CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
THE WEIGHING OF THE
WANDS
When Harry woke up on Sunday morning, it took him a moment to
remember why he felt so miserable and worried. Then the memory of the previous
night rolled over him. He sat up and ripped back the curtains of his own
four-poster, intending to talk to Ron, to force Ron to believe him—only to find
that Ron's bed was empty; he had obviously gone down to breakfast.
Harry
dressed and went down the spiral staircase into the common room. The moment he
appeared, the people who had already finished breakfast broke into applause
again. The prospect of going down into the Great Hall and facing the rest of the
Gryffindors, all treating him like some sort of hero, was not inviting; it was
that, however, or stay here and allow himself to be cornered by the Creevey
brothers, who were both beckoning frantically to him to join them. He walked
resolutely over to the portrait hole, pushed it open, climbed out of it, and
found himself face-to-face with Hermione.
“Hello,” she said, holding up a
stack of toast, which she was carrying in a napkin. “I brought you this... Want
to go for a walk?”
“Good idea,” said Harry gratefully.
They went
downstairs, crossed the entrance hall quickly without looking in at the Great
Hall, and were soon striding across the lawn toward the lake, where the
Durmstrang ship was moored, reflected blackly in the water. It was a chilly
morning, and they kept moving, munching their toast, as Harry told Hermione
exactly what had happened after he had left the Gryffindor table the night
before. To his immense relief, Hermione accepted his story without
question.
“Well, of course I knew you hadn't entered yourself,” she said when
he'd finished telling her about the scene in the chamber off the Hall. “The look
on your face when Dumbledore read out your name! But the question is, who did
put it in? Because Moody's right, Harry... I don't think any student could have
done it... they'd never be able to fool the Goblet, or get over
Dumbledore's—”
“Have you seen Ron?” Harry interrupted.
Hermione
hesitated.
“Erm... yes... he was at breakfast,” she said.
“Does he still
think I entered myself?”
“Well... no, I don't think so... not really,” said
Hermione awkwardly.
“What's that supposed to mean, 'not really'?”
“Oh
Harry, isn't it obvious?” Hermione said despairingly. “He's
jealous!”
“Jealous?” Harry said incredulously. “Jealous of what? He wants to
make a prat of himself in front of the whole school, does he?”
“Look,” said
Hermione patiently, “it's always you who gets all the attention, you know it is.
I know it's not your fault,” she added quickly, seeing Harry open his mouth
furiously. “I know you don't ask for it... but—well—you know, Ron's got all
those brothers to compete against at home, and you're his best friend, and
you're really famous—he's always shunted to one side whenever people see you,
and he puts up with it, and he never mentions it, but I suppose this is just one
time too many...
“Great,” said Harry bitterly. “Really great. Tell him from
me I'll swap any time he wants. Tell him from me he's welcome to it... People
gawping at my forehead everywhere I go...”
“I'm not teiling him anything,”
Hermione said shortly. “Tell him yourself. It's the only way to sort this
out.”
“I'm not running around after him trying to make him grow up!” Harry
said, so loudly that several owls in a nearby tree took flight in alarm. “Maybe
he'll believe I'm not enjoying myself once I've got my neck broken
or—”
“That's not funny,” said Hermione quietly. “That's not funny at all.”
She looked extremely anxious. “Harry, I've been thinking—you know what we've got
to do, don't you? Straight away, the moment we get back to the
castle?”
“Yeah, give Ron a good kick up the—”
“Write to Sirius. You've got
to tell him what's happened. He asked you to keep him posted on everything
that's going on at Hogwarts... It's almost as if he expected something like this
to happen. I brought some parchment and a quill out with me—”
“Come off it,”
said Harry, looking around to check that they couldn't be overheard, but the
grounds were quite deserted. “He came back to the country just because my scar
twinged. He'll probably come bursting right into the castle if I tell him
someone's entered me in the Triwizard Tournament—”
“He'd want you to tell
him,” said Hermione sternly. “He's going to find out
anyway.”
“How?”
“Harry, this isn't going to be kept quiet,” said Hermione,
very seriously. “This tournament's famous, and you're famous. I'll be really
surprised if there isn't anything in the Daily Prophet about you competing...
You're already in half the books about You-Know-Who, you know... and Sirius
would rather hear it from you, I know he would.”
“Okay, okay, I'll write to
him,” said Harry, throwing his last piece of toast into the lake. They both
stood and watched it floating there for a moment, before a large tentacle rose
out of the water and scooped it beneath the surface. Then they returned to the
castle.
“Whose owl am I going to use?” Harry said as they climbed the stairs.
“He told me not to use Hedwig again.”
“Ask Ron if you can borrow—”
“I'm
not asking Ron for anything,” Harry said flatly.
“Well, borrow one of the
school owls, then, anyone can use them,” said Hermione.
They went up to the
Owlery. Hermione gave Harry a piece of parchment, a quill, and a bottle of ink,
then strolled around the long lines of perches, looking at all the different
owls, while Harry sat down against a wall and wrote his letter.
Dear Sirius,
You told me to keep you posted on what's
happening at Hogwarts, so here goes—I don't know if you've heard, but the
Triwizard Tournament's happening this year and on Saturday night I got picked as
a fourth champion. I don't who put my name in the Goblet of Fire, because I
didn't. The other Hogwarts champion is Cedric Diggory, from
Hufflepuff
He paused at this point, thinking. He had an urge to say
something about the large weight of anxiety that seemed to have settled inside
his chest since last night, but he couldn't think how to translate this into
words, so he simply dipped his quill back into the ink bottle and wrote,
Hope
you're okay, and Buckbeak—Harry
“Finished,” he told Hermione, getting to his feet and brushing
straw off his robes. At this, Hedwig fluttered down onto his shoulder and held
out her leg.
“I can't use you,” Harry told her, looking around for the school
owls. “I've got to use one of these.”
Hedwig gave a very loud hoot and took
off so suddenly that her talons cut into his shoulder. She kept her back to
Harry all the time he was tying his letter to the leg of a large barn owl. When
the barn owl had flown off, Harry reached out to stroke Hedwig, but she clicked
her beak furiously and soared up into the rafters out of reach.
“First Ron,
then you,” Harry said angrily. “This isn't my fault.”
If Harry had thought
that matters would improve once everyone got used to the idea of him being
champion, the following day showed him how mistaken he was. He could no longer
avoid the rest of the school once he was back at lessons—and it was clear that
the rest of the school, just like the Gryffindors, thought Harry had entered
himself for the tournament. Unlike the Gryffindors, however, they did not seem
impressed.
The Hufflepuffs, who were usually on excellent terms with the
Gryffindors, had turned remarkably cold toward the whole lot of them. One
Herbology lesson was enough to demonstrate this. It was plain that the
Hufflepuffs felt that Harry had stolen their champion's glory; a feeling
exacerbated, perhaps, by the fact that Hufflepuff House very rarely got any
glory, and that Cedric was one of the few who had ever given them any, having
beaten Gryffindor once at Quidditch. Ernie Macmillan and Justin FinchFletchley,
with whom Harry normally got on very well, did not talk to him even though they
were repotting Bouncing Bulbs at the same tray—though they did laugh rather
unpleasantly when one of the Bouncing Bulbs wriggled free from Harry's grip and
smacked him hard in the face. Ron wasn't talking to Harry either. Hermione sat
between them, making very forced conversation, but though both answered her
normally, they avoided making eye contact with each other. Harry thought even
Professor Sprout seemed distant with him—but then, she was Head of Hufflepuff
House.
He would have been looking forward to seeing Hagrid under normal
circumstances, but Care of Magical Creatures meant seeing the Slytherins too—the
first time he would come face-to-face with them since becoming
champion.
Predictably, Malfoy arrived at Hagrid's cabin with his familiar
sneer firmly in place.
“Ah, look, boys, it's the champion,” he said to Crabbe
and Goyle the moment he got within earshot of Harry. “Got your autograph books?
Better get a signature now, because I doubt he's going to be around much
longer... Half the Triwizard champions have died... how long d'you reckon you're
going to last, Potter? Ten minutes into the first task's my bet.”
Crabbe and
Goyle guffawed sycophantically, but Malfoy had to stop there, because Hagrid
emerged from the back of his cabin balancing a teetering tower of crates, each
containing a very large Blast-Ended Skrewt. To the class's horror, Hagrid
proceeded to explain that the reason the skrewts had been killing one another
was an excess of pent-up energy, and that the solution would be for each student
to fix a leash on a skrewt and take it for a short walk. The only good thing
about this plan was that it distracted Malfoy completely.
“Take this thing
for a walk?” he repeated in disgust, staring into one of the boxes. “And where
exactly are we supposed to fix the leash? Around the sting, the blasting end, or
the sucker?”
“Roun' the middle,” said Hagrid, demonstrating. “Er—yeh might
want ter put on yer dragon-hide gloves, jus' as an extra precaution, like.
Harry—you come here an' help me with this big one...
Hagrid's real intention,
however, was totalk to Harry away from the rest of the class. He waited until
everyone else had set off with their skrewts, then turned to Harry and said,
very seriously, “So—yer competin', Harry. In the tournament. School
champion.”
“One of the champions,” Harry corrected him.
Hagrid's
beetle-black eyes looked very anxious under his wild eyebrows.
“No idea who
put yeh in fer it, Harry?”
“You believe I didn't do it, then?” said Harry,
concealing with difficulty the rush of gratitude he felt at Hagrid's
words.
“Course I do,” Hagrid grunted. “Yeh say it wasn' you, an' I believe
yeh—an' Dumbledore believes yer, an' all.”
“Wish I knew who did do it,” said
Harry bitterly.
The pair of them looked out over the lawn; the class was
widely scattered now, and all in great difficulty. The skrewts were now over
three feet long, and extremely powerful. No longer shell-less and colorless,
they had developed a kind of thick, grayish, shiny armor. They looked like a
cross between giant scorpions and elongated crabs—but still without recognizable
heads or eyes. They had become immensely strong and very hard to
control.
“Look like they're havin' fun, don' they?” Hagrid said happily.
Harry assumed he was talking about the skrewts, because his classmates certainly
weren't; every now and then, with an alarming bang, one of the skrewts' ends
would explode, causing it to shoot forward several yards, and more than one
person was being dragged along on their stomach, trying desperately to get back
on their feet.
“Ah, I don' know, Harry,” Hagrid sighed suddenly, looking back
down at him with a worried expression on his face. “School champion...
everythin' seems ter happen ter you, doesn' it?”
Harry didn't answer. Yes,
everything did seem to happen to him... that was more or less what Hermione had
said as they had walked around the lake, and that was the reason, according to
her, that Ron was no longer talking to him.
The next few days were some of Harry's worst at Hogwarts. The
closest he had ever come to feeling like this had been during those months, in
his second year, when a large part of the school had suspected him of attacking
his fellow students. But Ron had been on his side then. He thought he could have
coped with the rest of the school's behavior if he could just have had Ron back
as a friend, but he wasn't going to try and persuade Ron to talk to him if Ron
didn't want to. Nevertheless, it was lonely with dislike pouring in on him from
all sides.
He could understand the Hufflepuffs' attitude, even if he didn't
like it; they had their own champion to support. He expected nothing less than
vicious insults from the Slytherins—he was highly unpopular there and always had
been, because he had helped Gryffindor beat them so often, both at Quidditch and
in the Inter-House Championship. But he had hoped the Ravenclaws might have
found it in their hearts to support him as much as Cedric. He was wrong,
however. Most Ravenclaws seemed to think that he had been desperate to earn
himself a bit more fame by tricking the goblet into accepting his name.
Then
there was the fact that Cedric looked the part of a champion so much more than
he did. Exceptionally handsome, with his straight nose, dark hair, and gray
eyes, it was hard to say who was receiving more admiration these days, Cedric or
Viktor Krum. Harry actually saw the same sixth-year girls who had been so keen
to get Krum's autograph begging Cedric to sign their school bags one
lunchtime.
Meanwhile there was no reply from Sirius, Hedwig was refusing to
come anywhere near him, Professor Trelawney was predicting his death with even
more certainty than usual, and he did so badly at Summoning Charms in Professor
Flitwick's class that he was given extra homework—the only person to get any,
apart from Neville.
“It's really not that difficult, Harry,” Hermione tried
to reassure him as they left Flitwick's class—she had been making objects zoom
across the room to her all lesson, as though she were some sort of weird magnet
for board dusters, wastepaper baskets, and lunascopes. “You just weren't
concentrating properly—”
“Wonder why that was,” said Harry darkly as Cedric
Diggory walked past, surrounded by a large group of simpering girls, all of whom
looked at Harry as though he were a particularly large Blast-Ended Skrewt.
“Still—never mind, eh? Double Potions to look forward to this
afternoon...”
Double Potions was always a horrible experience, but these days
it was nothing short of torture. Being shut in a dungeon for an hour and a half
with Snape and the Slytherins, all of whom seemed determined to punish Harry as
much as possible for daring to become school champion, was about the most
unpleasant thing Harry could imagine. He had already struggled through one
Friday's worth, with Hermione sitting next to him intoning “ignore them, ignore
them, ignore them” under her breath, and he couldn't see why today should be any
better.
When he and Hermione arrived at Snape's dungeon after lunch, they
found the Slytherins waiting outside, each and every one of them wearing a large
badge on the front of his or her robes. For one wild moment Harry thought they
were S. P. E. W. badges—then he saw that they all bore the same message, in
luminous red letters that burnt brightly in the dimly lit underground
passage:
SUPPORT CEDRIC DIGGORY—
THE REAL HOGWARTS
CHAMPION!
“Like them, Potter?” said Malfoy loudly as Harry approached.
“And this isn't all they do—look!”
He pressed his badge into his chest, and
the message upon it vanished, to be replaced by another one, which glowed
green:
POTTER STINKS!
The Slytherins howled with laughter. Each of them pressed
their badges too, until the message POTTER STINKS was shining brightly all
around Harry. He felt the heat rise in his face and neck.
“Oh very funny,”
Hermione said sarcastically to Pansy Parkinson and her gang of Slytherin girls,
who were laughing harder than anyone, “really witty.”
Ron was standing
against the wall with Dean and Seamus. He wasn't laughing, but he wasn't
sticking up for Harry either.
“Want one, Granger?” said Malfoy, holding out a
badge to Hermione. “I've got loads. But don't touch my hand, now. I've just
washed it, you see; don't want a Mudblood sliming it up.”
Some of the anger
Harry had been feeling for days and days seemed to burst through a dam in his
chest. He had reached for his wand before he'd thought what he was doing. People
all around them scrambled out of the way, backing down the corridor.
“Harry!”
Hermione said warningly.
“Go on, then, Potter,” Malfoy said quietly, drawing
out his own wand. “Moody's not here to look after you now—do it, if you've got
the guts—”
For a split second, they looked into each other's eyes, then, at
exactly the same time, both acted.
“Funnunculus!” Harry
yelled.
“Densaugeo!” screamed Malfoy.
Jets of light shot from both wands,
hit each other in midair, and ricocheted off at angles—Harry's hit Goyle in the
face, and Malfoy's hit Hermione. Goyle bellowed and put his hands to his nose,
where great ugly boils were springing up—Hermione, whimpering in panic, was
clutching her mouth.
“Hermione!”
Ron had hurried forward to see what was
wrong with her; Harry turned and saw Ron dragging Hermione's hand away from her
face. It wasn't a pretty sight. Hermione's front teeth—already larger than
average—were now growing at an alarming rate; she was looking more and more like
a beaver as her teeth elongated, past her bottom lip, toward her
chin—panic-stricken, she felt them and let out a terrified cry.
“And what is
all this noise about?” said a soft, deadly voice.
Snape had arrived. The
Slytherins clamored to give their explanations; Snape pointed a long yellow
finger at Malfoy and said, “Explain.”
“Potter attacked me, sir—”
“We
attacked each other at the same time!” Harry shouted.
“and he hit
Goyle—look—”
Snape examined Goyle, whose face now resembled something that
would have been at home in a book on poisonous fungi.
“Hospital wing, Goyle,”
Snape said calmly.
“Malfoy got Hermione!” Ron said. “Look!”
He forced
Hermione to show Snape her teeth—she was doing her best to hide them with her
hands, though this was difficult as they had now grown down past her collar.
Pansy Parkinson and the other Slytherin girls were doubled up with silent
giggles, pointing at Hermione from behind Snape's back.
Snape looked coldly
at Hermione, then said, “I see no difference.”.
Hermione let out a whimper;
her eyes filled with tears, she turned on her heel and ran, ran all the way up
the corridor and out of sight.
It was lucky, perhaps, that both Harry and Ron
started shouting at Snape at the same time; lucky their voices echoed so much in
the stone corridor, for in the confused din, it was impossible for him to hear
exactly what they were calling him. He got the gist, however.
“Let's see,” he
said, in his silkiest voice. “Fifty points from Gryffindor and a detention each
for Potter and Weasley. Now get inside, or it'll be a week's worth of
detentions.”
Harry's ears were ringing. The injustice of it made him want to
curse Snape into a thousand slimy pieces. He passed Snape, walked with Ron to
the back of the dungeon, and slammed his bag down onto the table. Ron was
shaking with anger too—for a moment, it felt as though everything was back to
normal between them, but then Ron turned and sat down with Dean and Seamus
instead, leaving Harry alone at his table. On the other side of the dungeon,
Malfoy turned his back on Snape and pressed his badge, smirking. POTTER STINKS
flashed once more across the room.
Harry sat there staring at Snape as the
lesson began, picturing horrific things happening to him... If only he knew how
to do the Cruciatus Curse... he'd have Snape flat on his back like that spider,
jerking and twitching.
“Antidotes!” said Snape, looking around at them all,
his cold black eyes glittering unpleasantly. “You should all have prepared your
recipes now. I want you to brew them carefully, and then, we will be selecting
someone on whom to test one...”
Snape's eyes met Harry's, and Harry knew what
was coming. Snape was going to poison him. Harry imagined picking up his
cauldron, and sprinting to the front of the class, and bringing it down on
Snape's greasy head—And then a knock on the dungeon door burst in on Harry's
thoughts.
It was Colin Creevey; he edged into the room, beaming at Harry, and
walked up to Snape's desk at the front of the room.
“Yes?” said Snape
curtly.
“Please, sir, I'm supposed to take Harry Potter upstairs.” Snape
stared down his hooked nose at Colin, whose smile faded from his eager
face.
“Potter has another hour of Potions to complete,” said Snape coldly.
“He will come upstairs when this class is finished.”
Colin went
pink.
“Sir—sir, Mr. Bagman wants him,” he said nervously. “All the champions
have got to go, I think they want to take photographs...”
Harry would have
given anything he owned to have stopped Colin saying those last few words. He
chanced half a glance at Ron, but Ron was staring determinedly at the
ceiling.
“Very well, very well,” Snape snapped. “Potter, leave your things
here, I want you back down here later to test your antidote.”
“Please,
sir—he's got to take his things with him,” squeaked Cohn. “All the
champions...”
“Very well!” said Snape. “Potter—take your bag and get out of
my sight!”
Harry swung his bag over his shoulder, got up, and headed for the
door. As he walked through the Slytherin desks, POTTER STINKS flashed at him
from every direction.
“It's amazing, isn't it, Harry?” said Colin, starting
to speak the moment Harry had closed the dungeon door behind him. “Isn't it,
though? You being champion?”
“Yeah, really amazing,” said Harry heavily as
they set off toward the steps into the entrance hall. “What do they want photos
for, Colin?”
“The Daily Prophet, I think!”
“Great,” said Harry dully.
“Exactly what I need. More publicity.”
“Good luck!” said Colin when they had
reached the right room. Harry knocked on the door and entered.
He was in a
fairly small classroom; most of the desks had been pushed away to the back of
the room, leaving a large space in the middle; three of them, however, had been
placed end-to-end in front of the blackboard and covered with a long length of
velvet. Five chairs had been set behind the velvet-covered desks, and Ludo
Bagman was sitting in one of them, talking to a witch Harry had never seen
before, who was wearing magenta robes.
Viktor Krum was standing moodily in a
corner as usual and not talking to anybody. Cedric and Fheur were in
conversation. Fheur looked a good deal happier than Harry had seen her so far;
she kept throwing back her head so that her long silvery hair caught the light.
A paunchy man, holding a large black camera that was smoking slightly, was
watching Fleur out of the corner of his eye.
Bagman suddenly spotted Harry,
got up quickly, and bounded forward.
“Ah, here he is! Champion number four!
In you come, Harry, in you come... nothing to worry about, it's just the wand
weighing ceremony, the rest of the judges will be here in a moment—”
“Wand
weighing?” Harry repeated nervously.
“We have to check that your wands are
fully functional, no problems, you know, as they're your most important tools in
the tasks ahead,” said Bagman. “The expert's upstairs now with Dumbledore. And
then there's going to be a little photo shoot. This is Rita Skeeter,” he added,
gesturing toward the witch in magenta robes. “She's doing a small piece on the
tournament for the Daily Prophet...”
“Maybe not that small, Ludo,” said Rita
Skeeter, her eyes on Harry.
Her hair was set in elaborate and curiously rigid
curls that contrasted oddly with her heavy-jawed face. She wore jeweled
spectacles. The thick fingers clutching her crocodile-skin handbag ended in
two-inch nails, painted crimson.
“I wonder if I could have a little word with
Harry before we start?” she said to Bagman, but still gazing fixedly at Harry.
“The youngest champion, you know... to add a bit of color?”
“Certainly!”
cried Bagman. “That is—if Harry has no objection?”
“Er—” said
Harry.
“Lovely,” said Rita Skeeter, and in a second, her scarlet-taloned
fingers had Harry's upper arm in a surprisingly strong grip, and she was
steering him out of the room again and opening a nearby door.
“We don't want
to be in there with all that noise,” she said. “Let's see... ah, yes, this is
nice and cozy.”
It was a broom cupboard. Harry stared at her.
“Come along,
dear—that's right—lovely,” said Rita Skeeter again, perching herself
precariously upon an upturned bucket, pushing Harry down onto a cardboard box,
and closing the door, throwing them into darkness. “Let's see now..”
She
unsnapped her crocodile-skin handbag and pulled out a handful of candles, which
she lit with a wave of her wand and magicked into midair, so that they could see
what they were doing.
“You won't mind, Harry, if I use a Quick-Quotes Quill?
It leaves me free to talk to you normally...”
“A what?” said Harry.
Rita
Skeeter's smile widened. Harry counted three gold teeth. She reached again into
her crocodile bag and drew out a long acid-green quill and a roll of parchment,
which she stretched out between them on a crate of Mrs. Skower's All-Purpose
Magical Mess Remover. She put the tip of the green quill into her mouth, sucked
it for a moment with apparent relish, then placed it upright on the parchment,
where it stood balanced on its point, quivering slightly.
“Testing... my name
is Rita Skeeter, Daily Prophet reporter.”
Harry hooked down quickly at the
quill. The moment Rita Skeeter had spoken, the green quill had started to
scribble, skidding across the parchment:
Attractive blonde Rita Skeeter, forty-three, who's savage
quill has punctured many inflated reputations—
“Lovely,” said Rita Skeeter, yet again, and she ripped the top
piece of parchment off, crumpled it up, and stuffed it into her handbag. Now she
leaned toward Harry and said, “So, Harry... what made you decide to enter the
Triwizard Tournament?”
“Er—” said Harry again, but he was distracted by the
quill. Even though he wasn't speaking, it was dashing across the parchment, and
in its wake he could make out a fresh sentence:
An ugly scar, souvenier of a tragic past, disfigures the
otherwise charming face of Harry Potter, whose eyes—
“Ignore the quill, Harry,” said Rita Skeeter firmly.
Reluctantly Harry looked up at her instead. “Now—why did you decide to enter the
tournament, Harry?”
“I didn't,” said Harry. “I don't know how my name got
into the Goblet of Fire. I didn't put it in there.”
Rita Skeeter raised one
heavily penciled eyebrow.
“Come now, Harry, there's no need to be scared of
getting into trouble. We all know you shouldn't really have entered at all. But
don't worry about that. Our readers hove a rebel.”
“But I didn't enter,”
Harry repeated. “I don't know who—”
“How do you feel about the tasks ahead?”
said Rita Skeeter. “Excited? Nervous?”
“I haven't really thought... yeah,
nervous, I suppose,” said Harry. His insides squirmed uncomfortably as he
spoke.
“Champions have died in the past, haven't they?” said Rita Skeeter
briskly. “Have you thought about that at all?”
“Well... they say it's going
to be a lot safer this year,” said Harry.
The quill whizzed across the
parchment between them, back and forward as though it were skating.
“Of
course, you've looked death in the face before, haven't you?” said Rita Skeeter,
watching him closely. “How would you say that's affected you?”
“Er,” said
Harry, yet again.
“Do you think that the trauma in your past might have made
you keen to prove yourself? To live up to your name? Do you think that perhaps
you were tempted to enter the Triwizard Tournament because—”
“I didn't
enter,” said Harry, starting to feel irritated.
“Can you remember your
parents at all?” said Rita Skeeter, talking over him.
“No,” said
Harry.
“How do you think they'd feel if they knew you were competing in the
Triwizard Tournament? Proud? Worried? Angry?”
Harry was feeling really
annoyed now. How on earth was he to know how his parents would feel if they were
alive? He could feel Rita Skeeter watching him very intently. Frowning, he
avoided her gaze and hooked down at words the quill had just
written:
Tears fill those startlingly green eyes as our conversation
turns to the parents he can barely remember.
“I have NOT got tears in my eyes!” said Harry
loudly.
Before Rita Skeeter could say a word, the door of the broom cupboard
was pulled open. Harry looked around, blinking in the bright light. Albus
Dumbledore stood there, looking down at both of them, squashed into the
cupboard.
“Dumbledore!” cried Rita Skeeter, with every appearance of
delight—but Harry noticed that her quill and the parchment had suddenly vanished
from the box of Magical Mess Remover, and Rita's clawed fingers were hastily
snapping shut the clasp of her crocodile-skin bag. “How are you?” she said,
standing up and holding out one of her large, mannish hands to Dumbledore. “I
hope you saw my piece over the summer about the International Confederation of
Wizards' Conference?”
“Enchantingly nasty,” said Dumbledore, his eyes
twinkling. “I particularly enjoyed your description of me as an obsolete
dingbat.”
Rita Skeeter didn't look remotely abashed.
“I was just making
the point that some of your ideas are a little old-fashioned, Dumbhedore, and
that many wizards in the street—”
“I will be delighted to hear the reasoning
behind the rudeness, Rita,” said Dumbledore, with a courteous bow and a smile,
“but I'm afraid we will have to discuss the matter later. The Weighing of the
Wands is about to start, and it cannot take place if one of our champions is
hidden in a broom cupboard.”
Very glad to get away from Rita Skeeter, Harry
hurried back into the room. The other champions were now sitting in chairs near
the door, and he sat down quickly next to Cedric, hooking up at the
velvet-covered table, where four of the five judges were now sitting—Professor
Karkaroff, Madame Maxime, Mr. Crouch, and Ludo Bagman. Rita Skeeter settled
herself down in a corner; Harry saw her slip the parchment out of her bag again,
spread it on her knee, suck the end of the Quick-Quotes Quill, and place it once
more on the parchment.
“May I introduce Mr. Ollivander?” said Dumbledore,
taking his place at the judges' table and talking to the champions. “He will be
checking your wands to ensure that they are in good condition before the
tournament.”
Harry hooked around, and with a jolt of surprise saw an old
wizard with large, pale eyes standing quietly by the window. Harry had met Mr.
Ollivander before—he was the wand-maker from whom Harry had bought his own wand
over three years ago in Diagon Alley.
“Mademoiselle Delacour, could we have
you first, please?” said Mr. Ollivander, stepping into the empty space in the
middle of the room.
Fleur Delacour swept over to Mr. Olhivander and handed
him her wand.
“Hmm...” he said.
He twirled the wand between his long
fingers like a baton and it emitted a number of pink and gold sparks. Then he
held it chose to his eyes and examined it carefully.
“Yes,” he said quietly,
“nine and a half inches... inflexible.. rosewood... and containing... dear
me...”
“An 'air from ze 'ead of a veela,” said Fleur. “One of my
grandmuzzer's.”
So Fleur was part veela, thought Harry, making a mental note
to tell Ron... then he remembered that Ron wasn't speaking to him.
“Yes,”
said Mr. Ollivander, “yes, I've never used veela hair myself, of course. I find
it makes for rather temperamental wands... however, to each his own, and if this
suits you..”
Mr. Ollivander ran his fingers along the wand, apparently
checking for scratches or bumps; then he muttered, “Orchideous!” and a bunch of
flowers burst from the wand tip.
“Very well, very well, it's in fine working
order,” said Mr. Ollivander, scooping up the flowers and handing them to Fleur
with her wand. “Mr. Diggory, you next.”
Fleur glided back to her seat,
smiling at Cedric as he passed her.
“Ah, now, this is one of mine, isn't it?”
said Mr. Ollivander, with much more enthusiasm, as Cedric handed over his wand.
“Yes, I remember it well. Containing a single hair from the tail of a
particularly fine male unicorn... must have been seventeen hands; nearly gored
me with his horn after I plucked his tail. Twelve and a quarter inches... ash...
pleasantly springy. It's in fine condition... You treat it
regularly?”
“Polished it last night,” said Cedric, grinning.
Harry hooked
down at his own wand. He could see finger marks all over it. He gathered a
fistful of robe from his knee and tried to rub it clean surreptitiously. Several
gold sparks shot out of the end of it. Fleur Delacour gave him a very
patronizing look, and he desisted.
Mr. Ollivander sent a stream of silver
smoke rings across the room from the tip of Cedric's wand, pronounced himself
satisfied, and then said, “Mr. Krum, if you please.”
Viktor Krum got up and
slouched, round-shouldered and duck-footed, toward Mr. Ollivander. He thrust out
his wand and stood scowling, with his hands in the pockets of his
robes.
“Hmm,” said Mr. Olhivander, “this is a Gregorovitch creation, unless
I'm much mistaken? A fine wand-maker, though the styling is never quite what
I... however..”
He lifted the wand and examined it minutely, turning it over
and over before his eyes.
“Yes... hornbeam and dragon heartstring?” he shot
at Krum, who nodded. “Rather thicker than one usually sees... quite rigid... ten
and a quarter inches... Avis!”
The hornbeam wand let off a blast hike a gun,
and a number of small, twittering birds flew out of the end and through the open
window into the watery sunlight.
“Good,” said Mr. Ollivander, handing Krum
back his wand. “Which leaves... Mr. Potter.”
Harry got to his feet and walked
past Krum to Mr. Ollivander. He handed over his wand.
“Aaaah, yes,” said Mr.
Ohlivander, his pale eyes suddenly gleaming. “Yes, yes, yes. How well I
remember.”
Harry could remember too. He could remember it as though it had
happened yesterday...
Four summers ago, on his eleventh birthday, he had
entered Mr. Ollivander's shop with Hagrid to buy a wand. Mr. Ollivander had
taken his measurements and then started handing him wands to try. Harry had
waved what felt like every wand in the shop, until at last he had found the one
that suited him—this one, which was made of holly, eleven inches long, and
contained a single feather from the tail of a phoenix. Mr. Ollivander had been
very surprised that Harry had been so compatible with this wand. “Curious,” he
had said, “curious,” and not until Harry asked what was curious had Mr.
Olhivander explained that the phoenix feather in Harry's wand had come from the
same bird that had supplied the core of Lord Voldemort's.
Harry had never
shared this piece of information with anybody. He was very fond of his wand, and
as far as he was concerned its relation to Voldemort's wand was something it
couldn't help—rather as he couldn't help being related to Aunt Petunia. However,
he really hoped that Mr. Ollivander wasn't about to tell the room about it. He
had a funny feeling Rita Skeeter's Quick-Quotes Quill might just explode with
excitement if he did.
Mr. Ollivander spent much longer examining Harry's wand
than anyone else's. Eventually, however, he made a fountain of wine shoot out of
it, and handed it back to Harry, announcing that it was still in perfect
condition.
“Thank you all,” said Dumbledore, standing up at the judges'
table. “You may go back to your lessons now—or perhaps it would be quicker just
to go down to dinner, as they are about to end—”
Feeling that at last
something had gone right today, Harry got up to leave, but the man with the
black camera jumped up and cleared his throat.
“Photos, Dumbledore, photos!”
cried Bagman excitedly. “All the judges and champions, what do you think,
Rita?”
“Er—yes, let's do those first,” said Rita Skeeter, whose eyes were
upon Harry again. “And then perhaps some individual shots.”
The photographs
took a long time. Madame Maxime cast everyone else into shadow wherever she
stood, and the photographer couldn't stand far enough back to get her into the
frame; eventually she had to sit while everyone else stood around her. Karkaroff
kept twirling his goatee around his finger to give it an extra curl; Krum, whom
Harry would have thought would have been used to this sort of thing, skulked,
half-hidden, at the back of the group. The photographer seemed keenest to get
Fleur at the front, but Rita Skeeter kept hurrying forward and dragging Harry
into greater prominence. Then she insisted on separate shots of all the
champions. At last, they were free to go.
Harry went down to dinner. Hermione
wasn't there—he supposed she was still in the hospital wing having her teeth
fixed. He ate alone at the end of the table, then returned to Gryffindor Tower,
thinking of all the extra work on Summoning Charms that he had to do. Up in the
dormitory, he came across Ron.
“You've had an owl,” said Ron brusquely the
moment he walked in. He was pointing at Harry's pillow. The school barn owl was
waiting for him there.
“Oh—right,” said Harry.
“And we've got to do our
detentions tomorrow night, Snape's dungeon,” said Ron.
He then walked
straight out of the room, not looking at Harry. For a moment, Harry considered
going after him—he wasn't sure whether he wanted to talk to him or hit him, both
seemed quite appealing—but the lure of Sirius's answer was too strong. Harry
strode over to the barn owl, took the letter off its leg, and unrolled
it.
Harry—
I can't say everything I would like to in a letter, it's too
risky
in case the owl is intercepted—we need to talk face-to-face. Can you
ensure that you are alone by the fire in Gryffindor Tower at one o'clock in the
morning on the 22nd ofNovember?
I know better than anyone that you can look
after yourself and while you're around Dumbledore and Moody I don't think anyone
will be able to hurt you. However, someone seems to be having a good try.
Entering you in that tournament would have been very risky, especially right
under Dumbkdore's nose.
Be on the watch, Harry. I still want to hear about
anything unusual. Let me know about the 22nd ofNovember as quickly as you
can.
Sirius.
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