Harry had a troubled nights sleep. His parents wove in and
out of his dreams, never speaking; Mrs Weasley sobbed over Kreacher’s dead body,
watched by Ron and Hermione who were wearing crowns, and yet again Harry found
himself walking down a corridor ending in a locked door. He awoke abruptly with
his scar prickling to find Ron already dressed and talking to him.
“...better
hurry up, Mum's going ballistic, she says we're going to miss the
train”
There was a lot of commotion in the house. From what he heard as he
dressed at top speed, Harry gathered that Fred and George had bewitched their
trunks to fly downstairs to save the bother of carrying them, with the result
that they had hurtled straight into Ginny and knocked her down two flights of
stairs into the hall; Mrs Black and Mrs Weasley were both screaming at the top
of their voices.
“—COULD HAVE DONE HER A SERIOUS INJURY, YOU
IDIOTS—”
“—FILTHY HALF-BREEDS, BESMIRCHING THE HOUSE OF MY
FATHERS—”
Hermione came hurrying into the room looking flustered, just as
Harry was putting on his trainers. Hedwig was swaying on her shoulder, and she
was carrying a squirming Crookshanks in her arms.
“Mum and Dad just sent
Hedwig back.” The owl fluttered obligingly over and perched on top of her cage.
“Are you ready yet?”
“Nearly. Is Ginny all right?” Harry asked, shoving on
his glasses.
“Mrs Weasley's patched her up,” said Hermione. “But now
Mad-
“Eye's complaining that we can't leave unless Sturgis Podmore's here,
otherwise the guard will be one short.”
“Guard?” said Harry. “We have to go
to King's Cross with a guard?”
“You have to go to King's Cross with a guard,”
Hermione corrected him.
“Why?” said Harry irritably. “I thought Voldemort was
supposed to be lying low, or are you telling me he's going to jump out from
behind a dustbin to try and do me in?”
“I don't know, it's just what Mad-Eye
says,” said Hermione distractedly, looking at her watch, “but if we don't leave
soon we're definitely going to miss the train...”
“WILL YOU LOT GET DOWN HERE
NOW, PLEASE!” Mrs Weasley bellowed and Hermione jumped as though scalded and
hurried out of the room. Harry seized Hedwig, stuffed her unceremoniously into
her cage, and set off downstairs after Hermione, dragging his trunk.
Mrs
Black's portrait was howling with rage but nobody was bothering to close the
curtains over her; all the noise in the hall was bound to rouse her again,
anyway.
“Harry, you're to come with me and Tonks,” shouted Mrs Weasley—over
the repeated screeches of “MUDBLOODS! SCUM! CREATURES OF DIRT!”—“Leave your
trunk and your owl, Alastor's going to deal with the luggage...oh, for heaven's
sake, Sinus, Dumbledore said no!”
A bear-like black dog had appeared at
Harry's side as he was clambering over the various trunks cluttering the hall to
get to Mrs Weasley.
“Oh honestly...” said Mrs Weasley despairingly. “Well, on
your own head be it!”
She wrenched open the front door and stepped out into
the weak September sunlight. Harry and the dog followed her. The door slammed
behind them and Mrs Blacks screeches were cut off instantly.
“Where's Tonks?”
Harry said, looking round as they went down the stone steps of number twelve,
which vanished the moment they reached the pavement.
“She's waiting for us
just up here,” said Mrs Weasley stiffly, averting her eyes from the lolloping
black dog beside Harry.
An old woman greeted them on the corner. She had
tightly curled grey hair and wore a purple hat shaped like a pork
pie.
“Wotcher, Harry,” she said, winking. “Better hurry up, hadn't we,
Molly?” she added, checking her watch.
“I know, I know,” moaned Mrs Weasley,
lengthening her stride, “but Mad-Eye wanted to wait for Sturgis...if only Arthur
could have got us cars from the Ministry again...but Fudge won't let him borrow
so much as an empty ink bottle these days...how Muggles can stand travelling
without magic”
But the great black dog gave a joyful bark and gambolled
around them, snapping at pigeons and chasing its own tail. Harry couldn't help
laughing. Sirius had been trapped inside for a very long time. Mrs Weasley
pursed her lips in an almost Aunt Petunia-ish way.
It took them twenty
minutes to reach King's Cross on foot and nothing more eventful happened during
that time than Sirius scaring a couple of cats for Harry's entertainment. Once
inside the station they lingered casually beside the barrier between platforms
nine and ten until the coast was clear, then each of them leaned against it in
turn and fell easily through on to platform nine and three-quarters, where the
Hogwarts Express stood belching sooty steam over a platform packed with
departing students and their families. Harry inhaled the familiar smell and felt
his spirits soar...he was really going back...
“I hope the others make it in
time,” said Mrs Weasley anxiously, staring behind her at the wrought-iron arch
spanning the platform, through which new arrivals would come.
“Nice dog,
Harry!” called a tall boy with dreadlocks. “Thanks, Lee,” said Harry, grinning,
as Sirius wagged his tail frantically.
“Oh good,” said Mrs Weasley, sounding
relieved, “here's Alastor with the luggage, look...”
A porter's cap pulled
low over his mismatched eyes, Moody came limping through the archway pushing a
trolley loaded with their trunks.
“All OK,” he muttered to Mrs Weasley and
Tonks, “don't think we were followed...”
Seconds later, Mr Weasley emerged on
to the platform with Ron and Hermione. They had almost unloaded Moody's luggage
trolley when Fred, George and Ginny turned up with Lupin.
“No trouble?”
growled Moody.
“Nothing,” said Lupin.
“Til still be reporting Sturgis to
Dumbledore,” said Moody, “that's the second time he's not turned up in a week.
Getting as unreliable as Mundungus.”
“Well, look after yourselves,” said
Lupin, shaking hands all round. He reached Harry last and gave him a clap on the
shoulder. “You too. Harry. Be careful.”
“Yeah, keep your head down and your
eyes peeled,” said Moody, shaking Harry's hand too. “And don't forget, all of
you—careful what you put in writing. If in doubt, don't put it in a letter at
all.”
“It's been great meeting all of you,” said Tonks, hugging Hermione and
Ginny “We'll see you soon, I expect.”
A warning whistle sounded; the students
still on the platform started hurrying on to the train.
“Quick, quick,” said
Mrs Weasley distractedly, hugging them at random and catching Harry twice.
“Write...be good...if you've forgotten anything we'll send it on...on to the
train, now, hurry...”
For one brief moment, the great black dog reared on to
its hind legs and placed its front paws on Harry's shoulders, but Mrs Weasley
shoved Harry away towards the train door, hissing, “For heaven's sake, act more
like a dog, Sirius!”
“See you!” Harry called out of the open window as the
train began to move, while Ron, Hermione and Ginny waved beside him. The figures
of Tonks, Lupin, Moody and Mr and Mrs Weasley shrank rapidly but the black dog
was bounding alongside the window, wagging its tail; blurred people on the
platform were laughing to see it chasing the train, then they rounded a bend,
and Sirius was gone.
“He shouldn't have come with us,” said Hermione in a
worried voice.
“Oh, lighten up,” said Ron, “he hasn't seen daylight for
months, poor bloke.”
“Well,” said Fred, clapping his hands together, “can't
stand around chatting all day, we've got business to discuss with Lee. See you
later,” and he and George disappeared down the corridor to the right.
The
train was gathering still more speed, so that the houses outside the window
flashed past, and they swayed where they stood.
“Shall we go and find a
compartment, then?” Harry asked.
Ron and Hermione exchanged looks.
“Er,”
said Ron.
“We're—well—Ron and I are supposed to go into the prefect
carriage,” Hermione said awkwardly.
Ron wasn't looking at Harry; he seemed to
have become intensely interested in the fingernails on his left hand.
“Oh,”
said Harry. “Right. Fine.”
“I don't think we'll have to stay there all
journey,” said Hermione quickly. “Our letters said we just get instructions from
the Head Boy and Girl and then patrol the corridors from time to
time.”
“Fine,” said Harry again. “Well, I—I might see you later,
then.”
“Yeah, definitely,” said Ron, casting a shifty, anxious look at Harry.
“It's a pain having to go down there, I'd rather—but we have to -I mean, I'm not
enjoying it, I'm not Percy,” he finished defiantly.
“I know you're not,” said
Harry and he grinned. But as Hermione and Ron dragged their trunks, Crookshanks
and a caged Pigwidgeon off towards the engine end of the train, Harry felt an
odd sense of loss. He had never travelled on the Hogwarts Express without
Ron.
“Come on,” Ginny told him, “if we get a move on we'll be able to save
them places.”
“Right,” said Harry, picking up Hedwig's cage in one hand and
the handle of his trunk in the other. They struggled off down the corridor,
peering through the glass-panelled doors into the compartments they passed,
which were already full. Harry could not help noticing that a lot of people
stared back at him with great interest and that several of them nudged their
neighbours and pointed him out. After he had met this behaviour in five
consecutive carriages he remembered that the Daily Prophet had been telling its
readers all summer what a lying show-off he was. He wondered dully whether the
people now staring and whispering believed the stories.
In the very last
carriage they met Neville Longbottom, Harry's fellow fifth-year Gryffindor, his
round face shining with the effort of pulling his trunk along and maintaining a
one-handed grip on his struggling toad, Trevor.
“Hi, Harry” he panted. “Hi,
Ginny...everywhere's full...I can't find a seat...”
“What are you talking
about?” said Ginny, who had squeezed past Neville to peer into the compartment
behind him. There's room in this one, there's only Loony Lovegood in here
—”
Neville mumbled something about not wanting to disturb anyone.
“Don't
be silly,” said Ginny, laughing, “she's all right.”
She slid the door open
and pulled her trunk inside. Harry and Neville followed.
“Hi, Luna,” said
Ginny, “is it OK if we take these seats?”
The girl beside the window looked
up. She had straggly, waist-length, dirty blonde hair, very pale eyebrows and
protuberant eyes that gave her a permanently surprised look. Harry knew at once
why Neville had chosen to pass this compartment by. The girl gave off an aura of
distinct dottiness. Perhaps it was the fact that she had stuck her wand behind
her left ear for safekeeping, or that she had chosen to wear a necklace of
Butterbeer corks, or that she was reading a magazine upside-down. Her eyes
ranged over Neville and came to rest on Harry. She nodded.
“Thanks,” said
Ginny, smiling at her.
Harry and Neville stowed the three trunks and Hedwig's
cage in the luggage rack and sat down. Luna watched them over her upside-down
magazine, which was called The Quibbler. She did not seem to need to blink as
much as normal humans. She stared and stared at Harry, who had taken the seat
opposite her and now wished he hadn't.
“Had a good summer, Luna?” Ginny
asked.
“Yes,” said Luna dreamily, without taking her eyes off Harry. “Yes, it
was quite enjoyable, you know. You're Harry Potter,” she added.
“I know I
am,” said Harry.
Neville chuckled. Luna turned her pale eyes on him
instead.
“And I don't know who you are.”
“I'm nobody,” said Neville
hurriedly.
“No you're not,” said Ginny sharply. “Neville Longbottom—Luna Love
good. Luna's in my year, but in Ravenclaw.”
“Wit beyond measure is man's
greatest treasure,” said Luna in a singsong voice.
She raised her upside-down
magazine high enough to hide her face and fell silent. Harry and Neville looked
at each other with their eyebrows raised. Ginny suppressed a giggle.
The
train rattled onwards, speeding them out into open country. It was an odd,
unsettled sort of day; one moment the carriage was full of sunlight and the next
they were passing beneath ominously grey clouds.
“Guess what I got for my
birthday?” said Neville.
“Another Remembrall?” said Harry, remembering the
marble-like device Neville's grandmother had sent him in an effort to improve
his abysmal memory.
“No,” said Neville. “I could do with one, though, I lost
the old one ages ago...no, look at this...”
He dug the hand that was not
keeping a firm grip on Trevor into his schoolbag and after a little bit of
rummaging pulled out what appeared to be a small grey cactus in a pot, except
that it was covered with what looked like boils rather than spines.
“Mimbulus
mimbletonia,” he said proudly.
Harry stared at the thing. It was pulsating
slightly, giving it the rather sinister look of some diseased internal
organ.
“It's really, really rare,” said Neville, beaming. “I don't know it
there's one in the greenhouse at Hogwarts, even. I can't wait to show it to
Professor Sprout. My Great Uncle Algie got it for me in Assyria. I'm going to
see if I can breed from it.”
Harry knew that Neville's favourite subject was
Herbology but for the life of him he could not see what he would want with this
stunted little plant.
“Does it—er—do anything?” he asked.
“Loads of
stuff!” said Neville proudly. “It's got an amazing defensive mechanism. Here,
hold Trevor for me...”
He dumped the toad into Harry's lap and took a quill
from his schoolbag. Luna Lovegood's popping eyes appeared over the top of her
upside-down magazine again, to watch what Neville was doing. Neville held the
Mimbulus mimbletonia up to his eyes, his tongue between his teeth, chose his
spot, and gave the plant a sharp prod with the tip of his quill.
Liquid
squirted from every boil on the plant; thick, stinking, dark green jets of it.
They hit the ceiling, the windows, and spattered Luna Lovegood's magazine;
Ginny, who had flung her arms up in front of her face just in time, merely
looked as though she was wearing a slimy green hat, but Harry, whose hands had
been busy preventing Trevor's escape, received a faceful. It smelled like rancid
manure.
Neville, whose face and torso were also drenched, shook his head to
get the worst out of his eyes.
“S—sorry,” he gasped. “I haven't tried that
before...didn't realise it would be quite so...don't worry, though, Stinksap's
not poisonous,” he added nervously, as Harry spat a mouthful on to the
floor.
At that precise moment the door of their compartment slid
open.
“Oh...hello, Harry,” said a nervous voice. “Urn...bad time?”
Harry
wiped the lenses of his glasses with his Trevor-free hand. A very pretty girl
with long, shiny black hair was standing in the doorway smiling at him: Cho
Chang, the Seeker on the Ravenclaw Quidditch team.
“Oh...hi,” said Harry
blankly.
“Urn..." said Cho. “Well...just thought I'd say hello...bye
then.”
Rather pink in the face, she closed the door and departed. Harry
slumped back in his seat and groaned. He would have liked Cho to discover him
sitting with a group of very cool people laughing their heads off at a joke he
had just told; he would not have chosen to be sitting with Neville and Loony
Lovegood, clutching a toad and dripping in Stinksap.
“Never mind,” said Ginny
bracingly. “Look, we can easily get rid of all this.” She pulled out her wand.
“Scourgify!”
The Stinksap vanished.
“Sorry,” said Neville again, in a
small voice.
Ron and Hermione did not turn up for nearly an hour, by which
time the food trolley had already gone by. Harry, Ginny and Neville had finished
their pumpkin pasties and were busy swapping Chocolate Frog Cards when the
compartment door slid open and they walked in, accompanied by Crookshanks and a
shrilly hooting Pigwidgeon in his cage.
“I'm starving,” said Ron, stowing
Pigwidgeon next to Hedwig, grabbing a Chocolate Frog from Harry and throwing
himself into the seat next to him. He ripped open the wrapper, bit off the
frog's head and leaned back with his eyes closed as though he had had a very
exhausting morning.
“Well, there are two fifth-year prefects from each
house,” said Hermione, looking thoroughly disgruntled as she took her seat. “Boy
and girl from each.”
“And guess who's a Slytherin prefect?” said Ron, still
with his eyes closed.
“Malfoy,” replied Harry at once, certain his worst fear
would be confirmed.
“Course,” said Ron bitterly, stuffing the rest of the
Frog into his mouth and taking another.
“And that complete cow Pansy
Parkinson,” said Hermione viciously. “How she got to be a prefect when she's
thicker than a concussed troll...”
“Who are Hufflepuff's?” Harry
asked.
“Ernie Macmillan and Hannah Abbott,” said Ron thickly.
“And Anthony
Goldstein and Padma Patil for Ravenclaw,” said Hermione.
“You went to the
Yule Ball with Padma Patil,” said a vague voice.
Everyone turned to look at
Luna Lovegood, who was gazing unblinkingly at Ron over the top of The Quibbler.
He swallowed his mouthful of Frog.
“Yeah, I know I did,” he said, looking
mildly surprised.
“She didn't enjoy it very much,” Luna informed him. “She
doesn't think you treated her very well, because you wouldn't dance with her. I
don't think I'd have minded,” she added thoughtfully, “I don't like dancing very
much.”
She retreated behind The Quibbler again. Ron stared at the cover with
his mouth hanging open for a few seconds, then looked around at Ginny for some
kind of explanation, but Ginny had stuffed her knuckles in her mouth to stop
herself giggling. Ron shook his head, bemused, then checked his watch.
“We're
supposed to patrol the corridors every so often,” he told Harry and Neville,
“and we can give out punishments if people are misbehaving. I can't wait to get
Crabbe and Goyle for something”
“You're not supposed to abuse your position,
Ron!” said Hermione sharply.
“Yeah, right, because Malfoy won't abuse it at
all,” said Ron sarcastically.
“So you're going to descend to his
level?”
“No, I'm just going to make sure I get his mates before he gets
mine.”
“For heaven's sake, Ron—”
“Til make Goyle do lines, it'll kill him,
he hates writing,” said Ron happily. He lowered his voice to Goyle's low grunt
and, screwing up his face in a look of pained concentration, mimed writing in
midair. “I...must...not...look...like...a...baboon's...backside.”
Everyone
laughed, but nobody laughed harder than Luna Lovegood. She let out a scream of
mirth that caused Hedwig to wake up and flap her wings indignantly and
Crookshanks to leap up into the luggage rack, hissing. Luna laughed so hard her
magazine slipped out of her grasp, slid down her legs and on to the
floor.
“That was funny!”
Her prominent eyes swam with tears as she gasped
for breath, staring at Ron. Utterly nonplussed, he looked around at the others,
who were now laughing at the expression on Ron's face and at the ludicrously
prolonged laughter of Luna Lovegood, who was rocking backwards and forwards,
clutching her sides.
“Are you taking the mickey?” said Ron, frowning at
her.
“Baboon's...backside!” she choked, holding her ribs.
Everyone else
was watching Luna laughing, but Harry glancing at the magazine on the floor,
noticed something that made him dive for it. Upside-down it had been hard to
tell what the picture on the front was, but Harry now realised it was a fairly
bad cartoon of Cornelius Fudge; Harry only recognised him because of the
lime-green bowler hat. One of Fudge's hands was clenched around a bag of gold;
the other hand was throttling a goblin. The cartoon was captioned: How Far Will
Fudge Go to Gain Gringotts?
Beneath this were listed the titles of other
articles inside the magazine.
Corruption in the Quidditch League:
How the
Tornados are Taking Control
Secrets of the Ancient Runes Revealed
Sirius
Black: Villain or Victim?
“Can I have a look at this?” Harry asked Luna
eagerly.
She nodded, still gazing at Ron, breathless with laughter.
Harry
opened the magazine and scanned the index. Until this moment he had completely
forgotten the magazine Kingsley had handed Mr Weasley to give to Sirius, but it
must have been this edition of The Quibbler.
He found the page, and turned
excitedly to the article.
This, too, was illustrated by a rather bad cartoon;
in fact, Harry would not have known it was supposed to be Sirius if it hadn't
been captioned. Sirius was standing on a pile of human bones with his wand out.
The headline on the article said:
SIRIUS—BLACK AS HE'S PAINTED?
Notorious
mass murderer or innocent singing sensation?
Harry had to read this first
sentence several times before he was convinced that he had not misunderstood it.
Since when had Sirius been a singing sensation?
For fourteen years Sirius
Black has been believed guilty of the mass murder of twelve innocent Muggles and
one wizard. Black's audacious escape from Azkaban two years ago has led to the
widest manhunt ever conducted by the Ministry of Magic. None of us has ever
questioned that he deserves to be recaptured and handed back to the
Dementors.
BUT DOES HE?
Startling new evidence has recently come to light
that Sirius Black may not have committed the crimes for which he was sent to
Azkaban. In fact, says Doris Purkiss, of 18 Acanthia Way, Little Norton, Black
may not even have been present at the killings.
“What people don't realise is
that Sirius Black is a false name,” says Mrs Purkiss. “The man people believe to
be Sirius Black is actually Stubby Boardman, lead singer of popular singing
group The Hobgoblins, who retired from public life after being struck on the ear
by a turnip at a concert in Little Norton Church Hall nearly fifteen years ago.
I recognised him the moment I saw his picture in the paper. Now, Stubby couldn't
possibly have committed those crimes, because on the day in question he happened
to be enjoying a romantic candlelit dinner with me. I have written to the
Minister for Magic and am expecting him to give Stubby, alias -Sirius, a full
pardon any day now.”
Harry finished reading and stared at the page in
disbelief. Perhaps it was a joke, he thought, perhaps the magazine often printed
spoof Hems. He flicked back a few pages and found the piece on
Fudge.
Cornelius Fudge, the Minister for Magic, denied that he had any plans
to take over the running of the Wizarding Bank, Gringotts, when he was elected
Minister for Magic five years ago. Fudge has always insisted that he wants
nothing more than to “co-operate peacefully” with the guardians of our
gold.
BUT DOES HE?
Sources close to the Minister have recently disclosed
that Fudge's dearest ambition is to seize control of the goblin gold supplies
and that he will not hesitate to use force if need be.
“Til wouldn't be the
first time, either,” said a Ministry insider. “Cornelius "Goblin-Crusher" Fudge,
that's what his friends call him. If you could hear him when he thinks no one's
listening, oh, he's always talking about the goblins he's had done in; he's had
them drowned, he's had them dropped off buildings, he's had them poisoned, he's
had them cooked in pies...”
Harry did not read any further. Fudge might have
many faults but Harry found it extremely hard to imagine him ordering goblins to
be cooked in pies. He flicked through the rest of the magazine. Pausing every
few pages, he read: an accusation that the Tutshill Tornados were winning the
Quidditch League by a combination of blackmail, illegal broom-tampering and
torture; an interview with a wizard who claimed to have flown to the moon on a
Cleansweep Six and brought back a bag of moon frogs to prove it; and an article
on ancient runes which at least explained why Luna had been reading The Quibbler
upside-down. According to the magazine, if you turned the runes on their heads
they revealed a spell to make your enemy's ears turn into kumquats. In fact,
compared to the rest of the articles in The Quibbler, the suggestion that Sirius
might really be the lead singer of The Hobgoblins was quite
sensible.
“Anything good in there?” asked Ron as Harry closed the
magazine.
“Of course not,” said Hermione scathingly, before Harry could
answer. “The Quibbler's rubbish, everyone knows that.”
“Excuse me,” said
Luna; her voice had suddenly lost its dreamy quality. “My father's the
editor.”
“I—oh,” said Hermione, looking embarrassed. “Well...it's got some
interesting...I mean, it's quite...”
“I'll have it back, thank you,” said
Luna coldly, and leaning forwards she snatched it out of Harry's hands. Riffling
through it to page fifty-seven, she turned it resolutely upside-down again and
disappeared behind it, just as the compartment door opened for the third
time.
Harry looked around; he had expected this, but that did not make the
sight of Draco Malfoy smirking at him from between his cronies Crabbe and Goyle
any more enjoyable-.
“What?” he said aggressively, before Malfoy could open
his mouth.
“Manners, Potter, or I'll have to give you a detention,” drawled
Malfoy, whose sleek blond hair and pointed chin were just like his fathers. “You
see, I, unlike you, have been made a prefect, which means that I, unlike you,
have the power to hand out punishments.”
“Yeah,” said Harry, “but you, unlike
me,-are a git, so get out and leave us alone.”
Ron, Hermione, Ginny and
Neville laughed. Malfoy's lip curled.
“Tell me, how does it feel being
second-best to Weasley, Potter?” he asked.
“Shut up, Malfoy,” said Hermione
sharply.
“I seem to have touched a nerve,” said Malfoy, smirking. “Well, just
watch yourself, Potter, because I'll be dogging your footsteps in case you step
out of line.”
“Get out!” said Hermione, standing up.
Sniggering, Malfoy
gave Harry a last malicious look and departed, with Crabbe and Goyle lumbering
along in his wake. Hermione slammed the compartment door behind them and turned
to look at Harry, who knew at once that she, like him, had registered what
Malfoy had said and been just as unnerved by it.
“Chuck us another Frog,”
said Ron, who had clearly noticed nothing.
Harry could not talk freely in
front of Neville and Luna. He exchanged another nervous look with Hermione, then
stared out of the window.
He had thought Sirius coming with him to the
station was a bit of a laugh, but suddenly it seemed reckless, if not downright
dangerous...Hermione had been right...Sirius should not have come. What if Mr
Malfoy had noticed the black dog and told Draco? What if he had deduced that the
Weasleys, Lupin, Tonks and Moody knew where Sirius was hiding? Or had Malfoy's
use of the word “dogging” been a coincidence?
The weather remained undecided
as they travelled further and further north. Rain spattered the windows in a
half-hearted way, then the sun put in a feeble appearance before clouds drifted
over it once more. When darkness fell and lamps came on inside the carriages,
Luna rolled up The Quibbler, put it carefully away in her bag and took to
staring at everyone in the compartment instead.
Harry was sitting with his
forehead pressed against the train window, trying to get a first distant glimpse
of Hogwarts, but it was a moonless night and the rain-streaked window was
grimy.
“We'd better change,” said Hermione at last, and all of them opened
their trunks with difficulty and pulled on their school robes. She and Ron
pinned their prefect badges carefully to their chests. Harry saw Ron checking
his reflection in the black window.
At last, the train began to slow down and
they heard the usual racket up and down it as everybody scrambled to get their
luggage and pets assembled, ready to get off. As Ron and Hermione were supposed
to supervise all this, they disappeared from the carriage again, leaving Harry
and the others to look after Crookshanks and Pigwidgeon.
“Til carry that owl,
if you like,” said Luna to Harry, reaching out for Pigwidgeon as Neville stowed
Trevor carefully in an inside pocket.
“Oh—er—thanks,” said Harry, handing her
the cage and hoisting Hedwig's more securely into his arms.
They shuffled out
of the compartment feeling the first sting of the night air on their faces as
they joined the crowd in the corridor. Slowly, they moved towards the doors.
Harry could smell the pine trees that lined the path down to the lake. He
stepped down on to the platform and looked around, listening for the familiar
call of firs'-years over ‘ere...firs'-years...”
But it did not come. Instead,
a quite different voice, a brisk female one, was calling out, "First-years line
up over here, please! All first-years to me!”
A lantern came swinging towards
Harry and by its light he saw the prominent chin and severe haircut of Professor
Grubbly-Plank, the witch who had taken over Hagrid's Care of Magical Creatures
lessons for a while the previous year.
“Where's Hagrid?” he said out
loud.
“I don't know,” said Ginny, “but we'd better get out of the way, we're
blocking the door.”
“Oh, yeah...”
Harry and Ginny became separated as they
moved off along the platform and out through the station. Jostled by the crowd,
Harry squinted through the darkness for a glimpse of Hagrid; he had to be here,
Harry had been relying on it—seeing Hagrid again was one of the things he'd been
looking forward to most. But there was no sign of him.
He can't have left,
Harry told himself as he shuffled slowly through a narrow doorway on to the road
outside with the rest of the crowd. He's just got a cold or something...
He
looked around for Ron or Hermione, wanting to know what they thought about the
reappearance of Professor Grubbly-Plank, but neither of them was anywhere near
him, so he allowed himself to be shunted forwards on to the dark rain-washed
road outside Hogsmeade Station.
Here stood the hundred or so horseless
stagecoaches that always took the students above first year up to the castle.
Harry glanced quickly at them, turned away to keep a lookout for Ron and
Hermione, then did a double-take.
The coaches were no longer horseless. There
were creatures standing between the carriage shafts. If he had had to give them
a name, he supposed he would have called them horses, though there was something
reptilian about them, too. They were completely fleshless, their black coats
clinging to their skeletons, of which every bone was visible. Their heads were
dragonish, and their pupil-less eyes white and staring. Wings sprouted from each
wither—vast, black leathery wings that looked as though they ought to belong to
giant bats. Standing still and quiet in the gathering gloom, the creatures
looked eerie and sinister. Harry could not understand why the coaches were being
pulled by these horrible horses when they were quite capable of moving along by
themselves.
“Where's Pig?” said Ron's voice, right behind Harry.
“That
Luna girl was carrying him,” said Harry, turning quickly, eager to consult Ron
about Hagrid. “Where d'you reckon—”
“—Hagrid is? I dunno,” said Ron, sounding
worried. “He'd better be OK...”
A short distance away, Draco Malfoy, followed
by a small gang of cronies including Crabbe, Goyle and Pansy Parkinson, was
pushing some timid-looking second-years out of the way so that he and his
friends could get a coach to themselves. Seconds later, Hermione emerged panting
from the crowd.
“Malfoy was being absolutely foul to a first-year back there.
I swear I'm going to report him, he's only had his badge three minutes and he's
using it to bully people worse than ever...where's Crookshanks?”
“Ginny's got
him,” said Harry. There she is...”
Ginny had just emerged from the crowd,
clutching a squirming Crookshanks.
“Thanks,” said Hermione, relieving Ginny
of the cat. “Come on, let's get a carriage together before they all fill
up...”
“I haven't got Pig yet!” Ron said, but Hermione was already heading
off towards the nearest unoccupied coach. Harry remained behind with
Ron.
“What are those things, d'you reckon?” he asked Ron, nodding at the
horrible horses as the other students surged past them.
“What
things?”
“Those horse—”
Luna appeared holding Pigwidgeon's cage in her
arms; the tiny owl was twittering excitedly as usual.
“Here you are,” she
said. “He's a sweet little owl, isn't he?”
“Er...yeah...he's all right,” said
Ron gruffly. “Well, come on then, let's get in...what were you saying,
Harry?”
“I was saying, what are those horse things?” Harry said, as he, Ron
and Luna made for the carriage in which Hermione and Ginny were already
sitting.
“What horse things?”
“The horse things pulling the carriages!”
said Harry impatiently. They were, after all, about three feet from the nearest
one; it was watching them with empty white eyes. Ron, however, gave Harry a
perplexed look.
“What are you talking about?”
“I'm talking
about—look!”
Harry grabbed Ron's arm and wheeled him about so that he was
face to face with the winged horse. Ron stared straight at it for a second, then
looked back at Harry.
“What am I supposed to be looking at?”
“At
the—there, between the shafts! Harnessed to the coach! It's right there in
front—”
But as Ron continued to look bemused, a strange thought occurred to
Harry.
“Can't...can't you see them?”
“See what?”
“Can't you see what's
pulling the carriages?”
Ron looked seriously alarmed now.
“Are you feeling
all right, Harry?”
“I...yeah...”
Harry felt utterly bewildered. The horse
was there in front of him, gleaming solidly in the dim light issuing from the
station windows behind them, vapour rising from its nostrils in the chilly night
air. Yet, unless Ron was faking—and it was a very feeble joke if he was—Ron
could not see it at all.
“Shall we get in, then?” said Ron uncertainly,
looking at Harry as though worried about him.
“Yeah,” said Harry. “Yeah, go
on...”
“It's all right,” said a dreamy voice from beside Harry as Ron
vanished into the coach's dark interior. “You're not going mad or anything. I
can see them, too.”
“Can you?” said Harry desperately, turning to Luna. He
could see the bat-winged horses reflected in her wide silvery eyes.
“Oh,
yes,” said Luna, “I've been able to see them ever since my first day here.
They've always pulled the carriages. Don't worry. You're just as sane as I
am:
Smiling faintly, she climbed into the musty interior of the carriage
after Ron. Not altogether reassured, Harry followed her.