CHAPTER FIFTEEN
BEAUXBATONS AND
DURMSTRANG
Early next morning, Harry woke with a plan fully formed in his
mind, as though his sleeping brain had been working on it all night. He got up,
dressed in the pale dawn light, left the dormitory without waking Ron, and went
back down to the deserted common room. Here he took a piece of parchment from
the table upon which his Divination homework still lay and wrote the following
letter:
Dear Sirius,
I reckon I just imagined my scar hurting, I
was half asleep when I wrote to you last time. There's no point coming back,
everything's fine here. Don't worry about me, my head feels completely
normal.
Harry
He then climbed out of the portrait hole, up through the
silent castle (held up only briefly by Peeves, who tried to overturn a large
vase on him halfway along the fourth-floor corridor), finally arriving at the
Owlery, which was situated at the top of West Tower.
The Owlery was a
circular stone room, rather cold and drafty, because none of the windows had
glass in them. The floor was entirely covered in straw, owl droppings, and the
regurgitated skeletons of mice and voles. Hundreds upon hundreds of owls of
every breed imaginable were nestled here on perches that rose right up to the
top of the tower, nearly all of them asleep, though here and there a round amber
eye glared at Harry. He spotted Hedwig nestled between a barn owl and a tawny,
and hurried over to her, sliding a little on the dropping-strewn floor.
It
took him a while to persuade her to wake up and then to look at him, as she kept
shuffling around on her perch, showing him her tail. She was evidently still
furious about his lack of gratitude the previous night. In the end, it was Harry
suggesting she might be too tired, and that perhaps he would ask Ron to borrow
Pigwidgeon, that made her stick out her leg and allow him to tie the letter to
it.
“Just find him, all right?” Harry said, stroking her back as he carried
her on his arm to one of the holes in the wall. “Before the dementors
do.”
She nipped his finger, perhaps rather harder than she would ordinarily
have done, but hooted softly in a reassuring sort of way all the same. Then she
spread her wings and took off into the sunrise. Harry watched her fly out of
sight with the familiar feeling of unease back in his stomach. He had been so
sure that Sirius's reply would alleviate his worries rather than increasing
them.
“That was a lie, Harry,” said Hermione sharply over breakfast, when he
told her and Ron what he had done. “You didn't imagine your scar hurting and you
know it.”
“So what?” said Harry. “He's not going back to Azkaban because of
me.”
“Drop it,” said Ron sharply to Hermione as she opened her mouth to argue
some more, and for once, Hermione heeded him, and fell silent.
Harry did his
best not to worry about Sirius over the next couple of weeks. True, he could not
stop himself from looking anxiously around every morning when the post owls
arrived, nor, late at night before he went to sleep, prevent himself from seeing
horrible visions of Sirius, cornered by dementors down some dark London street,
but betweentimes he tried to keep his mind off his godfather. He wished he still
had Quidditch to distract him; nothing worked so well on a troubled mind as a
good, hard training session. On the other hand, their lessons were becoming more
difficult and demanding than ever before, particularly Moody's Defense Against
the Dark Arts.
To their surprise, Professor Moody had announced that he would
be putting the Imperius Curse on each of them in turn, to demonstrate its power
and to see whether they could resist its effects.
“But—but you said it's
illegal, Professor,” said Hermione uncertainly as Moody cleared away the desks
with a sweep of his wand, leaving a large clear space in the middle of the room.
“You said—to use it against another human was—”
“Dumbledore wants you taught
what it feels like,” said Moody, his magical eye swiveling onto Hermione and
fixing her with an eerie, unblinking stare. “If you'd rather learn the hard
way—when someone's putting it on you so they can control you completely—fine by
me. You're excused. Off you go.”
He pointed one gnarled finger toward the
door. Hermione went very pink and muttered something about not meaning that she
wanted to leave. Harry and Ron grinned at each other. They knew Hermione would
rather eat bubotuber pus than miss such an important lesson.
Moody began to
beckon students forward in turn and put the Imperius Curse upon them. Harry
watched as, one by one, his classmates did the most extraordinary things under
its influence. Dean Thomas hopped three times around the room, singing the
national anthem. Lavender Brown imitated a squirrel. Neville performed a series
of quite astonishing gymnastics he would certainly not have been capable of in
his normal state. Not one of them seemed to be able to fight off the curse, and
each of them recovered only when Moody had removed it.
“Potter,” Moody
growled, “you next.”
Harry moved forward into the middle of the classroom,
into the space that Moody had cleared of desks. Moody raised his wand, pointed
it at Harry, and said, '1mperio!”
It was the most wonderful feeling. Harry
felt a floating sensation as every thought and worry in his head was wiped
gently away, leaving nothing but a vague, untraceable happiness. He stood there
feeling immensely relaxed, only dimly aware of everyone watching him.
And
then he heard Mad-Eye Moody's voice, echoing in some distant chamber of his
empty brain: Jump onto the desk... jump onto the desk...
Harry bent his knees
obediently, preparing to spring.
Jump onto the desk...
Why, though?
Another voice had awoken in the back of his brain.
Stupid thing to do,
really, said the voice.
Jump onto the desk...
No, I don't think I will,
thanks, said the other voice, a little more firmly... no, I don't really want
to.
Jump! NOW!
The next thing Harry felt was considerable pain. He had
both jumped and tried to prevent himself from jumping—the result was that he'd
smashed headlong into the desk knocking it over, and, by the feeling in his
legs, fractured both his kneecaps.
“Now, that's more like it!” growled
Moody's voice, and suddenly, Harry felt the empty, echoing feeling in his head
disappear. He remembered exactly what was happening, and the pain in his knees
seemed to double.
“Look at that, you lot... Potter fought! He fought it, and
he damn near beat it! We'll try that again, Potter, and the rest of you, pay
attention—watch his eyes, that's where you see it—very good, Potter, very good
indeed! They'll have trouble controlling you!”
“The way he talks,” Harry muttered as he hobbled out of the
Defense Against the Dark Arts class an hour later (Moody had insisted on putting
Harry through his paces four times in a row, until Harry could throw off the
curse entirely), “you'd think we were all going to be attacked any
second.”
“Yeah, I know,” said Ron, who was skipping on every alternate step.
He had had much more difficulty with the curse than Harry, though Moody assured
him the effects would wear off by lunchtime. “Talk about paranoid...” Ron
glanced nervously over his shoulder to check that Moody was definitely out of
earshot and went on. “No wonder they were glad to get shot of him at the
Ministry. Did you hear him telling Seamus what he did to that witch who shouted
'Boo' behind him on April Fools' Day? And when are we supposed to read up on
resisting the Imperius Curse with everything else we've got to do?”
All the
fourth years had noticed a definite increase in the amount of work they were
required to do this term. Professor McGonagall explained why, when the class
gave a particularly loud groan at the amount of Transfiguration homework she had
assigned.
“You are now entering a most important phase of your magical
education!” she told them, her eyes glinting dangerously behind her square
spectacles. “Your Ordinary Wizarding Levels are drawing closer—”
“We don't
take O. W. L. s till fifth year!” s aid Dean Thomas indignantly.
“Maybe not,
Thomas, but believe me, you need all the preparation you can get! Miss Granger
remains the only person in this class who has managed to turn a hedgehog into a
satisfactory pincushion. I might remind you that your pincushion, Thomas, still
curls up in fright if anyone approaches it with a pin!”
Hermione, who had
turned rather pink again, seemed to be trying not to look too pleased with
herself.
Harry and Ron were deeply amused when Professor Trelawney told them
that they had received top marks for their homework in their next Divination
class. She read out large portions of their predictions, commending them for
their unflinching acceptance of the horrors in store for them—but they were less
amused when she asked them to do the same thing for the month after next; both
of them were running out of ideas for catastrophes.
Meanwhile Professor
Binns, the ghost who taught History of Magic, had them writing weekly essays on
the goblin rebellions of the eighteenth century. Professor Snape was forcing
them to research antidotes. They took this one seriously, as he had hinted that
he might be poisoning one of them before Christmas to see if their antidote
worked. Professor Flitwick had asked them to read three extra books in
preparation for their lesson on Summoning Charms.
Even Hagrid was adding to
their workload. The Blast-Ended Skrewts were growing at a remarkable pace given
that nobody had yet discovered what they ate. Hagrid was delighted, and as part
of their “project,” suggested that they come down to his hut on alternate
evenings to observe the skrewts and make notes on their extraordinary
behavior.
“I will not,” said Draco Malfoy flatly when Hagrid had proposed
this with the air of Father Christmas pulling an extra-large toy out of his
sack. “I see enough of these foul things during lessons, thanks.”
Hagrid's
smile faded off his face.
“Yeh'll do wha' yer told,” he growled, “or I'll be
takin' a leaf outta Professor Moody's book... I hear yeh made a good ferret,
Malfoy.”
The Gryffindors roared with laughter. Malfoy flushed with anger, but
apparently the memory of Moody's punishment was still sufficiently painful to
stop him from retorting. Harry, Ron, and Hermione returned to the castle at the
end of the lesson in high spirits; seeing Hagrid put down Malfoy was
particularly satisfying, especially because Malfoy had done his very best to get
Hagrid sacked the previous year.
When they arrived in the entrance hall, they
found themselves unable to proceed owing to the large crowd of students
congregated there, all milling around a large sign that had been erected at the
foot of the marble staircase. Ron, the tallest of the three, stood on tiptoe to
see over the heads in front of them and read the sign aloud to the other
two:
TRIWIZARD TOURNAMENT
THE DELEGATIONS FROM BEAUXBATONS
AND
DURMSTRANG WILL BE ARRIVING AT 6 O'CLOCK
ON FRIDAY THE 30TH OF
OCTOBER. LESSONS WILL
END HALF AN HOUR EARLY—
“Brilliant!” said Harry. “It's Potions last thing on Friday!
Snape won't have time to poison us all!”
STUDENTS WILL RETURN THEIR BAGS AND BOOKS
TO THEIR
DORMITORIES AND ASSEMBLE IN FRONT
OF THE CASTLE TO GREET OUR GUESTS
BEFORE
THE WELCOMING FEAST.
“Only a week away!” said Ernie Macmillan of
Hufflepuff, emerging from the crowd, his eyes gleaming. “I wonder if Cedric
knows? Think I'll go and tell him...”
“Cedric?” said Ron blankly as Ernie
hurried off.
“Diggory,” said Harry. “He must be entering the
tournament.”
“That idiot, Hogwarts champion?” said Ron as they pushed their
way through the chattering crowd toward the staircase.
“He's not an idiot.
You just don't like him because he beat Gryffindor at Quidditch,” said Hermione.
“I've heard he's a really good student—and he's a prefect.”
She spoke as
though this settled the matter.
“You only like him because he's handsome,”
said Ron scathingly.
“Excuse me, I don't like people just because they're
handsome!” said Hermione indignantly.
Ron gave a loud false cough, which
sounded oddly like “Lockhart!”
The appearance of the sign in the entrance
hall had a marked effect upon the inhabitants of the castle. During the
following week, there seemed to be only one topic of conversation, no matter
where Harry went: the Triwizard Tournament. Rumors were flying from student to
student like highly contagious germs: who was going to try for Hogwarts
champion, what the tournament would involve, how the students from Beauxbatons
and Durmstrang differed from themselves.
Harry noticed too that the castle
seemed to be undergoing an extra-thorough cleaning. Several grimy portraits had
been scrubbed, much to the displeasure of their subjects, who sat huddled in
their frames muttering darkly and wincing as they felt their raw pink faces. The
suits of armor were suddenly gleaming and moving without squeaking, and Argus
Filch, the caretaker, was behaving so ferociously to any students who forgot to
wipe their shoes that he terrified a pair of first-year girls into
hysterics.
Other members of the staff seemed oddly tense too.
“Longbottom,
kindly do not reveal that you can't even perform a simple Switching Spell in
front of anyone from Durmstrang!” Professor McGonagall barked at the end of one
particularly difficult lesson, during which Neville had accidentally
transplanted his own ears onto a cactus.
When they went down to breakfast on
the morning of the thirtieth of October, they found that the Great Hall had been
decorated overnight. Enormous silk banners hung from the walls, each of them
representing a Hogwarts House: red with a gold lion for Gryffiindor, blue with a
bronze eagle for Ravenclaw, yellow with a black badger for Hufflepuff, and green
with a silver serpent for Slytherin. Behind the teachers' table, the largest
banner of all bore the Hogwarts coat of arms: lion, eagle, badger, and snake
united around a large letter H.
Harry, Ron, and Hermione sat down beside Fred
and George at the Gryffindor table. Once again, and most unusually, they were
sitting apart from everyone else and conversing in low voices. Ron led the way
over to them.
“It's a bummer, all right,” George was saying gloomily to Fred.
“But if he won't talk to us in person, we'll have to send him the letter after
all. Or we'll stuff it into his hand. He can't avoid us forrever.
“Who's
avoiding you?” said Ron, sitting down next to them.
“Wish you would,” said
Fred, looking irritated at the interruption.
“What's a bummer?” Ron asked
George.
“Having a nosy git like you for a brother,” said George.
“You two
got any ideas on the Triwizard Tournament yet?” Harry asked. “Thought any more
about trying to enter?”
“I asked McGonagall how the champions are chosen but
she wasn't telling,” said George bitterly. “She just told me to shut up and get
on with transfiguring my raccoon.”
“Wonder what the tasks are going to be?”
said Ron thoughtfully. “You know, I bet we could do them, Harry. We've done
dangerous stuff before...”
“Not in front of a panel of judges, you haven't,”
said Fred. “McGonagall says the champions get awarded points according to how
well they've done the tasks.”
“Who are the judges?” Harry asked.
“Well,
the Heads of the participating schools are always on the panel,” said Hermione,
and everyone looked around at her, rather surprised, “because all three of them
were injured during the Tournament of 1792, when a cockatrice the champions were
supposed to be catching went on the rampage.”
She noticed them all looking at
her and said, with her usual air of impatience that nobody else had read all the
books she had, “It's all in Hogwarts, A History. Though, of course, that book's
not entirely reliable. A Revised History of Hogwarts would be a more accurate
title. Or A Highly Biased and Selective History of Hogwarts, Which Glosses Over
the Nastier Aspects of the School.”
“What are you on about?” said Ron, though
Harry thought he knew what was coming.
“House-elves!” said Hermione, her eyes
flashing. “Not once, in over a thousand pages, does Hogwarts, A History mention
that we are all colluding in the oppression of a hundred slaves!”
Harry shook
his head and applied himself to his scrambled eggs. His and Ron's lack of
enthusiasm had done nothing whatsoever to curb Hermione's determination to
pursue justice for house-elves.
True, both of them had paid two Sickles for a
S. P. E. W. badge, but they had only done it to keep her quiet. Their Sickles
had been wasted, however; if anything, they seemed to have made Hermione more
vociferous. She had been badgering Harry and Ron ever since, first to wear the
badges, then to persuade others to do the same, and she had also taken to
rattling around the Gryffindor common room every evening, cornering people and
shaking the collecting tin under their noses.
“You do realize that your
sheets are changed, your fires lit, your classrooms cleaned, and your food
cooked by a group of magical creatures who are unpaid and enslaved?” she kept
saying fiercely.
Some people, like Neville, had paid up just to stop Hermione
from glowering at them. A few seemed mildly interested in what she had to say,
but were reluctant to take a more active role in campaigning. Many regarded the
whole thing as a joke.
Ron now rolled his eyes at the ceiling, which was
flooding them all in autumn sunlight, and Fred became extremely interested in
his bacon (both twins had refused to buy a S. P. E. W. badge). George, however,
leaned in toward Hermione.
“Listen, have you ever been down in the kitchens,
Hermione?”
“No, of course not,” said Hermione curtly, “I hardly think
students are supposed to—”
“Well, we have,” said George, indicating Fred,
“loads of times, to nick food. And we've met them, and they're happy. They think
they've got the best job in the world—”
“That's because they're uneducated
and brainwashed!” Hermione began hotly, but her next few words were drowned out
by the sudden whooshing noise from overhead, which announced the arrival of the
post owls. Harry looked up at once, and saw Hedwig soaring toward him. Hermione
stopped talking abruptly; she and Ron watched Hedwig anxiously as she fluttered
down onto Harry's shoulder, folded her wings, and held out her leg
wearily.
Harry pulled off Sirius's reply and offered Hedwig his bacon rinds,
which she ate gratefully. Then, checking that Fred and George were safely
immersed in further discussions about the Triwizard Tournament, Harry read out
Sirius's letter in a whisper to Ron and Hermione.
Nice try, Harry.
I'm back in the country and well hidden. I
want you to keep me posted on everything that's going on at Hogwarts. Don't use
Hedwig, keep changing owls, and don't worry about me, just watch out for
yourself Don't forget what I said about your scar.
Sirius
“Why d'you have to keep changing owls?” Roat least he wouldn't have to wait so long for a response every time
he wrote.
“Thanks, Hedwig,” he said, stroking her. She hooted sleepily,
dipped her beak briefly into his goblet of orange juice, then took off again,
clearly desperate for a good long sleep in the Owlery.
There was a pleasant
feeling of anticipation in the air that day. Nobody was very attentive in
lessons, being much more interested in the arrival that evening of the people
from Beauxbatons and Durmstrang; even Potions was more bearable than usual, as
it was half an hour shorter. When the bell rang early, Harry, Ron, and Hermione
hurried up to Gryffindor Tower, deposited their bags and books as they had been
instructed, pulled on their cloaks, and rushed back downstairs into the entrance
hall.
The Heads of Houses were ordering their students into
lines.
“Weasley, straighten your hat,” Professor McGonagall snapped at Ron.
“Miss Patil, take that ridiculous thing out of your hair.”
Parvati scowled
and removed a large ornamental butterfly from the end of her plait.
“Follow
me, please,” said Professor McGonagall. “First years in front... no
pushing...
They filed down the steps and lined up in front of the castle. It
was a cold, clear evening; dusk was falling and a pale, transparent-looking moon
was already shining over the Forbidden Forest. Harry, standing between Ron and
Hermione in the fourth row from the front, saw Dennis Creevey positively
shivering with anticipation among the other first years.
“Nearly six,” said
Ron, checking his watch and then staring down the drive that led to the front
gates. “How d'you reckon they're coming? The train?”
“I doubt it,” said
Hermione.
“How, then? Broomsticks?” Harry suggested, looking up at the starry
sky.
“I don't think so... not from that far away...
“A Portkey?” Ron
suggested. “Or they could Apparate—maybe you're allowed to do it under seventeen
wherever they come from?”
“You can't Apparate inside the Hogwarts grounds,n asked in a low
voice.
“Hedwig'll attract too much attention,” said Hermione at once. “She
stands out. A snowy owl that keeps returning to wherever he's hiding... I mean,
they're not native birds, are they?”
Harry rolled up the letter and slipped
it inside his robes, wondering whether he felt more or less worried than before.
He supposed that Sirius managing to get back without being caught was something.
He couldn't deny either that the idea that Sirius was much nearer was
reassuring;
how often do I have to tell you?” said Hermione impatiently.
They scanned the
darkening grounds excitedly, but nothing was moving; everything was still,
silent, and quite as usual. Harry was starting to feel cold. He wished they'd
hurry up... Maybe the foreign students were preparing a dramatic entrance... He
remembered what Mr. Weasley had said back at the campsite before the Quidditch
World Cup: “always the same—we can't resist showing off when we get
together...”
And then Dumbledore called out from the back row where he stood
with the other teachers—”Aha! Unless I am very much mistaken, the delegation
from Beauxbatons approaches!”
“Where?” said many students eagerly, all
looking in different directions.
“There!” yelled a sixth year, pointing over
the forest.
Something large, much larger than a broomstick—or, indeed, a
hundred broomsticks—was hurtling across the deep blue sky toward the castle,
growing larger all the time.
“It's a dragon!” shrieked one of the first
years, losing her head completely.
“Don't be stupid... it's a flying house!”
said Dennis Creevey.
Dennis's guess was closer... As the gigantic black shape
skimmed over the treetops of the Forbidden Forest and the lights shining from
the castle windows hit it, they saw a gigantic, powderblue, horse-drawn
carriage, the size of a large house, soaring toward them, pulled through the air
by a dozen winged horses, all palominos, and each the size of an
elephant.
The front three rows of students drew backward as the carriage
hurtled ever lower, coming in to land at a tremendous speed—then, with an
almighty crash that made Neville jump backward onto a Slytherin fifth year's
foot, the horses' hooves, larger than dinner plates, hit the ground. A second
later, the carriage landed too, bouncing upon its vast wheels, while the golden
horses tossed their enormous heads and rolled large, fiery red eyes.
Harry
just had time to see that the door of the carriage bore a coat of arms (two
crossed, golden wands, each emitting three stars) before it opened.
A boy in
pale blue robes jumped down from the carriage, bent forward, fumbled for a
moment with something on the carriage floor, and unfolded a set of golden steps.
He sprang back respectfully. Then Harry saw a shining, high-heeled black shoe
emerging from the inside of the carriage—a shoe the size of a child's
sled—followed, almost immediately, by the largest woman he had ever seen in his
life. The size of the carriage, and of the horses, was immediately explained. A
few people gasped.
Harry had only ever seen one person as large as this woman
in his life, and that was Hagrid; he doubted whether there was an inch
difference in their heights. Yet somehow—maybe simply because he was used to
Hagrid—this woman (now at the foot of the steps, and looking around at the
waiting, wide-eyed crowd) seemed even more unnaturally large. As she stepped
into the light flooding from the entrance hall, she was revealed to have a
handsome, olive-skinned face; large, black, liquid-looking eyes; and a rather
beaky nose. Her hair was drawn back in a shining knob at the base of her neck.
She was dressed from head to foot in black satin, and many magnificent opals
gleamed at her throat and on her thick fingers.
Dumbledore started to clap;
the students, following his lead, broke into applause too, many of them standing
on tiptoe, the better to look at this woman.
Her face relaxed into a gracious
smile and she walked forward toward Dumbledore, extending a glittering hand.
Dumbledore, though tall himself, had barely to bend to kiss it.
“My dear
Madame Maxime,” he said. “Welcome to Hogwarts.”
“Dumbly-dort,” said Madame
Maxime in a deep voice. “I 'ope I find you well?”
“In excellent form, I thank
you,” said Dumbledore.
“My pupils,” said Madame Maxime, waving one of her
enormous hands carelessly behind her.
Harry, whose attention had been focused
completely upon Madame Maxime, now noticed that about a dozen boys and girls,
all, by the look of them, in their late teens, had emerged from the carriage and
were now standing behind Madame Maxime. They were shivering, which was
unsurprising, given that their robes seemed to be made of fine silk, and none of
them were wearing cloaks. A few had wrapped scarves and shawls around their
heads. From what Harry could see of them (they were standing in Madame Maxime's
enormous shadow), they were staring up at Hogwarts with apprehensive looks on
their faces.
“As Karkaroff arrived yet?” Madame Maxime asked.
“He should
be here any moment,” said Dumbledore. “Would you like to wait here and greet him
or would you prefer to step inside and warm up a trifle?”
“Warm up, I think,”
said Madame Maxime. “But ze 'orses—”
“Our Care of Magical Creatures teacher
will be delighted to take care of them,” said Dumbledore, “the moment he has
returned from dealing with a slight situation that has arisen with some of his
other—er—charges.”
“Skrewts,” Ron muttered to Harry, grinning.
“My steeds
require—er—forceful 'andling,” said Madame Maxime, looking as though she doubted
whether any Care of Magical Creatures teacher at Hogwarts could be up to the
job. “Zey are very strong...”
“I assure you that Hagrid will be well up to
the job,” said Dumbledore, smiling.
“Very well,” said Madame Maxime, bowing
slightly. “Will you please inform zis 'Agrid zat ze 'orses drink only
single-malt whiskey?”
“It will be attended to,” said Dumbledore, also
bowing.
“Come,” said Madame Maxime imperiously to her students, and the
Hogwarts crowd parted to allow her and her students to pass up the stone
steps.
“How big d'you reckon Durmstrang's horses are going to be?” Seamus
Finnigan said, leaning around Lavender and Parvati to address Harry and
Ron.
“Well, if they're any bigger than this lot, even Hagrid won't be able to
handle them,” said Harry. “That's if he hasn't been attacked by his skrewts.
Wonder what's up with them?”
“Maybe they've escaped,” said Ron
hopefully.
“Oh don't say that,” said Hermione with a shudder. “Imagine that
lot loose on the grounds...”
They stood, shivering slightly now, waiting for
the Durmstrang party to arrive. Most people were gazing hopefully up at the
sky.
For a few minutes, the silence was broken only by Madame Maxime's huge
horses snorting and stamping. But then—”Can you hear something?” said Ron
suddenly.
Harry listened; a loud and oddly eerie noise was drifting toward
them from out of the darkness: a muffled rumbling and sucking sound, as though
an immense vacuum cleaner were moving along a riverbed.
“The lake!” yelled
Lee Jordan, pointing down at it. “Look at the lake!”
From their position at
the top of the lawns overlooking the grounds, they had a clear view of the
smooth black surface of the water—except that the surface was suddenly not
smooth at all. Some disturbance was taking place deep in the center; great
bubbles were forming on the surface, waves were now washing over the muddy
banks—and then, out in the very middle of the lake, a whirlpool appeared, as if
a giant plug had just been pulled out of the lake's floor..
What seemed to be
a long, black pole began to rise slowly out of the heart of the whirlpool... and
then Harry saw the rigging...
“It's a mast!” he said to Ron and
Hermione.
Slowly, magnificently, the ship rose out of the water, gleaming in
the moonlight. It had a strangely skeletal look about it, as though it were a
resurrected wreck, and the dim, misty lights shimmering at its portholes looked
like ghostly eyes. Finally, with a great sloshing noise, the ship emerged
entirely, bobbing on the turbulent water, and began to glide toward the bank. A
few moments later, they heard the splash of an anchor being thrown down in the
shallows, and the thud of a plank being lowered onto the bank.
People were
disembarking; they could see their silhouettes passing the lights in the ship's
portholes. All of them, Harry noticed, seemed to be built along the lines of
Crabbe and Goyle... but then, as they drew nearer, walking up the lawns into the
light streaming from the entrance hall, he saw that their bulk was really due to
the fact that they were wearing cloaks of some kind of shaggy, matted fur. But
the man who was leading them up to the castle was wearing furs of a different
sort: sleek and silver, like his hair.
“Dumbledore!” he called heartily as he
walked up the slope. “How are you, my dear fellow, how are you?”
“Blooming,
thank you, Professor Karkaroff,” Dumbledore replied. Karkaroff had a fruity,
unctuous voice; when he stepped into the light pouring from the front doors of
the castle they saw that he was tall and thin like Dumbledore, but his white
hair was short, and his goatee (finishing in a small curl) did not entirely hide
his rather weak chin. When he reached Dumbledore, he shook hands with both of
his own.
“Dear old Hogwarts,” he said, looking up at the castle and smiling;
his teeth were rather yellow, and Harry noticed that his smile did not extend to
his eyes, which remained cold and shrewd. “How good it is to be here, how
good... Viktor, come along, into the warmth... you don't mind, Dumbledore?
Viktor has a slight head cold...”
Karkaroff beckoned forward one of his
students. As the boy passed, Harry caught a glimpse of a prominent curved nose
and thick black eyebrows. He didn't need the punch on the arm Ron gave him, or
the hiss in his ear, to recognize that profile.
“Harry—it's
Krum!”
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