Harry Potter and the Order of
Phoenix
CHAPTER ONE
DUDLEY
DEMENTED
The hottest day of the summer so far was drawing to a close
and a drowsy silence lay over the large, square houses of Privet Drive. Cars
that were usually gleaming stood dusty in their drives and lawns that were once
emerald green lay parched and yellowing for the use of hosepipes had been banned
due to drought. Deprived of their usual car-washing and lawn-mowing pursuits,
the inhabitants of Privet Drive had retreated into the shade of their cool
houses, windows thrown wide in the hope of tempting in a nonexistent breeze. The
only person left outdoors was a teenage boy who was lying flat on his back in a
flowerbed outside number four.
He was a skinny, black-haired, bespectacled
boy who had the pinched, slightly unhealthy look of someone who has grown a lot
in a short space of time. His jeans were torn and dirty, his T-shirt baggy and
faded, and the soles of his trainers were peeling away from the uppers. Harry
Potter's appearance did not endear him to the neighbours, who were the sort of
people who thought scruffiness ought to be punishable by law, but as he had
hidden himself behind a large hydrangea bush this evening he was quite invisible
to passers-by. In fact, the only way he would be spotted was if his Uncle Vernon
or Aunt Petunia stuck their heads out of the living-room window and looked
straight down into the flowerbed below.
On the whole, Harry thought he was to
be congratulated on his idea of hiding here. He was not, perhaps, very
comfortable lying on the hot, hard earth but, on the other hand, nobody was
glaring at him, grinding their teeth so loudly that he could not hear the news,
or shooting nasty questions at him, as had happened every time he had tried
sitting down in the living room to watch television with his aunt and
uncle.
Almost as though this thought had fluttered through the open window,
Vernon Dursley, Harry's uncle, suddenly spoke.
“Glad to see the boy's stopped
trying to butt in. Where is he, anyway?”
“I don't know,” said Aunt Petunia,
unconcerned. “Not in the house.”
Uncle Vernon grunted.
“Watching the
news...” he said scathingly. “I'd like to know what he's really up to. As if a
normal boy cares what's on the news—Dudley hasn't got a clue what's going on;
doubt he knows who the Prime Minister is! Anyway, it's not as if there'd be
anything about his lot on our news—”
“Vernon, shh!” said Aunt Petunia. “The
window's open!”
“Oh—yes—sorry, dear.”
The Dursleys fell silent. Harry
listened to a jingle about Fruit ‘n’ Bran breakfast cereal while he watched Mrs
Figg, a batty cat-loving old lady from nearby Wisteria Walk, amble slowly past.
She was frowning and muttering to herself. Harry was very pleased he was
concealed behind the bush, as Mrs Figg had recently taken to asking him round
for tea whenever she met him in the street. She had rounded the corner and
vanished from view before Uncle Vernon's voice floated out of the window
again.
“Dudders out for tea?”
“At the Polkisses,” said Aunt Petunia
fondly. “He's got so many little friends, he's so popular.”
Harry suppressed
a snort with difficulty. The Dursleys really were astonishingly stupid about
their son, Dudley. They had swallowed all his dim-witted lies about having tea
with a different member of his gang every night of the summer holidays. Harry
knew perfectly well that Dudley had not been to tea anywhere; he and his gang
spent every evening vandalising the play park, smoking on street corners and
throwing stones at passing cars and children. Harry had seen them at it during
his evening walks around Little Whinging; he had spent most of the holidays
wandering the streets, scavenging newspapers from bins along the way.
The
opening notes of the music that heralded the seven o'clock news reached Harry's
ears and his stomach turned over. Perhaps tonight—after a month of waiting—would
be the night.
“Record numbers of stranded holiday makers fill airports as the
Spanish baggage-handlers” strike reaches its second week—
“Give 'em a
lifelong siesta, I would,” snarled Uncle Vernon over the end of the newsreader's
sentence, but no matter: outside in the flowerbed, Harry’s stomach seemed to
unclench. If anything had happened, it would surely have been the first item on
the news; death and destruction were more important than stranded
holidaymakers.
He let out a long, slow breath and stared up at the brilliant
blue sky. Every day this summer had been the same: the tension, the expectation,
the temporary relief, and then mounting tension again...and always, growing more
insistent all the time, the question of why nothing had happened yet.
He kept
listening, just in case there was some small clue, not recognised for what it
really was by the Muggles—an unexplained disappearance, perhaps, or some strange
accident...but the baggage-handlers’ strike was followed by news about the
drought in the Southeast (“I hope he's listening next door!” bellowed Uncle
Vernon. “Him with his sprinklers on at three in the morning!”), then a
helicopter that had almost crashed in a field in Surrey, then a famous actress's
divorce from her famous husband (“As if we're interested in their sordid
affairs,” sniffed Aunt Petunia, who had followed the case obsessively in every
magazine she could lay her bony hands on).
Harry closed his eyes against the
now blazing evening sky as the newsreader said, “—and finally, Bungy the budgie
has found a novel way of keeping cool this summer. Bungy, who lives at the Five
Feathers in Barnsley, has learned to water ski! Mary Dorkins went to find out
more.”
Harry opened his eyes. If they had reached water-skiing budgerigars,
there would be nothing else worth hearing. He rolled cautiously on to his front
and raised himself on to his knees and elbows, preparing to crawl out from under
the window.
He had moved about two inches when several things happened in
very quick succession.
A loud, echoing crack broke the sleepy silence like a
gunshot; a cat streaked out from under a parked car and flew out of sight; a
shriek, a bellowed oath and the sound of breaking china came from the Dursleys’
living room, and as though this was the signal Harry had been waiting for he
jumped to his feet, at the same time pulling from the waistband of his jeans a
thin wooden wand as if he were unsheathing a sword—but before he could draw
himself up to full height, the top of his head collided with the Dursleys’ open
window. The resultant crash made Aunt Petunia scream even louder.
Harry felt
as though his head had been split in two. Eyes streaming, he swayed, trying to
focus on the street to spot the source of the noise, but he had barely staggered
upright when two large purple hands reached through the open window and closed
tightly around his throat.
“Put—it—away!” Uncle Vernon snarled into Harry's
ear. “Now.” Before—anyone—sees!”
“Get—off—me!” Harry gasped. For a few
seconds they struggled, Harry pulling at his uncle’s sausage-like fingers with
his left hand, his right maintaining a firm grip on his raised wand; then, as
the pain in the top of Harry's head gave a particularly nasty throb, Uncle
Vernon yelped and released Harry as though he had received an electric shock.
Some invisible force seemed to have surged through his nephew, making him
impossible to hold.
Panting, Harry fell forwards over the hydrangea bush,
straightened up and stared around. There was no sign of what had caused the loud
cracking noise, but there were several faces peering through various nearby
windows. Harry stuffed his wand hastily back into his jeans and tried to look
innocent.
“Lovely evening!” shouted Uncle Vernon, waving at Mrs Number Seven
opposite, who was glaring from behind her net curtains. “Did you hear that car
backfire just now? Gave Petunia and me quite a turn!”
He continued to grin in
a horrible, manic way until all the curious neighbours had disappeared from
their various windows, then the grin became a grimace of rage as he beckoned
Harry back towards him.
Harry moved a few steps closer, taking care to stop
just short of the point at which Uncle Vernon's outstretched hands could resume
their strangling.
“What the devil do you mean by it, boy?” asked Uncle Vernon
in a croaky voice that trembled with fury.
“What do I mean by what?” said
Harry coldly. He kept looking left and right up the street, still hoping to see
the person who had made the cracking noise.
“Making a racket like a starting
pistol right outside our—”
“I didn't make that noise,” said Harry
firmly.
Aunt Petunia's thin, horsy face now appeared beside Uncle Vernon's
wide, purple one. She looked livid.
“Why were you lurking under our
window?”
“Yes—yes, good point, Petunia! What were you doing under our window,
boy?”
“Listening to the news,” said Harry in a resigned voice.
His aunt
and uncle exchanged looks of outrage.
“Listening to the news!
Again?”
“Well, it changes every day, you see,” said Harry.
“Don't you be
clever with me, boy! I want to know what you're really up to—and don't give me
any more of this listening to the news tosh! You know perfectly well that your
lot—
“Careful, Vernon!” breathed Aunt Petunia, and Uncle Vernon lowered his
voice so that Harry could barely hear him,—“that your lot don't get on our
news!”
“That's all you know,” said Harry.
The Dursleys goggled at him for
a few seconds, then Aunt Petunia said, “You're a nasty little liar. What are all
those—” she, too, lowered her voice so that Harry had to lip-read the next
word,—owls doing if they're not bringing you news?”
“Aha!” said Uncle Vernon
in a triumphant whisper. “Get out of that one, boy! As if we didn't know you get
all your news from those pestilential birds!”
Harry hesitated for a moment.
It cost him something to tell the truth this time, even though his aunt and
uncle could not possibly know how bad he felt at admitting it.
“The owls . .
. aren't bringing me news,” he said tonelessly.
“I don't believe it,” said
Aunt Petunia at once.
“No more do I,” said Uncle Vernon forcefully.
“We
know you're up to something funny,” said Aunt Petunia.
“We're not stupid, you
know,” said Uncle Vernon.
“Well, that's news to me,” said Harry, his temper
rising, and before the Dursleys could call him back, he had wheeled about,
crossed the front lawn, stepped over the low garden wall and was striding off up
the street.
He was in trouble now and he knew it. He would have to face his
aunt and uncle later and pay the price for his rudeness, but he did not care
very much just at the moment; he had much more pressing matters on his
mind.
Harry was sure the cracking noise had been made by someone Apparating
or Disapparating. It was exactly the sound Dobby the house-elf made when he
vanished into thin air. Was it possible that Dobby was here in Privet Drive?
Could Dobby be following him right at this very moment? As this thought occurred
he wheeled around and stared back down Privet Drive, but it appeared to be
completely deserted and Harry was sure that Dobby did not know how to become
invisible.
He walked on, hardly aware of the route he was taking, for he had
pounded these streets so often lately that his feet carried him to his favourite
haunts automatically. Every few steps he glanced back over his shoulder. Someone
magical had been near him as he lay among Aunt Petunia's dying begonias, he was
sure of it. Why hadn't they spoken to him, why hadn't they made contact, why
were they hiding now?
And then, as his feeling of frustration peaked, his
certainty leaked away.
Perhaps it hadn't been a magical sound after all.
Perhaps he was so desperate for the tiniest sign of contact from the world to
which he belonged that he was simply overreacting to perfectly ordinary noises.
Could he be sure it hadn't been the sound of something breaking inside a
neighbour's house?
Harry felt a dull, sinking sensation in his stomach and
before he knew it the feeling of hopelessness that had plagued him all summer
rolled over him once again.
Tomorrow morning he would be woken by the alarm
at five o'clock so he could pay the owl that delivered the Daily Prophet, but
was there any point continuing to take it? Harry merely glanced at the front
page before throwing it aside these days; when the idiots who ran the paper
finally realised that Voldemort was back it would be headline news, and that was
the only kind Harry cared about.
If he was lucky, there would also be owls
carrying letters from his best friends Ron and Hermione, though any expectation
he'd had that their letters would bring him news had long since been
dashed.
We can't say much about you-know-what, obviously...We've been told
not to say anything important in case our letters go astray...We're quite busy
but I can't give you details here . . . There's a fair amount going on, we'll
tell you everything when we see you...
But when were they going to see him?
Nobody seemed too bothered with a precise date. Hermione had scribbled “I expect
we'll be seeing you quite soon” inside his birthday card, but how soon was soon?
As far as Harry could tell from the vague hints in their letters, Hermione and
Ron were in the same place, presumably at Ron's parents’ house. He could hardly
bear to think of the pair of them having fun at The Burrow when he was stuck in
Privet Drive. In fact, he was so angry with them he had thrown away, unopened,
the two boxes of Honeydukes chocolates they'd sent him for his birthday. He'd
regretted it later, after the wilted salad Aunt Petunia had provided for dinner
that night.
And what were Ron and Hermione busy with? Why wasn't he, Harry,
busy? Hadn't he proved himself capable of handling much more than them? Had they
all forgotten what he had done? Hadn't it been he who had entered that graveyard
and watched Cedric being murdered, and been tied to that tombstone and nearly
killed?
Don't think about that, Harry told himself sternly for the hundredth
lime that summer. It was bad enough that he kept revisiting the graveyard in his
nightmares, without dwelling on it in his waking moments too.
He turned a
corner into Magnolia Crescent; halfway along he passed the narrow alleyway down
the side of a garage where he had first clapped eyes on his godfather. Sirius,
at least, seemed to understand how Harry was feeling. Admittedly, his letters
were just as empty of proper news as Ron and Hermione's, but at least they
contained words of caution and consolation instead of tantalising hints:
I
know this must be frustrating for you . . . Keep your nose clean and everything
will be OK . . . Be careful and don't do anything rash...
Well, thought
Harry, as he crossed Magnolia Crescent, turned into Magnolia Road and headed
towards the darkening play park, he had (by and large) done as Sirius advised.
He had at least resisted the temptation to tie his trunk to his broomstick and
set off for The Burrow by himself. In fact, Harry thought his behaviour had been
very good considering how frustrated and angry he felt at being stuck in Privet
Drive so long, reduced to hiding in flowerbeds in the hope of hearing something
that might point to what Lord Voldemort was doing. Nevertheless, it was quite
galling to be told not to be rash by a man who had served twelve years in the
wizard prison, Azkaban, escaped, attempted to commit the murder he had been
convicted for in the first place, then gone on the run with a stolen
Hippogriff.
Harry vaulted over the locked park gate and set off across the
parched grass. The park was as empty as the surrounding streets. When he reached
the swings he sank on to the only one that Dudley and his friends had not yet
managed to break, coiled one arm around the chain and stared moodily at the
ground. He would not be able to hide in the Dursleys’ flowerbed again. Tomorrow,
he would have to think of some fresh way of listening to the news. In the
meantime, he had nothing to look forward to but another restless, disturbed
night, because even when he escaped the nightmares about Cedric he had
unsettling dreams about long dark corridors, all finishing in dead ends and
locked doors, which he supposed had something to do with the trapped feeling he
had when he was awake. Often the old scar on his forehead prickled
uncomfortably, but he did not fool himself that Ron or Hermione or Sirius would
find that very interesting any more. In the past, his scar hurting had warned
that Voldemort was getting stronger again, but now that Voldemort was back they
would probably remind him that its regular irritation was only to be
expected...nothing to worry about...old news...
The injustice of it all
welled up inside him so that he wanted to yell with fury. If it hadn't been for
him, nobody would even have known Voldemort was back! And his reward was to be
stuck in Little Whinging for four solid weeks, completely cut off from the
magical world, reduced to squatting among dying begonias so that he could hear
about water-skiing budgerigars! How could Dumbledore have forgotten him so
easily? Why had Ron and Hermione got together without inviting him along, too?
How much longer was he supposed to endure Sirius telling him to sit tight and be
a good boy; or resist the temptation to write to the stupid Daily Prophet and
point out that Voldemort had returned? These furious thoughts whirled around in
Harry's head, and his insides writhed with anger as a sultry, velvety night fell
around him, the air full of the smell of warm, dry grass, and the only sound
that of the low grumble of traffic on the road beyond the park railings.
He
did not know how long he had sat on the swing before the sound of voices
interrupted his musings and he looked up. The streetlamps from the surrounding
roads were casting a misty glow strong enough to silhouette a group of people
making their way across the park. One of them was singing a loud, crude song.
The others were laughing. A soft ticking noise came from several expensive
racing bikes that they were wheeling along.
Harry knew who those people were.
The figure in front was unmistakeably his cousin, Dudley Dursley, wending his
way home, accompanied by his faithful gang.
Dudley was as vast as ever, but a
year's hard dieting and the discovery of a new talent had wrought quite a change
in his physique. As Uncle Vernon delightedly told anyone who would listen,
Dudley had recently become the Junior Heavyweight Inter-School Boxing Champion
of the Southeast. The noble sport, as Uncle Vernon called it, had made Dudley
even more formidable than he had seemed to Harry in their primary school days
when he had served as Dudley's first punchball. Harry was not remotely afraid of
his cousin any more but he still didn't think that Dudley learning to punch
harder and more accurately was cause for celebration. Neighbourhood children all
around were terrified of him—even more terrified than they were of “that Potter
boy” who, they had been warned, was a hardened hooligan and attended St Brutus's
Secure Centre for Incurably Criminal Boys.
Harry watched the dark figures
crossing the grass and wondered who they had been beating up tonight. Look
round, Harry found himself thinking as he watched them. Come on . . . look round
. . . I'm sitting here all alone . . . come and have a go...
If Dudley's
friends saw him sitting here, they would be sure to make a beeline for him, and
what would Dudley do then? He wouldn't want to lose face in front of the gang,
but he'd be terrified of provoking Harry . . . it would be really fun to watch
Dudley's dilemma, to taunt him, watch him, with him powerless to respond . . .
and if any of the others tried hitting Harry, he was ready—he had his wand. Let
them try . . . he'd love to vent some of his frustration on the boys who had
once made his life hell.
But they didn't turn around, they didn't see him,
they were almost at the railings. Harry mastered the impulse to call after them
. . . seeking a fight was not a smart move . . . he must not use magic . . . he
would be risking expulsion again.
The voices of Dudley's gang died away; they
were out of sight, heading along Magnolia Road.
There you go, Sirius, Harry
thought dully. Nothing rash. Kept my nose clean. Exactly the opposite of what
you'd have done.
He got to his feet and stretched. Aunt Petunia and Uncle
Vernon seemed to feel that whenever Dudley turned up was the right time to be
home, and any time after that was much too late. Uncle Vernon had threatened to
lock Harry in the shed if he came home after Dudley ever again, so, stifling a
yawn, and still scowling, Harry set off towards the park gate.
Magnolia Road,
like Privet Drive, was full of large, square houses with perfectly manicured
lawns, all owned by large, square owners who drove very clean cars similar to
Uncle Vernon's. Harry preferred Little Whinging by night, when the curtained
windows made patches of jewel-bright colour in the darkness and he ran no danger
of hearing disapproving mutters about his “delinquent” appearance when he passed
the householders. He walked quickly, so that halfway along Magnolia Road
Dudley's gang came into view again; they were saying their farewells at the
entrance to Magnolia Crescent. Harry stepped into the shadow of a large lilac
tree and waited.
“...squealed like a pig, didn't he?” Malcolm was saying, to
guffaws from the others.
“Nice right hook, Big D,” said Piers.
“Same time
tomorrow?” said Dudley.
“Round at my place, my parents will be out,” said
Gordon.
“See you then,” said Dudley.
“Bye, Dud!”
“See ya, Big
D!”
Harry waited for the rest of the gang to move on before setting off
again. When their voices had faded once more he headed around the corner into
Magnolia Crescent and by walking very quickly he soon came within hailing
distance of Dudley, who was strolling along at his ease, humming
tunelessly.
“Hey, Big D!”
Dudley turned.
“Oh,” he grunted. “It's
you.”
“How long have you been "Big D" then?” said Harry.
“Shut it,”
snarled Dudley, turning away.
“Cool name,” said Harry, grinning and falling
into step beside his cousin. “But you'll always be "Ickle Diddykins" to
me.”
“I said, SHUT IT!” said Dudley, whose ham-like hands had curled into
fists.
“Don't the boys know that's what your mum calls you?”
“Shut your
face.”
“You don't tell her to shut her face. What about "Popkin" and "Dinky
Diddydums", can I use them then?”
Dudley said nothing. The effort of keeping
himself from hitting Harry seemed to demand all his self-control.
“So who've
you been beating up tonight?” Harry asked, his grin fading. “Another
ten-year-old? I know you did Mark Evans two nights ago—”
“He was asking for
it,” snarled Dudley.
“Oh yeah?”
“He cheeked me.”
“Yeah? Did he say you
look like a pig that's been taught to walk on its hind legs? “Cause that's not
cheek, Dud, that's true.”
A muscle was twitching in Dudley's jaw. It gave
Harry enormous satisfaction to know how furious he was making Dudley; he felt as
though he was siphoning off his own frustration into his cousin, the only outlet
he had.
They turned right down the narrow alleyway where Harry had first seen
Sirius and which formed a short cut between Magnolia Crescent and Wisteria Walk.
It was empty and much darker than the streets it linked because there were no
streetlamps. Their footsteps were muffled between garage walls on one side and a
high fence on the other.
“Think you're a big man carrying that thing, don't
you?” Dudley said after a few seconds.
“What thing?”
“That—that thing you
are hiding.”
Harry grinned again.
“Not as stupid as you look, are you,
Dud? But I's'pose, if you were, you wouldn't be able to walk and talk at the
same time.”
Harry pulled out his wand. He saw Dudley look sideways at
it.
“You're not allowed,” Dudley said at once. “I know you're not. You'd get
expelled from that freak school you go to.”
“How d'you know they haven't
changed the rules, Big D?”
“They haven't,” said Dudley, though he didn't
sound completely convinced.
Harry laughed softly.
“You haven't got the
guts to take me on without that thing, have you?” Dudley snarled.
“Whereas
you just need four mates behind you before you can beat up a ten year old. You
know that boxing title you keep banging on about? How old was your opponent?
Seven? Eight?”
“He was sixteen, for your information,” snarled Dudley, “and
he was out cold for twenty minutes after I'd finished with him and he was twice
as heavy as you. You just wait till I tell Dad you had that thing
out—”
“Running to Daddy now, are you? Is his ickle boxing champ frightened of
nasty Harry's wand?”
“Not this brave at night, are you?” sneered
Dudley.
“This is night, Diddykins. That's what we call it when it goes all
dark like this.”
“I mean when you're in bed!” Dudley snarled.
He had
stopped walking. Harry stopped too, staring at his cousin.
From the little he
could see of Dudley's large face, he was wearing a strangely triumphant
look.
“What d'you mean, I'm not brave when I'm in bed?” said Harry,
completely nonplussed. “What am I supposed to be frightened of, pillows or
something?”
“I heard you last night,” said Dudley breathlessly. “Talking in
your sleep. Moaning.”
“What d'you mean?” Harry said again, but there was a
cold, plunging sensation in his stomach. He had revisited the graveyard last
night in his dreams.
Dudley gave a harsh bark of laughter, then adopted a
high-pitched whimpering voice.
“"Don't kill Cedric! Don't kill Cedric!" Who's
Cedric—your boyfriend?”
“I—you're lying,” said Harry automatically. But his
mouth had gone dry. He knew Dudley wasn't lying—how else would he know about
Cedric?
“"Dad! Help me, Dad! He's going to kill me, Dad! Boo hoo!"”
“Shut
up,” said Harry quietly. “Shut up, Dudley, I'm warning you!”
“'Come and help
me, Dad! Mum, come and help me! He's killed Cedric! Dad, help me! He's going to
-" Don't you point that thing at me!”
Dudley backed into the alley wall.
Harry was pointing the wand directly at Dudley's heart. Harry could feel
fourteen years” hatred of Dudley pounding in his veins—what wouldn't he give to
strike now, to jinx Dudley so thoroughly he'd have to crawl home like an insect,
struck dumb, sprouting feelers...
“Don't ever talk about that again,” Harry
snarled. “D'you understand me?”
“Point that thing somewhere else!”
“I
said, do you understand me?”
“Point it somewhere else!”
“DO YOU UNDERSTAND
ME?”
“GET THAT THING AWAY FROM—”
Dudley gave an odd, shuddering gasp, as
though he had been doused in icy water.
Something had happened to the night.
The star-strewn indigo sky was suddenly pitch black and lightless—the stars, the
moon, the misty streetlamps at either end of the alley had vanished. The distant
rumble of cars and the whisper of trees had gone. The balmy evening was suddenly
piercingly, bitingly cold. They were surrounded by total, impenetrable, silent
darkness, as though some giant hand had dropped a thick, icy mantle over the
entire alleyway, blinding them.
For a split second Harry thought he had done
magic without meaning to, despite the fact that he'd been resisting as hard as
he could—then his reason caught up with his senses—he didn't have the power to
turn off the stars. He turned his head this way and that, trying to see
something, but the darkness pressed on his eyes like a weightless
veil.
Dudley's terrified voice broke in Harry's ear.
“W-what are you
d-doing? St-stop it!”
“I'm not doing anything! Shut up and don't move!”
“I
c-can't see! I've g-gone blind! I—”
“I said shut up!”
Harry stood stock
still, turning his sightless eyes left and right. The cold was so intense he was
shivering all over; goose bumps had erupted up his arms and the hairs on the
back of his neck were standing up—he opened his eyes to their fullest extent,
staring blankly around, unseeing.
It was impossible . . . they couldn't be
here . . . not in Little Whinging...he strained his ears . . . he would hear
them before he saw them...
“I'll't-tell Dad!” Dudley whimpered. “W-where are
you? What are you d-do—?”
“Will you shut up?” Harry hissed, I'm trying to
lis—”
But he fell silent. He had heard just the thing he had been
dreading.
There was something in the alleyway apart from themselves,
something that was drawing long, hoarse, rattling breaths. Harry felt a horrible
jolt of dread as he stood trembling in the freezing air.
“C-cut it out! Stop
doing it! I'll h-hit you, I swear I will!”
“Dudley, shut—”
WHAM.
A fist
made contact with the side of Harrys head, lifting him off his feet. Small white
lights popped in front of his eyes. For the second time in an hour Harry felt as
though his head had been cleaved in two; next moment, he had landed hard on the
ground and his wand had flown out of his hand.
“You moron, Dudley!” Harry
yelled, his eyes watering with pain as he scrambled to his hands and knees,
feeling around frantically in the blackness. He heard Dudley blundering away,
hitting the alley fence, stumbling.
“DUDLEY, COME BACK! YOU'RE RUNNING RIGHT
AT IT!”
There was a horrible squealing yell and Dudley's footsteps stopped.
At the same moment, Harry felt a creeping chill behind him that could mean only
one thing. There was more than one.
“DUDLEY, KEEP YOUR MOUTH SHUT! WHATEVER
YOU DO, KEEP YOUR MOUTH SHUT! Wand!” Harry muttered frantically, his hands
flying over the ground like spiders. “Where's—wand -come on—lumos!”
He said
the spell automatically, desperate for light to help him in his search—and to
his disbelieving relief, light flared inches from his right hand—the wand tip
had ignited. Harry snatched it up, scrambled to his feet and turned
around.
His stomach turned over.
A towering, hooded figure was gliding
smoothly towards him, hovering over the ground, no feet or face visible beneath
its robes, sucking on the night as it came.
Stumbling backwards, Harry raised
his wand.
“Expecto patronum!”
A silvery wisp of vapour shot from the tip
of the wand and the Dementor slowed, but the spell hadn't worked properly;
tripping over his own feet, Harry retreated further as the Dementor bore down
upon him, panic fogging his brain—concentrate—
A pair of grey, slimy, scabbed
hands slid from inside the Dementor's robes, reaching for him. A rushing noise
filled Harry's ears.
“Expecto patronum!”
His voice sounded dim and
distant. Another wisp of silver smoke, feebler than the last, drifted from the
wand—he couldn't do it any more, he couldn't work the spell.
There was
laughter inside his own head, shrill, high-pitched laughter . . . he could smell
the Dementor's putrid, death-cold breath filling his own lungs, drowning
him—think . . . something happy...
But there was no happiness in him . . .
the Dementor's icy fingers were closing on his throat—the high-pitched laughter
was growing louder and louder, and a voice spoke inside his head: “Bow to death,
Harry . . . it might even be painless . . . I would not know . . . I have never
died...”
He was never going to see Ron and Hermione again—
And their faces
burst clearly into his mind as he fought for breath.
“EXPECTO
PATRONUM!”
An enormous silver stag erupted from the tip of Harry's wand; its
antlers caught the Dementor in the place where the heart should have been; it
was thrown backwards, weightless as darkness, and as the stag charged, the
Dementor swooped away, bat-like and defeated.
“THIS WAY!” Harry shouted at
the stag. Wheeling around, he sprinted down the alleyway, holding the lit wand
aloft. “DUDLEY? DUDLEY!”
He had run barely a dozen steps when he reached
them: Dudley was curled up on the ground, his arms clamped over his face. A
second Dementor was crouching low over him, gripping his wrists in its slimy
hands, prising them slowly almost lovingly apart, lowering its hooded head
towards Dudley's face as though about to kiss him.
“GET IT!” Harry bellowed,
and with a rushing, roaring sound, the silver stag he had conjured came
galloping past him. The Dementor's eyeless face was barely an inch from Dudley's
when the silver antlers caught it; the thing was thrown up into the air and,
like its fellow, it soared away and was absorbed into the darkness; the stag
cantered to the end of the alleyway and dissolved into silver mist.
Moon,
stars and streetlamps burst back into life. A warm breeze swept the alleyway.
Trees rustled in neighbouring gardens and the mundane rumble of cars in Magnolia
Crescent filled the air again.
Harry stood quite still, all his senses
vibrating, taking in the abrupt return to normality. After a moment, he became
aware that his T-shirt was sticking to him; he was drenched in sweat.
He
could not believe what had just happened. Dementors here, in Little
Whinging.
Dudley lay curled up on the ground, whimpering and shaking. Harry
bent down to see whether he was in a fit state to stand up, but then he heard
loud, running footsteps behind him. Instinctively raising his wand again, he
span on his heel to face the newcomer.
Mrs Figg, their batty old neighbour,
came panting into sight. Her grizzled grey hair was escaping from its hairnet, a
clanking string shopping bag was swinging from her wrist and her feet were
halfway out of her tartan carpet slippers. Harry made to stow his wand hurriedly
out of sight, but—
“Don't put it away idiot boy!” she shrieked. “What if
there are more of them around? Oh, I'm going to kill Mundungus
Fletcher!”
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