... begin
his life as an outcast. It was a horrible prospect, but he couldn't sit on this
wall forever, or he'd find himself trying to explain to Muggle police why he was
out in the dead of night with a trunkful of spellbooks and a
broomstick.
Harry opened his trunk again and pushed the contents aside,
looking for the Invisibility Cloak—but before he had found it, he straightened
up suddenly, looking around him once more.
A funny prickling on the back of
his neck had made Harry feel he was being watched, but the street appeared to be
deserted, and no lights shone from any of the large square houses.
He bent
over his trunk again, but almost immediately stood up once more, his hand
clenched on his wand. He had sensed rather than heard it: someone or something
was standing in the narrow gap between the garage and the fence behind him.
Harry squinted at the black alleyway. If only it would move, then he'd know
whether it was just a stray cat or—something else.
“Lumos,” Harry muttered,
and a light appeared at the end of his wand, almost dazzling him. He held it
high over his head, and the pebble-dashed walls of number two suddenly sparkled;
the garage door gleamed, and between them Harry saw, quite distinctly, the
hulking outline of something very big, with wide, gleaming eyes.
Harry
stepped backward. His legs hit his trunk and he tripped. His wand flew out of
his hand as he flung out an arm to break his fall, and he landed, hard, in the
gutter —
There was a deafening BANG, and Harry threw up his hands to shield
his eyes against a sudden blinding light —
With a yell, he rolled back onto
the pavement, just in time. A second later, a gigantic pair of wheels and
headlights screeched to a halt exactly where Harry had just been lying. They
belonged, as Harry saw when he raised his head, to a triple-decker, violently
purple bus, which had appeared out of thin air. Gold lettering over the
windshield spelled The Knight Bus.
For a Split second, Harry wondered if he
had been knocked silly by his fall. Then a conductor in a purple uniform leapt
out of the bus and began to speak loudly to the night.
“Welcome to the Knight
Bus, emergency transport for the stranded witch or wizard. just stick out your
wand hand, step on board) and we can take you anywhere you want to go. My name
is Stan Shunpike, and I will be your conductor this eve —”
The conductor
stopped abruptly. He had just caught sight of “Harry, who was still sitting on
the ground. Harry snatched up his wand again and scrambled to his feet. Close
up, he saw that Stan Shunpike was only a few years older than he was, eighteen
or nineteen at most, with large, protruding ears and quite a few
pimples.
“What were you doin' down there?” said Stan, dropping his
professional manner.
“Fell over,” said Harry.
“'Choo fall over for?”
sniggered Stan.
“I didn't do it on purpose,” said Harry, annoyed. One of the
knees in his jeans was torn, and the hand he had thrown out to break his fall
was bleeding. He suddenly remembered why he had fallen over and turned around
quickly to stare at the alleyway between the garage and fence. The Knight Bus's
headlamps were flooding it with light, and it was empty.
“'Choo lookin' at?”
said Stan.
“There was a big black thing,” said Harry, pointing uncertainly
into the gap. “Like a dog... but massive...”
He looked a-round at Stan, whose
mouth was slightly open. With a feeling of unease, Harry saw Stan's eyes move to
the scar on Harry's forehead.
“Woss that on your 'ead?” said Stan
abruptly.
“Nothing,” said Harry quickly, flattening his hair over his scar.
If the Ministry of Magic was looking for him, he didn't want to make it too easy
for them.
“Woss your name?” Stan persisted.
“Neville Longbottom,” said
Harry, saying the first name that came into his head. “So—so this bus,” he went
on quickly, hoping to distract Stan, “did you say it goes anywhere?”
“Yep,”
said Stan proudly, “anywhere you like, long's it's on land. Can't do nuffink
underwater. 'Ere,” he said, looking suspicious again,,You did flag us down,
dincha? Stuck out your wand 'and, dincha?”
“Yes,” said Harry quickly.
“Listen, how much would it be to get to London?”
“Eleven Sickles,” said Stan,
“but for fifteen you get 'or chocolate, and for fifteen you get an 'ot water
bottle an' a toofbrush in the color of your choice.”
Harry rummaged once more
in his trunk, extracted his money bag, and shoved some gold into Stan's hand. He
and Stan then lifted his trunk, with Hedwig's cage balanced on top, up the steps
of the bus.
There were no seats; instead, half a dozen brass bedsteads stood
beside the curtained windows. Candles were burning in brackets beside each bed,
illuminating the wood-paneled walls. A tiny wizard in a nightcap at the rear of
the bus muttered, “Not now, thanks, I'm pickling some slugs” and rolled over in
his sleep.
“You 'ave this one,” Stan whispered, shoving Harry's trunk under
the bed right behind the driver, who was sitting in an armchair in front of the
steering wheel. “This is our driver, Ernie Prang. This,is Neville Longbottom,
Ern. “
Ernie Prang, an elderly wizard wearing very thick glasses, nodded to
Harry, who nervously flattened his bangs again and sat down on his bed.
“Take
'er away, Ern,” said Stan, sitting down in the armchair next to
Ernie's.
There was another tremendous BANG, and the next moment Harry found
himself flat on his bed, thrown backward by the speed of the Knight Bus. Pulling
himself up, Harry stared out of the dark window and saw that they were now
bowling along a completely different street. Stan was watching Harry's stunned
face with great enjoyment.
“This is where we was before you flagged us down,”
he said. “Where are we, Ern? Somewhere in Wales?”
“Ar,” said Ernie.
“How
come the Muggles don't hear the bus?” said Harry.
“Them!” said Stan
contemptuously. “Don' listen properly, do they? Don' look properly either. Never
notice nuffink, they don'.”
“Best go wake up Madam Marsh, Stan,” said Ern.
“We'll be in Abergavenny in a minute.”
Stan passed Harry's bed and
disappeared up a narrow wooden staircase. Harry was still looking out of the
window, feeling increasingly nervous. Ernie didn't seem to have mastered the use
of a steering wheel. The Knight Bus kept mounting the pavement, but it didn't
hit anything; lines of lampposts, mailboxes, and trash cans jumped out of its
way as it approached and back into position once it had passed.
Stan came
back downstairs, followed by a faintly green witch wrapped in a traveling
cloak.
“'Ere you go, Madam Marsh,” said Stan happily as Ern stamped on the
brake and the beds slid a foot or so toward the front of the bus. Madam Marsh
clamped a handkerchief to her mouth and tottered down the steps. Stan threw her
bag out after her and rammed the doors shut; there was another loud BANG, and
they were thundering down a narrow country lane, trees leaping out of the
way.
Harry wouldn't have been able to sleep even if he had been traveling on
a bus that didn't keep banging loudly and jumping a hundred miles at a time. His
stomach churned as he fell back to wondering what was going to happen to him,
and whether the Dursleys had managed to get Aunt Marge off the ceiling
yet.
Stan had unfurled a copy of the Daily Prophet and was now reading with
his tongue between his teeth. A large photograph of a sunken-faced man with
long, matted hair blinked slowly at Harry from the front page. He looked
strangely familiar.
“That man!” Harry said, forgetting his troubles for a
moment. “He was on the Muggle news!”
Stanley turned to the front page and chuckled.
“Sirius
Black,” he said, nodding. “'Course 'e was on the Muggle news, Neville, where you
been?”
He gave a superior sort of chuckle at the blank look on Harry's face,
removed the front page, and handed it to Harry.
“You oughta read the papers
more, Neville.”
Harry held the paper up to the candlelight and read:
BLACK
STILL AT LARGE
Sirius Black, possibly the most infamous prisoner ever to be
held in Azkaban fortress, is still eluding capture, the Ministry of Magic
confirmed today.
“We are doing all we can to recapture Black,” said the
Minister of Magic, Cornelius Fudge, this morning, “and we beg the magical
community to remain calm.”
Fudge has been criticized by some members of the
International Federation of Warlocks for informing the Muggle Prime Minister of
the crisis.
“Well, really, I had to, don't you know,” said an irritable
Fudge. “Black is mad. He's a danger to anyone who crosses him, magic or Muggle.
I have the Prime Minister's assurance that he will not breathe a word of Black's
true identity to anyone. And let's face it-who'd believe him if he
did?”
While Muggles have been told that Black is carrying a gun (a kind of
metal wand that Muggles use to kill each other), the magical community lives in
fear of a massacre like that of twelve years ago, when Black murdered thirteen
people with a single curse.
Harry looked into the shadowed eyes of Sirius
Black, the only part of the sunken face that seemed alive. Harry had never met a
vampire, but he had seen pictures of them in his Defense Against the Dark Arts
classes, and Black, with his waxy white skin, looked just like
one.
“Scary-lookin' fing, inee?” said Stan, who had been watching Harry
read.
“He murdered thirteen people?” said Harry, handing the page back to
Stan, “with one curse?”
“Yep,” said Stan, “in front of witnesses an' all.
Broad daylight. Big trouble it caused, dinnit, Ern?”
“Ar,” said Ern
darkly.
Stan swiveled in his armchair, his hands on the back, the better to
look at Harry.
“Black woz a big supporter of You-Know-'Oo,” he
said.
“What, Voldemort?” said Harry, without thinking.
Even Stan's pimples
went white; Ern jerked the steering wheel so hard that a whole farmhouse had to
jump aside to avoid the bus.
“You outta your tree?” yelped Stan. “'Choo say
'is name for?”
“Sorry,” said Harry hastily. “Sorry, I—I forgot
—”
“Forgot!” said Stan weakly. “Blimey, my 'eart's goin' that fast
...”
“So—so Black was a supporter of You-Know-Who?” Harry prompted
apologetically.
“Yeah,” said Stan, still rubbing his chest. “Yeah, that's
right. Very close to You-Know-'Oo, they say. Anyway, when little 'Arry Potter
got the better of You-Know-'Oo —”
Harry nervously flattened his bangs down
again.
“— all You-Know-'Oo's supporters was tracked down, wasn't they, Ern?
Most of 'em knew it was all over, wiv You-Know-'Oo gone, and they came quiet.
But not Sirius Black. I 'eard he thought 'e'd be second-in-command once
You-Know-'Oo 'ad taken over.
“Anyway, they cornered Black in the middle of a
street full of Muggles an' Black took out 'is wand and 'e blasted 'alf the
street apart, an' a wizard got it, an' so did a dozen Muggles what got in the
way. 'Orrible, eh? An' you know what Black did then?” Stan continued in a
dramatic whisper.
“What?” said Harry.
“Laughed,” said Stan. “Jus' stood
there an' laughed. An' when reinforcements from the Ministry of Magic got there,
I 'e went wiv em quiet as anyfink, still laughing 'is 'ead off. 'Cos 'e's mad,
inee, Ern? Inee mad?”
“If he weren't when he went to Azkaban, he will be
now,” said Ern in his slow voice. “I'd blow meself up before I set foot in that
place. Serves him right, mind you ...after what he did...”
“They 'ad a job
coverin' it up, din' they, Ern?” Stan said. “'Ole street blown up an' all them
Muggles dead. What was it they said ad 'appened, Ern?”
“Gas explosion,”
grunted Ernie.
“An' now 'e's out,” said Stan, examining the newspaper picture
of Black's gaunt face again. “Never been a breakout from Azkaban before, 'as
there, Ern? Beats me 'ow 'e did it. Frightenin', eh? Mind, I don't fancy 'is
chances against them Azkaban guards, eh, Ern?”
Ernie suddenly
shivered.
“Talk about summat else, Stan, there's a good lad. Them Azkaban
guards give me the collywobbles.”
Stan put the paper away reluctantly, and
Harry leaned against the window of the Knight Bus, feeling worse than ever. He
couldn't help imagining what Stan might be telling his passengers in a few
nights' time.
“'Ear about that 'Arry Potter? Blew up 'is aunt! We 'ad 'im
'ere on the Knight Bus, di'n't we, Ern? 'E was tryin' I to run for it...”
He,
Harry, had broken wizard law just like Sirius Black. Was inflating Aunt Marge
bad enough to land him in Azkaban? Harry didn't know anything about the wizard
prison, though everyone he'd ever heard speak of it did so in the same fearful
tone. Hagrid, the Hogwarts gamekeeper, had spent two months there only last
year. Harry wouldn't soon forget the look of terror on Hagrid's face when he had
been told where he was going, and Hagrid was one of the bravest people Harry
knew.
The Knight Bus rolled through the darkness, scattering bushes and
wastebaskets, telephone booths and trees, and Harry lay, restless and miserable,
on his feather bed. After a while, Stan remembered that Harry had paid for hot
chocolate, but poured it all over Harry's pillow when the bus moved abruptly
from Anglesea to Aberdeen. One by one, wizards and witches in dressing gowns and
slippers descended from the upper floors to leave the bus. They all looked very
pleased to go.
Finally, Harry was the only passenger left.
“Right then,
Neville,” said Stan, clapping his hands, where abouts in London?”
“Diagon
Alley,” said Harry.
“Righto,” said Stan. “'Old tight, then.”
BANG.
They
were thundering along Charing Cross Road. Harry sat up and watched buildings and
benches squeezing themselves out of the Knight Bus's way. The sky was getting a
little lighter. He would lie low for a couple of hours, go to Gringotts the.
moment it opened, then set off—where, he didn't know.
Ern slammed on the
brakes and the Knight Bus skidded to a halt in front of a small and
shabbylooking pub, the Leaky Cauldron, behind which lay the magical entrance to
Diagon Alley.
“Thanks,” Harry said to Ern.
He jumped down the steps and
helped Stan lower his trunk and Hedwig's cage onto the pavement.
“Well,” said
Harry. “'Bye then!”
But Stan wasn't paying attention. Still standing in the
doorway to the bus) he was goggling at the shadowy entrance to the Leaky
Cauldron. “There you are, Harry,” said a voice.
Before Harry could turn, he
felt a hand on his shoulder. At the same time, Stan shouted, “Blimey! Ern, come
'ere! Come 'ere I”
Harry looked up at the owner of the hand on his shoulder
and felt a bucketful of ice cascade into his stomach—he had walked right into
Cornelius Fudge, the Minister of Magic himself.
Stan leapt onto the pavement
beside them.
“What didja call Neville, Minister?” he said
excitedly.
Fudge, a portly little man in a long, pinstriped cloak, looked
cold and exhausted.
“Neville?” he repeated, frowning. “This is Harry
Potter.”
“I knew it!” Stan shouted gleefully. “Ern! Ern! Guess 'oo Neville
is, Ern! 'E's 'Arry Potter! I can see 'is scar!”
“Yes,” said Fudge testily,
“well, I'm very glad the Knight Bus picked Harry up, but he and I need to step
inside the Leaky Cauldron now...”
Fudge increased the pressure on Harry's
shoulder, and Harry found himself being steered inside the pub. A stooping
figure bearing a lantern appeared through the door behind the bar. It was Tom,
the wizened, toothless landlord.
“You've got him, Minister!” said Tom. “Will
you be wanting anything? Beer? Brandy?”
“Perhaps a pot of tea,” said Fudge,
who still hadn't let go of Harry.
There was a loud scraping and puffing from
behind them, and Stan and Ern appeared, carrying Harry's trunk and Hedwig's cage
and looking around excitedly.
“'Ow come you di'n't tell us 'oo you are, eh,
Neville?” said Stan, beaming at Harry, while Ernie's owlish face peered
interestedly over Stan's shoulder.
“And a private parlor, please, Tom,” said
Fudge pointedly.
`Bye,” Harry said miserably to Stan and Ern as Tom beckoned
Fudge toward the passage that led from the bar.
“'Bye, Neville!” called
Stan.
Fudge marched Harry along the narrow passage after Tom's lantern, and
then into a small parlor. Tom clicked his fingers, a fire burst into life in the
grate, and he bowed himself out of the room.
“Sit down, Harry,” said Fudge,
indicating a chair by the fire.
Harry sat down, feeling goose bumps rising up
his arms despite the glow of the fire. Fudge took off his pinstriped cloak and
tossed it aside, then hitched up the trousers of his bottle-green suit and sat
down opposite Harry.
“I am Cornelius Fudge, Harry. The Minister of
Magic.”
Harry already knew this, of course; he had seen Fudge once before,
but as he had been wearing his father's Invisibility Cloak at the time, Fudge
wasn't to know that.
Tom the innkeeper reappeared, wearing an apron over his
nightshirt and bearing a tray of tea and crumpets. He placed the tray on a table
between Fudge and Harry and left the parlor, closing the door behind
him.
“Well, Harry,” said Fudge, pouring out tea, “you've had us all in a
right flap, I don't mind telling you. Running away from your aunt and uncle's
house like that! I'd started to think... but you're safe, and that's what
matters.”
Fudge buttered himself a crumpet and pushed the plate toward
Harry.
“Eat, Harry, you look dead on your feet. Now then... You will be
pleased to hear that we have dealt with the unfortunate blowing-up of Miss
Marjorie Dursley. Two members of the Accidental Magic Reversal Department were
dispatched to Privet Drive a few hours ago. Miss Dursley has been punctured and
her memory has been modified. She has no recollection of the incident at all. So
that's that, and no harm done.”
Fudge smiled at Harry over the rim of his
teacup, rather like an uncle surveying a favorite nephew. Harry, who couldn't
believe his ears, opened his mouth to speak, couldn't think of anything to say,
and closed it again.
“Ah, you're worrying about the reaction of your aunt and
uncle?” said Fudge. “Well, I won't deny that they are extremely angry, Harry,
but they are prepared to take you back next summer as long as you stay at
Hogwarts for the Christmas and Easter holidays.”
Harry unstuck his
throat.
“I always stay at Hogwarts for the Christmas and Easter holidays,” he
said, “and I don't ever want to go back to Privet Drive.”
“Now, now, I'm sure
you'll feel differently once you've calmed down,” said Fudge in a worried tone.
“They are your family, after all, and I'm sure you are fond of each
other—er—very deep down.”
It didn't occur to Harry to put Fudge right. He was
still waiting to hear what was going to happen to him now.
“So all that
remains,” said Fudge, now buttering himself a second crumpet, “is to decide
where you're going to spend the last two weeks of your vacation. I suggest you
take a room here at the Leaky Cauldron and
“Hang on,” blurted Harry. “What
about my punishment?”
Fudge blinked. “Punishment?”
“I broke the law!”
Harry said. “The Decree for the Restriction of Underage Wizardry!”
“Oh, my
dear boy, we're not going to punish you for a little thing like that!” cried
Fudge, waving his crumpet impatiently. “It was an accident! We don't send people
to Azkaban just for blowing up their aunts!”
But this didn't tally at all
with Harry's past dealings with the Ministry of Magic.
“Last year, I got an
official warning just because a house-elf smashed a pudding in my uncle's
house!” he told Fudge, frowning. “The Ministry of Magic said I'd be expelled
from Hogwarts if there was any more magic there!”
Unless Harry's eyes were
deceiving him, Fudge was suddenly looking awkward.
“Circumstances change,
Harry... We have to take into account... in the present climate... Surely you
don't want to be expelled?”
“Of course I don't,” said Harry.
“Well then,
what's A the fuss about?” laughed Fudge. “Now, have a crumpet, Harry, while I go
and see if Tom's got a room for you.”
Fudge strode out of the parlor and
Harry stared after him. There was something extremely odd going on. Why had
Fudge been waiting for him at the Leaky Cauldron, if not to punish him for what
he'd done? And now Harry came to think of it, surely it wasn't usual for the
Minister of Magic himself to get involved in matters of underage magic?
Fudge
came back, accompanied by Tom the innkeeper.
“Room eleven's free, Harry,”
said Fudge. “I think you'll be very comfortable. just one thing, and I'm sure
you'll understand... I don't want you wandering off into Muggle London, all
right? Keep to Diagon Alley. And you're to be back here before dark each night.
Sure you'll understand. Tom will be keeping an eye on you for me.”
“Okay,”
said Harry slowly, “but why?”
“Don't want to lose you again, do we?” said
Fudge with a hearty laugh. “No, no... best we know where you are... I
mean...”
Fudge cleared his throat loudly and picked up his pinstriped
cloak.
“Well, I'll be off, plenty to do, you know...
“Have you had any
luck with Black yet?” Harry asked.
Fudge's finger slipped on the silver
fastenings of his cloak.
“What's that? Oh, you've heard—well, no, not yet,
but it's only a matter of time. The Azkaban guards have never yet failed... and
they are angrier than I've ever seen them.”
Fudge shuddered slightly.
“So,
I'll say good-bye.”
He held out his hand and Harry, shaking it, had a sudden
idea.
“Er—Minister? Can I ask you something?”
“Certainly,” said Fudge with
a smile.
“Well, third years at Hogwarts are allowed to visit Hogsmeade, but
my aunt and uncle didn't sign the permission form. D'you think you could
—?”
Fudge was looking uncomfortable.
“Ah,” he said. “No, no, I'm very
sorry, Harry, but as I'm not your parent or guardian —”
“But you I re the
Minister of Magic,” said Harry eagerly. “If you gave me permission
“No, I'm
sorry, Harry, but rules are rules,” said Fudge flatly.
'Perhaps You'll be
able to visit Hogsmeade next year. In fact, I think it's best if you don't...
yes... well, I'll be off Enjoy your stay, Harry.”
And with a last smile and
shake of Harry's hand, Fudge left the room. Tom now moved forward, beaming at
Harry.
“If you'll follow me, Mr. Potter,” he said, “I've already taken your
things up...”
Harry followed Tom up a handsome wooden staircase to a door
with a brass number eleven on it, which Tom unlocked and opened for
him.
Inside was a very comfortable-looking bed, some highly polished oak
furniture, a cheerfully crackling fire and, perched on top of the wardrobe
—
“Hedwig!” Harry gasped.
The snowy owl clicked her beak and fluttered
down onto Harry's arm.
“Very smart owl you've got there, chuckled Tom.
“Arrived about five minutes after you did. If there's anything you need, Mr.
Potter, don't hesitate to ask.”
He gave another bow and left.
Harry sat on
his bed for a long time, absentmindedly stroking Hedwig. The sky outside the
window was changing rapidly from deep, velvety blue to cold, steely gray and
then, slowly, to pink shot with gold. Harry could hardly believe that he'd left
Privet Drive only a few hours ago, that he wasn't expelled, and that he was now
facing two completely Dursley-free weeks.
“It's been a very weird night,
Hedwig,” he yawned.
And without even removing his glasses, he slumped back
onto his pillows and fell asleep.
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