Dinner in the Great Hall that night was not a pleasant
experience for Harry. The news about his shouting match with Umbridge had
travelled exceptionally fast even by Hogwarts” standards. He heard whispers all
around him as he sat eating between Ron and Hermione. The funny thing was that
none of the whisperers seemed to mind him overhearing what they were saying
about him. On the contrary, it was as though they were hoping he would get angry
and start shouting again, so that they could hear his story first-hand.
“He
says he saw Cedric Diggory murdered...”
“He reckons he duelled with
You-Know-Who...”
“Come off it...”
“Who does he think he's
kidding?”
“Tur-Zease...”
“What I don't get,” said Harry through clenched
teeth, laying down his knife and fork (his hands were shaking too much to hold
them steady), “is why they all believed the story two months ago when Dumbledore
told them...”
“The thing is, Harry, I'm not sure they did,” said Hermione
grimly. “Oh, let's get out of here.”
She slammed down her own knife and fork;
Ron looked longingly at his half-finished apple pie but followed suit. People
stared at them all the way out of the Hall.
“What d'you mean, you're not sure
they believed Dumbledore?” Harry asked Hermione when they reached the
first-floor landing.
“Look, you don't understand what it was like after it
happened,” said Hermione quietly. “You arrived back in the middle of the lawn
clutching Cedric's dead body...none of us saw what happened in the maze...we
just had Dumbledore's word for it that You-Know-Who had come back and killed
Cedric and fought you.”
“Which is the truth!” said Harry loudly.
“I know
it is, Harry, so will you please stop biting my head off?” said Hermione
wearily. “It's just that before the truth could sink in, everyone went home for
the summer, where they spent two months reading about how you're a nutcase and
Dumbledore's going senile!”
Rain pounded on the windowpanes as they strode
along the empty corridors back to Gryffindor Tower. Harry felt as though his
first day had lasted a week, but he still had a mountain of homework to do
before bed. A dull pounding pain was developing over his right eye. He glanced
out of a rain-washed window at the dark grounds as they turned into the Fat
Lady's corridor. There was still no light in Hagrid's cabin.
“Mimbulus
mimbletonia,” said Hermione, before the Fat Lady could ask. The portrait swung
open to reveal the hole behind it and the three of them scrambled through
it.
The common room was almost empty; nearly everyone was still down at
dinner. Crookshanks uncoiled himself from an armchair and trotted to meet them,
purring loudly, and when Harry, Ron and Hermione took their three favourite
chairs at the fireside he leapt lightly on to Hermione's lap and curled up there
like a furry ginger cushion. Harry gazed into the flames, feeling drained and
exhausted.
“How can Dumbledore have let this happen?” Hermione cried
suddenly, making Harry and Ron jump; Crookshanks leapt off her, looking
affronted. She pounded the arms of her chair in fury, so that bits of stuffing
leaked out of the holes. “How can he let that terrible woman teach us? And in
our OWL year, too!”
“Well, we've never had great Defence Against the Dark
Arts teachers, have we?” said Harry. “You know what it's like, Hagrid told us,
nobody wants the job; they say it's jinxed.”
“Yes, but to employ someone
who's actually refusing to let us do magic! What's Dumbledore playing
at?”
“And she's trying to get people to spy for her,” said Ron
darkly.
“Remember when she said she wanted us to come and tell her if we hear
anyone saying You-Know-Who's back?”
“Of course she's here to spy on us all,
that's obvious, why else would Fudge have wanted her to come?” snapped
Hermione.
“Don't start arguing again,” said Harry wearily, as Ron opened his
mouth to retaliate. “Can't we just...let's just do that homework, get it out of
the way...”
They collected their schoolbags from a corner and returned to the
chairs by the fire. People were coming back from dinner now. Harry kept his face
averted from the portrait hole, but could still sense the stares he was
attracting.
“Shall we do Snape's stuff first?” said Ron, dipping his quill
into his ink. "The properties...of moonstone...and its uses ...in
potion-making...'" he muttered, writing the words across the top of his
parchment as he spoke them. There.” He underlined the title, then looked up
expectantly at Hermione.
“So, what are the properties of moonstone and its
uses in potion-making?”
But Hermione was not listening; she was squinting
over into the far corner of the room, where Fred, George and Lee Jordan were now
sitting at the centre of a knot of innocent-looking first-years, all of whom
were chewing something that seemed to have come out of a large paper bag that
Fred was holding.
“No, I'm sorry, they've gone too far,” she said, standing
up and looking positively furious. “Come on, Ron.”
“I—what?” said Ron,
plainly playing for time. “No—come on, Hermione—we can't tell them off for
giving out sweets.”
“You know perfectly well that those are bits of Nosebleed
Nougat or—or Puking Pastilles or—”
“Fainting Fancies?” Harry suggested
quietly.
One by one, as though hit over the head with an invisible mallet,
the first-years were slumping unconscious in their seats; some slid right on to
the floor, others merely hung over the arms of their chairs, their tongues
lolling out. Most of the people watching were laughing; Hermione, however,
squared her shoulders and marched directly over to where Fred and George now
stood with clipboards, closely observing the unconscious first-years. Ron rose
halfway out of his chair, hovered uncertainly for a moment or two, then muttered
to Harry, “She's got it under control,” before sinking as low in his chair as
his lanky frame permitted.
“That's enough!” Hermione said forcefully to Fred
and George, both of whom looked up in mild surprise.
“Yeah, you're right,”
said George, nodding, “this dosage looks strong enough, doesn't it?”
“I told
you this morning, you can't test your rubbish on students!”
“We're paying
them!” said Fred indignantly.
“I don't care, it could be
dangerous!”
“Rubbish,” said Fred.
“Calm down, Hermione, they're fine!”
said Lee reassuringly as he walked from first-year to first-year, inserting
purple sweets into their open mouths.
“Yeah, look, they're coming round now,”
said George.
A few of the first-years were indeed stirring. Several looked so
shocked to find themselves lying on the floor, or dangling off their chairs,
that Harry was sure Fred and George had not warned them what the sweets were
going to do.
“Feel all right?” said George kindly to a small dark-haired girl
lying at his feet.
“I—I think so,” she said shakily.
“Excellent,” said
Fred happily, but the next second Hermione had snatched both his clipboard and
the paper bag of Fainting Fancies from his hands.
“It is NOT
excellent!”
“Course it is, they're alive, aren't they?” said Fred
angrily.
“You can't do this, what if you made one of them really
ill?”
“We're not going to make them ill, we've already tested them all on
ourselves, this is just to see if everyone reacts the same—”
“If you don't
stop doing it, I'm going to—”
“Put us in detention?” said Fred, in an
I'd-like-to-see-you-try-it voice.
“Make us write lines?” said George,
smirking.
Onlookers all over the room were laughing. Hermione drew herself up
to her full height; her eyes were narrowed and her bushy hair seemed to crackle
with electricity.
“No,” she said, her voice quivering with anger, “but I will
write to your mother.”
“You wouldn't,” said George, horrified, taking a step
back from her.
“Oh, yes, I would,” said Hermione grimly. “I can't stop you
eating the stupid things yourselves, but you're not to give them to the
first-years.”
Fred and George looked thunderstruck. It was clear that as far
as they were concerned, Hermione's threat was way below the belt. With a last
threatening look at them, she thrust Fred's clipboard and the bag of Fancies
back into his arms, and stalked back to her chair by the fire.
Ron was now so
low in his seat that his nose was roughly level with his knees.
Thank you for
your support, Ron,” Hermione said acidly.
“You handled it fine by yourself,”
Ron mumbled.
Hermione stared down at her blank piece of parchment for a few
seconds, then said edgily, “Oh, it's no good, I can't concentrate now. I'm going
to bed.”
She wrenched her bag open; Harry thought she was about to put her
books away, but instead she pulled out two misshapen woolly objects, placed them
carefully on a table by the fireplace, covered them with a few screwed-up bits
of parchment and a broken quill and stood back to admire the effect.
“What in
the name of Merlin are you doing?” said Ron, watching her as though fearful for
her sanity.
“They're hats for house-elves,” she said briskly, now stuffing
her books back into her bag. “I did them over the summer. I'm a really slow
knitter without magic but now I'm back at school I should be able to make lots
more.”
“You're leaving out hats for the house-elves?” said Ron slowly. “And
you're covering them up with rubbish first?”
“Yes,” said Hermione defiantly,
swinging her bag on to her back.
“That's not on,” said Ron angrily. “You're
trying to trick them into picking up the hats. You're setting them free when
they might not want to be free.”
“Of course they want to be free!” said
Hermione at once, though I her face was turning pink. “Don't you dare touch
those hats, Ron!”
She turned on her heel and left. Ron waited until she had
disappeared through the door to the girls” dormitories, then cleared the rubbish
off the woolly hats.
“They should at least see what they're picking up,” he
said firmly. “Anyway...” he rolled up the parchment on which he had written the
title of Snape's essay, “there's no point trying to finish this now, I can't do
it without Hermione, I haven't got a clue what you're supposed to do with
moonstones, have you?”
Harry shook his head, noticing as he did so that the
ache in his right temple was getting worse. He thought of the long essay on
giant wars and the pain stabbed at him sharply. Knowing perfectly well that when
the morning came, he would regret not finishing his homework that night, he
piled his books back into his bag.
“I'm going to bed too.”
He passed
Seamus on the way to the door leading to the dormitories, but did not look at
him. Harry had a fleeting impression that Seamus had opened his mouth to speak,
but he sped up and reached the soothing peace of the stone spiral staircase
without having to endure any more provocation.
***
The following day
dawned just as leaden and rainy as the previous one. Hagrid was still absent
from the staff table at breakfast.
“But on the plus side, no Snape today”
said Ron bracingly.
Hermione yawned widely and poured herself some coffee.
She looked mildly pleased about something, and when Ron asked her what she had
to be so happy about, she simply said, The hats have gone. Seems the house-elves
do want freedom after all.”
“I wouldn't bet on it,” Ron told her cuttingly.
They might not count as clothes. They didn't look anything like hats to me, more
like woolly bladders.”
Hermione did not speak to him all morning.
Double
Charms was succeeded by double Transfiguration. Professor Flitwick and Professor
McGonagall both spent the first fifteen minutes of their lessons lecturing the
class on the importance of OWLs.
“What you must remember,” said little
Professor Flitwick squeakily perched as ever on a pile of books so that he could
see over the top of his desk, “is that these examinations may influence your
futures for many years to come! If you have not already given serious thought to
your careers, now is the time to do so. And in the meantime, I'm afraid, we
shall be working harder than ever to ensure that you all do yourselves
justice!”
They then spent over an hour revising Summoning Charms, which
according to Professor Flitwick were bound to come up in their OWL, and he
rounded off the lesson by setting them their largest ever amount of Charms
homework.
It was the same, if not worse, in Transfiguration.
“You cannot
pass an OWL,” said Professor McGonagall grimly, “without serious application,
practice and study. I see no reason why everybody in this class should not
achieve an OWL in Transfiguration as long as they put in the work.” Neville made
a sad little disbelieving noise. “Yes, you too, Longbottom,” said Professor
McGonagall. There's nothing wrong with your work except lack of confidence.
So...today we are starting Vanishing Spells. These are easier than Conjuring
Spells, which you would not usually attempt until NEWT level, but they are still
among the most difficult magic you will be tested on in your OWL.”
She was
quite right; Harry found the Vanishing Spells horribly difficult. By the end of
a double period neither he nor Ron had managed to vanish the snails on which
they were practising, though Ron said hopefully he thought his looked a bit
paler. Hermione, on the other hand, successfully vanished her snail on the third
attempt, earning her a ten-point bonus for Gryffindor from Professor McGonagall.
She was the only person not given homework; everybody else was told to practise
the spell overnight, ready for a fresh attempt on their snails the following
afternoon.
Now panicking slightly about the amount of homework they had to
do, Harry and Ron spent their lunch hour in the library looking up the uses of
moonstones in potion-making. Still angry about Ron's slur on her woolly hats,
Hermione did not join them. By the time they reached Care of Magical Creatures
in the afternoon, Harry's head was aching again.
The day had become cool and
breezy, and as they walked down the sloping lawn towards Hagrid's cabin on the
edge of the Forbidden Forest, they felt the occasional drop of rain on their
faces. Professor Grubbly-Plank stood waiting for the class some ten yards from
Hagrid's front door, a long trestle table in front of her laden with twigs. As
Harry and Ron reached her, a loud shout of laughter sounded behind them;
turning, they saw Draco Malfoy striding towards them, surrounded by his usual
gang of Slytherin cronies. He had clearly just said something highly amusing,
because Crabbe, Goyle, Pansy Parkinson and the rest continued to snigger
heartily as they gathered around the trestle table and, judging by the way they
all kept looking over at Harry, he was able to guess the subject of the joke
without too much difficulty.
“Everyone here?” barked Professor Grubbly-Plank,
once all the Slytherins and Gryffindors had arrived. “Let's crack on then. Who
can tell me what these things are called?”
She indicated the heap of twigs in
front of her. Hermione's hand shot into the air. Behind her back, Malfoy did a
buck-toothed imitation of her jumping up and down in eagerness to answer a
question. Pansy Parkinson gave a shriek of laughter that turned almost at once
into a scream, as the twigs on the table leapt into the air and revealed
themselves to be what looked like tiny pixie-ish creatures made of wood, each
with knobbly brown arms and legs, two twiglike fingers at the end of each hand
and a funny flat, barklike face in which a pair of beetle-brown eyes
glittered.
“Oooooh!” said Parvati and Lavender, thoroughly irritating Harry.
Anyone would have thought Hagrid had never shown them impressive creatures;
admittedly, the Flobberworms had been a bit dull, but the Salamanders and
Hippogriffs had been interesting enough, and the Blast-Ended Skrewts perhaps too
much so.
“Kindly keep your voices down, girls!” said Professor Grubbly-Plank
sharply, scattering a handful of what looked like brown rice among the
stick-creatures, who immediately fell upon the food. “So—anyone know the names
of these creatures? Miss Granger?”
“Bowtruckles,” said Hermione. “They're
tree-guardians, usually live in wand-trees.”
“Five points for Gryffindor,”
said Professor Grubbly-Plank. “Yes, these are Bowtruckles, and as Miss Granger
rightly says, they generally live in trees whose wood is of wand quality.
Anybody know what they eat?”
“Woodlice,” said Hermione promptly which
explained why what Harry had taken to be grains of brown rice were moving. “But
fairy eggs if they can get them.”
“Good girl, take another five points. So,
whenever you need leaves or wood from a tree in which a Bowtruckle lodges, it is
wise to have a gift of woodlice ready to distract or placate it. They may not
look dangerous, but if angered they will try to gouge at human eyes with their
fingers, which, as you can see, are very sharp and not at all desirable near the
eyeballs. So if you'd like to gather closer, take a few woodlice and a
Bowtruckle—I have enough here for one between three—you can study them more
closely. I want a sketch from each of you with all body-parts labelled by the
end of the lesson.”
The class surged forwards around the trestle table. Harry
deliberately circled around the back so that he ended up right next to Professor
Grubbly-Plank.
“Where's Hagrid?” he asked her, while everyone else was
choosing Bowtruckles.
“Never you mind,” said Professor Grubbly-Plank
repressively, which had been her attitude last time Hagrid had failed to turn up
for a class, too. Smirking all over his pointed face, Draco Malfoy leaned across
Harry and seized the largest Bowtruckle.
“Maybe,” said Malfoy in an
undertone, so that only Harry could hear him, “the stupid great oaf's got
himself badly injured.”
“Maybe you will if you don't shut up,” said Harry out
of the side of his mouth.
“Maybe he's been messing with stuff that's too big
for him, if you get my drift.”
Malfoy walked away, smirking over his shoulder
at Harry, who felt suddenly sick. Did Malfoy know something? His father was a
Death Eater after all; what if he had information about Hagrid's fate that had
not yet reached the ears of the Order? He hurried back around the table to Ron
and Hermione who were squatting on the grass some distance away and attempting
to persuade a Bowtruckle to remain still long enough for them to draw it. Harry
pulled out parchment and quill, crouched down beside the others and related in a
whisper what Malfoy had just said.
“Dumbledore would know if some thing had
happened to Hagrid,” said Hermione at once. “It's just playing into Malfoy's
hands to look worried; it tells him we don't know exactly what's going on. We've
got to ignore him, Harry. Here, hold the Bowtruckle for a moment, just so I can
draw its face...”
“Yes,” came Malfoy's clear drawl from the group nearest
them, “Father was talking to the Minister just a couple of days ago, you know,
and it sounds as though the Ministry's really determined to crack down on
sub-standard teaching in this place. So even if that overgrown moron does show
up again, he'll probably be sent packing straightaway.”
“OUCH!”
Harry had
gripped the Bowtruckle so hard that it had almost snapped, and it had just taken
a great retaliatory swipe at his hand with its sharp fingers, leaving two long
deep cuts there. Harry dropped it. Crabbe and Goyle, who had already been
guffawing at the idea of Hagrid being sacked, laughed still harder as the
Bowtruckle set off at full tilt towards the Forest, a little moving stick-man
soon swallowed up among the tree roots. When the bell echoed distantly over the
grounds, Harry rolled up his blood-stained Bowtruckle picture and marched off to
Herbology with his hand wrapped in Hermione's handkerchief, and Malfoy's
derisive laughter still ringing in his ears.
“If he calls Hagrid a moron one
more time...” said Harry through gritted teeth.
“Harry, don't go picking a
row with Malfoy, don't forget, he's a prefect now, he could make life difficult
for you...”
“Wow, I wonder what it'd be like to have a difficult life?” said
Harry sarcastically. Ron laughed, but Hermione frowned. Together, they traipsed
across the vegetable patch. The sky still appeared unable to make up its mind
whether it wanted to rain or not.
“I just wish Hagrid would hurry up and get
back, that's all,” said Harry in a low voice, as they reached the greenhouses.
“And don't say that Grubbly-Plank woman's a better teacher!” he added
threateningly.
“I wasn't going to,” said Hermione calmly.
“Because she'll
never be as good as Hagrid,” said Harry firmly, fully aware that he had just
experienced an exemplary Care of Magical Creatures lesson and was thoroughly
annoyed about it.
The door of the nearest greenhouse opened and some
fourth-years spilled out of it, including Ginny.
“Hi,” she said brightly as
she passed. A few seconds later, Luna Lovegood emerged, trailing behind the rest
of the class, a smudge of earth on her nose, and her hair tied in a knot on the
top of her head. When she saw Harry, her prominent eyes seemed to bulge
excitedly and she made a beeline straight for him. Many of his classmates turned
curiously to watch. Luna took a great breath and then said, without so much as a
preliminary hello, “I believe He Who Must Not Be Named is back and I believe you
fought him and escaped from him.”
“Er—right,” said Harry awkwardly. Luna was
wearing what looked like a pair of orange radishes for earrings, a fact that
Parvati and Lavender seemed to have noticed, as they were both giggling and
pointing at her earlobes.
“You can laugh,” Luna said, her voice rising,
apparently under the impression that Parvati and Lavender were laughing at what
she had said rather than what she was wearing, “but people used to believe there
were no such things as the Blibbering Humdinger or the Crumple-Horned
Snorkack!”
“Well, they were right, weren't they?” said Hermione impatiently.
“There weren't any such things as the Blibbering Humdinger or the Crumple-Horned
Snorkack.”
Luna gave her a withering look and flounced away, radishes
swinging madly Parvati and Lavender were not the only ones hooting with laughter
now.
“D'you mind not offending the only people who believe me?” Harry asked
Hermione as they made their way into class.
“Oh, for heaven's sake, Harry,
you can do better than her,” said Hermione. “Ginny's told me all about her;
apparently, she'll only believe in things as long as there's no proof at all.
Well, I wouldn't expect anything else from someone whose father runs The
Quibbler.”
Harry thought of the sinister winged horses he had seen on the
night he had arrived and how Luna had said she could see them too. His spirits
sank slightly. Had she been lying? But before he could devote much more thought
to the matter, Ernie Macmillan had stepped up to him.
“I want you to know,
Potter,” he said in a loud, carrying voice, “that it's not only weirdos who
support you. I personally believe you one hundred per cent. My family have
always stood firm behind Dumbledore, and so do I.”
“Er—thanks very much,
Ernie,” said Harry, taken aback but pleased. Ernie might be pompous on occasions
like this, but Harry was in a mood to deeply appreciate a vote of confidence
from somebody who did not have radishes dangling from their ears. Ernie's words
had certainly wiped the smile from Lavender Brown's face and as he turned to
talk to Ron and Hermione, Harry caught Seamuss expression, which looked both
confused and defiant.
To nobody's surprise, Professor Sprout started their
lesson by lecturing them about the importance of OWLs. Harry wished all the
teachers would stop doing this; he was starting to get an anxious, twisted
feeling in his stomach every time he remembered how much homework he had to do,
a feeling that worsened dramatically when Professor Sprout gave them yet another
essay at the end of class. Tired and smelling strongly of dragon dung, Professor
Sprout's preferred type of fertiliser, the Gryffindors trooped back up to the
castle an hour and a half later, none of them talking very much; it had been
another long day.
As Harry was starving, and he had his first detention with
Umbridge at five o'clock, he headed straight for dinner without dropping off his
bag in Gryffindor Tower so that he could bolt something down before facing
whatever she had in store for him. He had barely reached the entrance of the
Great Hall, however, when a loud and angry voice yelled, “Oi, Potter!”
“What
now?” he muttered wearily, turning to face Angelina Johnson, who looked as
though she was in a towering temper.
“I'll tell you what now,” she said,
marching straight up to him and poking him hard in the chest with her finger.
“How come you've landed yourself in detention for five o'clock on
Friday?”
“What?” said Harry. “Why...oh yeah, Keeper tryouts!”
“Now he
remembers!” snarled Angelina. “Didn't I tell you I wanted to do a tryout with
the whole team, and find someone who fitted in with everyone! Didn't I tell you
I'd booked the Quidditch pitch specially? And now you've decided you're not
going to be there!”
“I didn't decide not to be there!” said Harry, stung by
the injustice of these words. “I got detention from that Umbridge woman, just
because I told her the truth about You-Know-Who.”
“Well, you can just go
straight to her and ask her to let you off on Friday,” said Angelina fiercely,
“and I don't care how you do it. Tell her You-Know-Who's a figment of your
imagination if you like, just make sure you re there!”
She turned on her heel
and stormed away.
“You know what?” Harry said to Ron and Hermione as they
entered the Great Hall. “I think we'd better check with Puddlemere United
whether Oliver Wood's been killed during a training session, because Angelina
seems to be channelling his spirit.”
“What d'you reckon are the odds of
Umbridge letting you off on Friday?” said Ron sceptically, as they sat down at
the Gryffindor table.
“Less than zero,” said Harry glumly, tipping lamb chops
on to his plate and starting to eat. “Better try, though, hadn't I? I'll offer
to do two more detentions or something, I dunno..." He swallowed a mouthful of
potato and added, “I hope she doesn't keep me too long this evening. You realise
we've got to write three essays, practise Vanishing Spells for McGonagall, work
out a counter-charm for Flitwick, finish the Bowtruckle drawing and start that
stupid dream diary for Trelawney?”
Ron moaned and for some reason glanced up
at the ceiling.
“And it looks like it's going to rain.”
“What's that got
to do with our homework?” said Hermione, her eyebrows raised.
“Nothing,” said
Ron at once, his ears reddening.
At five to five Harry bade the other two
goodbye and set off for Umbridge's office on the third floor. When he knocked on
the door she called, “Come in,” in a sugary voice. He entered cautiously,
looking around.
He had known this office under three of its previous
occupants.
In the days when Gilderoy Lockhart had lived here it had been
plastered in beaming portraits of himself. When Lupin had occupied it, it was
likely you would meet some fascinating Dark creature in a cage or tank if you
came to call. In the impostor Moody's days it had been packed with various
instruments and artefacts for the detection of wrongdoing and
concealment.
Now, however, it looked totally unrecognisable. The surfaces had
all been draped in lacy covers and cloths. There were several vases full of
dried flowers, each one residing on its own doily, and on one of the walls was a
collection of ornamental plates, each decorated with a large technicolour kitten
wearing a different bow around its neck. These were so foul that Harry stared at
them, transfixed, until Professor Umbridge spoke again.
“Good evening, Mr
Potter.”
Harry started and looked around. He had not noticed her at first
because she was wearing a luridly flowered set of robes that blended only too
well with the tablecloth on the desk behind her.
“Evening, Professor
Umbridge,” Harry said stiffly.
“Well, sit down,” she said, pointing towards a
small table draped in lace beside which she had drawn up a straight-backed
chair. A piece of blank parchment lay on the table, apparently waiting for
him.
“Er,” said Harry, without moving. “Professor Umbridge. Er—before we
start, I—I wanted to ask you a...a favour.”
Her bulging eyes
narrowed.
“Oh, yes?”
“Well, I'm...I'm in the Gryffindor Quidditch team.
And I was supposed to be at the tryouts for the new Keeper at five o'clock on
Friday and I was—was wondering whether I could skip detention that night and do
it—do it another night...instead...”
He knew long before he reached the end
of his sentence that it was no good.
“Oh, no,” said Umbridge, smiling so
widely that she looked as though she had just swallowed a particularly juicy
fly. “Oh, no, no, no. This is your punishment for spreading evil, nasty,
attention-seeking stories, Mr Potter, and punishments certainly cannot be
adjusted to suit the guilty one's convenience. No, you will come here at five
o'clock tomorrow, and the next day, and on Friday too, and you will do your
detentions as planned. I think it rather a good thing that you are missing
something you really want to do. It ought to reinforce the lesson I am trying to
teach you.”
Harry felt the blood surge to his head and heard a thumping noise
in his ears. So he told “evil, nasty, attention-seeking stones”, did he?
She
was watching him with her head slightly to one side, still smiling widely, as
though she knew exactly what he was thinking and was waiting to see whether he
would start shouting again. With a massive effort, Harry looked away from her,
dropped his schoolbag beside the straight-backed chair and sat down.
There,”
said Umbridge sweetly, “we're getting better at controlling our temper already,
aren't we? Now, you are going to be doing some lines for me, Mr Potter. No, not
with your quill,” she added, as Harry bent down to open his bag. “You're going
to be using a rather special one of mine. Here you are.”
She handed him a
long, thin black quill with an unusually sharp point.
“I want you to write, I
must not tell lies,” she told him softly.
“How many times?” Harry asked, with
a creditable imitation of politeness.
“Oh, as long as it takes for the
message to sink in,” said Umbridge sweetly. “Off you go.”
She moved over to
her desk, sat down and bent over a stack of parchment that looked like essays
for marking. Harry raised the sharp black quill, then realised what was
missing.
“You haven't given me any ink,” he said.
“Oh, you won't need
ink,” said Professor Umbridge, with the merest suggestion of a laugh in her
voice.
Harry placed the point of the quill on the paper and wrote: I must not
tell lies.
He let out a gasp of pain. The words had appeared on the parchment
in what appeared to be shining red ink. At the same time, the words had appeared
on the back of Harry’s right hand, cut into his skin as though traced there by a
scalpel—yet even as he stared at the shining cut, the skin healed over again,
leaving the place where it had been slightly redder than before but quite
smooth.
Harry looked round at Umbridge. She was watching him, her wide,
toadlike mouth stretched in a smile.
“Yes?”
“Nothing,” said Harry
quietly.
He looked back at the parchment, placed the quill on it once more,
wrote I must not tell lies, and felt the searing pain on the back of his hand
for a second time; once again, the words had been cut into his skin; once again,
they healed over seconds later.
And on it went. Again and again Harry wrote
the words on the parchment in what he soon came to realise was not ink, but his
own blood. And, again and again, the words were cut into the back of his hand,
healed, and reappeared the next time he set quill to parchment.
Darkness fell
outside Umbridge's window. Harry did not ask when he would be allowed to stop.
He did not even check his watch. He knew she was watching him for signs of
weakness and he was not going to show any, not even if he had to sit there all
night, cutting open his own hand with this quill...
“Come here,” she said,
after what seemed hours.
He stood up. His hand was stinging painfully. When
he looked down at it he saw that the cut had healed, but that the skin there was
red raw.
“Hand,” she said.
He extended it. She took it in her own. Harry
repressed a shudder as she touched him with her thick, stubby fingers on which
she wore a number of ugly old rings.
“Tut, tut, I don't seem to have made
much of an impression yet,” she said, smiling. “Well, we'll just have to try
again tomorrow evening, won't we? You may go.”
Harry left her office without
a word. The school was quite deserted; it was surely past midnight. He walked
slowly up the corridor, then, when he had turned the corner and was sure she
would not hear him, broke into a run.
***
He had not had time to practise
Vanishing Spells, had not written a single dream in his dream diary and had not
finished the drawing of the Bowtruckle, nor had he written his essays. He
skipped breakfast next morning to scribble down a couple of made-up dreams for
Divination, their first lesson, and was surprised to find a dishevelled Ron
keeping him company.
“How come you didn't do it last night?” Harry asked, as
Ron stared wildly around the common room for inspiration. Ron, who had been fast
asleep when Harry got back to the dormitory, muttered something about “doing
other stuff”, bent low over his parchment and scrawled a few words.
“That'll
have to do,” he said, slamming the diary shut. “I've said I dreamed I was buying
a new pair of shoes, she can't make anything weird out of that, can
she?”
They hurried off to North Tower together.
“How was detention with
Umbridge, anyway? What did she make you do?”
Harry hesitated for a fraction
of a second, then said, “Lines.”
“That's not too bad, then, eh?” said
Ron.
“Nope,” said Harry.
“Hey—I forgot—did she let you off for
Friday?”
“No,” said Harry.
Ron groaned sympathetically.
It was another
bad day for Harry; he was one of the worst in Transfiguration, not having
practised Vanishing Spells at all. He had to give up his lunch hour to complete
the picture of the Bowtruckle and, meanwhile, Professors McGonagall,
Grubbly-Plank and Sinistra gave them yet more homework, which he had no prospect
of finishing that evening because of his second detention with Umbridge. To cap
it all, Angelina Johnson tracked him down at dinner again and, on learning that
he would not be able to attend Friday's Keeper tryouts, told him she was not at
all impressed by his attitude and that she expected players who wished to remain
on the team to put training before their other commitments.
“I'm in
detention!” Harry yelled after her as she stalked away. “D'you think I'd rather
be stuck in a room with that old toad or playing Quidditch?”
“At least it's
only lines,” said Hermione consolingly, as Harry sank back on to his bench and
looked down at his steak and kidney pie, which he no longer fancied very much.
“It's not as if it's a dreadful punishment, really...”
Harry opened his
mouth, closed it again and nodded. He was not really sure why he was not telling
Ron and Hermione exactly what was happening in Umbridge's room: he only knew
that he did not want to see their looks of horror; that would make the whole
thing seem worse and therefore more difficult to face. He also felt dimly that
this was between himself and Umbridge, a private battle of wills, and he was not
going to give her the satisfaction of hearing that he had complained about
it.
“I can't believe how much homework we've got,” said Ron
miserably.
“Well, why didn't you do any last night?” Hermione asked him.
“Where were you, anyway?”
“I was...I fancied a walk,” said Ron
shiftily.
Harry had the distinct impression that he was not alone in
concealing things at the moment.
***
The second detention was just as bad
as the previous one. The skin on the back of Harry's hand became irritated more
quickly now and was soon red and inflamed. Harry thought it unlikely that it
would keep healing as effectively for long. Soon the cut would remain etched
into his hand and Umbridge would, perhaps, be satisfied. He let no gasp of pain
escape him, however, and from the moment of entering the room to the moment of
his dismissal, again past midnight, he said nothing but “good evening” and
“goodnight”.
His homework situation, however, was now desperate, and when he
returned to the Gryffindor common room he did not, though exhausted, go to bed,
but opened his books and began Snape's moonstone essay. It was half past two by
the time he had finished it. He knew he had done a poor job, but there was no
help for it; unless he had something to give in he would be in detention with
Snape next. He then dashed off answers to the questions Professor McGonagall had
set them, cobbled together something on the proper handling of Bowtruckles for
Professor Grubbly-Plank, and staggered up to bed, where he fell fully clothed on
top of the covers and fell asleep immediately.
***
Thursday passed in a
haze of tiredness. Ron seemed very sleepy too, though Harry could not see why he
should be. Harry's third detention passed in the same way as the previous two,
except that after two hours the words “I must not tell lies” did not fade from
the back of Harry’s hand, but remained scratched there, oozing droplets of
blood. The pause in the pointed quill's scratching made Professor Umbridge look
up.
“Ah,” she said softly, moving around her desk to examine his hand
herself. “Good. That ought to serve as a reminder to you, oughtn't it? You may
leave for tonight.”
“Do I still have to come back tomorrow?” said Harry
picking up his schoolbag with his left hand rather than his smarting right
one.
“Oh yes,” said Professor Umbridge, smiling as widely as before. “Yes, I
think we can etch the message a little deeper with another evening's
work.”
Harry had never before considered the possibility that there might be
another teacher in the world he hated more than Snape, but as he walked back
towards Gryffindor Tower he had to admit he had found a strong contender. She's
evil, he thought, as he climbed a staircase to the seventh floor, she's an evil,
twisted, mad old-
“Ron?”
He had reached the top of the stairs, turned
right and almost walked into Ron, who was lurking behind a statue of Lachlan the
Lanky, clutching his broomstick. He gave a great leap of surprise when he saw
Harry and attempted to hide his new Cleansweep Eleven behind his back.
“What
are you doing?”
“Er—nothing. What are you doing?”
Harry frowned at
him.
“Come on, you can tell me! What are you hiding here for?”
“I'm—I'm
hiding from Fred and George, if you must know,” said Ron. “They just went past
with a bunch of first-years, I bet they're testing stuff on them again. I mean,
they can't do it in the common room now, can they, not with Hermione
there.”
He was talking in a very fast, feverish way.
“But what have you
got your broom for, you haven't been flying, have you?” Harry
asked.
“I—well—well, OK, I'll tell you, but don't laugh, all right?” Ron said
defensively, turning redder with every second. “I—I thought I'd try out for
Gryffindor Keeper now I've got a decent broom. There. Go on. Laugh.”
“I'm not
laughing,” said Harry. Ron blinked. “It's a brilliant idea! It'd be really cool
if you got on the team! I've never seen you play Keeper, are you good?”
“I'm
not bad,” said Ron, who looked immensely relieved at Harry's reaction. “Charlie,
Fred and George always made me Keep for them when they were training during the
holidays.”
“So you've been practising tonight?”
“Every evening since
Tuesday...just on my own, though. I've been trying to bewitch Quaffles to fly at
me, but it hasn't been easy and I don't know how much use it'll be.” Ron looked
nervous and anxious. “Fred and George are going to laugh themselves stupid when
I turn up for the tryouts. They haven't stopped taking the mickey out of me
since I got made a prefect.”
“I wish I was going to be there,” said Harry
bitterly, as they set off together towards the common room.
“Yeah, so
do—Harry, what's that on the back of your hand?”
Harry, who had just
scratched his nose with his free right hand, tried to hide it, but had as much
success as Ron with his Cleansweep.
“It's just a cut—it's
nothing—it's—”
But Ron had grabbed Harry's forearm and pulled the back of
Harry's hand up level with his eyes. There was a pause, during which he stared
at the words carved into the skin, then, looking sick, he released Harry.
“I
thought you said she was just giving you lines?”
Harry hesitated, but after
all, Ron had been honest with him, so he told Ron the truth about the hours he
had been spending in Umbridge's office.
“The old hag!” Ron said in a revolted
whisper as they came to a halt in front of the Fat Lady, who was dozing
peacefully with her head against her frame. “She's sick! Go to McGonagall, say
something!”
“No,” said Harry at once. “I'm not giving her the satisfaction of
knowing she's got to me.”
“Got to you? You can't let her get away with
this!”
“I don't know how much power McGonagall's got over her,” said
Harry.
“Dumbledore, then, tell Dumbledore!”
“No,” said Harry
flatly.
“Why not?”
“He's got enough on his mind,” said Harry, but that was
not the true reason. He was not going to go to Dumbledore for help when
Dumbledore had not spoken to him once since June.
“Well, I reckon you
should—” Ron began, but he was interrupted by the Fat Lady, who had been
watching them sleepily and now burst out, “Are you going to give me the password
or will I have to stay awake all night waiting for you to finish your
conversation?”
***
Friday dawned sullen and sodden as the rest of the
week. Though Harry automatically glanced towards the staff table when he entered
the Great Hall, it was without any real hope of seeing Hagrid, and he turned his
mind immediately to his more pressing problems, such as the mountainous pile of
homework he had to do and the prospect of yet another detention with
Umbridge.
Two things sustained Harry that day. One was the thought that it
was almost the weekend; the other was that, dreadful though his final detention
with Umbridge was sure to be, he had a distant view of the Quidditch pitch from
her window and might, with luck, be able to see something of Ron's tryout. These
were rather feeble rays of light, it was true, but Harry was grateful for
anything that might lighten his present darkness; he had never had a worse first
week of term at Hogwarts.
At five o'clock that evening he knocked on
Professor Umbridge's office door for what he sincerely hoped would be the final
time, and was told to enter. The blank parchment lay ready for him on the
lace-covered table, the pointed black quill beside it.
“You know what to do,
Mr Potter,” said Umbridge, smiling sweetly at him.
Harry picked up the quill
and glanced through the window. If he just shifted his chair an inch or so to
the right...on the pretext of shifting himself closer to the table, he managed
it. He now had a distant view of the Gryffindor Quidditch team soaring up and
down the pitch, while half a dozen black figures stood at the foot of the three
high goalposts, apparently awaiting their turn to Keep. It was impossible to
tell which one was Ron at this distance.
I must not tell lies, Harry wrote.
The cut in the back of his right hand opened and began to bleed atresh.
I
must not tell lies. The cut dug deeper, stinging and smarting.
I must not
tell lies. Blood trickled down his wrist.
He chanced another glance out of
the window. Whoever was defending the goalposts now was doing a very poor job
indeed. Katie Bell scored twice in the few seconds Harry dared to watch. Hoping
very much that the Keeper wasn't Ron, he dropped his eyes back to the parchment
shining with blood.
I must not tell lies.
I must not tell lies.
He
looked up whenever he thought he could risk it; when he could hear the
scratching of Umbridges quill or the opening of a desk drawer. The third person
to try out was pretty good, the fourth was terrible, the fifth dodged a Bludger
exceptionally well but then fumbled an easy save. The sky was darkening, and
Harry doubted he would be able to see the sixth and seventh people at all.
I
must not tell lies.
I must not tell lies.
The parchment was now dotted
with drops of blood from the back of his hand, which was searing with pain. When
he next looked up, night had fallen and the Quidditch pitch was no longer
visible.
“Let's see if you've got the message yet, shall we?” said Umbridges
soft voice half an hour later.
She moved towards him, stretching out her
short ringed fingers for his arm. And then, as she took hold of him to examine
the words now cut into his skin, pain seared, not across the back of his hand,
but across the scar on his forehead. At the same time, he had a most peculiar
sensation somewhere around his midriff.
He wrenched his arm out of her grip
and leapt to his feet, staring at her. She looked back at him, a smile
stretching her wide, slack mouth.
“Yes, it hurts, doesn't it?” she said
softly.
He did not answer. His heart was thumping very hard and fast. Was she
talking about his hand or did she know what he had just felt in his
forehead?
“Well, I think I've made my point, Mr Potter. You may go.”
He
caught up his schoolbag and left the room as quickly as he could.
Stay calm,
he told himself, as he sprinted up the stairs. Stay calm, it doesn't necessarily
mean what you think it means...
“Mimbulus mimbletonia!” he gasped at the Fat
Lady, who swung forwards once more.
A roar of sound greeted him. Ron came
running towards him, beaming all over his face and slopping Butterbeer down his
front from the goblet he was clutching.
“Harry, I did it, I'm in, I'm
Keeper!”
“What? Oh—brilliant!” said Harry, trying to smile naturally, while
his heart continued to race and his hand throbbed and bled.
“Have a
Butterbeer.” Ron pressed a bottle on him. “I can't believe it—where's Hermione
gone?”
“She's there,” said Fred, who was also swigging Butterbeer, and
pointed to an armchair by the fire. Hermione was dozing in it, her drink tipping
precariously in her hand.
“Well, she said she was pleased when I told her,”
said Ron, looking slightly put out.
“Let her sleep,” said George hastily. It
was a few moments before Harry noticed that several of the first-years gathered
around them bore unmistakeable signs of recent nosebleeds.
“Come here, Ron,
and see if Oliver's old robes fit you,” called Katie Bell, “we can take off his
name and put yours on instead...”
As Ron moved away, Angelina came striding
up to Harry.
“Sorry I was a bit short with you earlier, Potter,” she said
abruptly. “It's stressful this managing lark, you know, I'm starting to think I
was a bit hard on Wood sometimes.” She was watching Ron over the rim of her
goblet with a slight frown on her face.
“Look, I know he's your best mate,
but he's not fabulous,” she said bluntly. “I think with a bit of training he'll
be all right, though. He comes from a family of good Quidditch players. I'm
banking on him turning out to have a bit more talent than he showed today, to be
honest. Vicky Frobisher and Geoffrey Hooper both flew better this evening, but
Hoopers a real whiner, he's always moaning about something or other, and Vicky's
involved in all sorts of societies. She admitted herself that if training
clashed with her Charms Club she'd put Charms first. Anyway, we're having a
practice session at two o'clock tomorrow, so just make sure you're there this
time. And do me a favour and help Ron as much as you can, OK?”
He nodded, and
Angelina strolled back to Alicia Spinnet. Harry moved over to sit next to
Hermione, who awoke with a jerk as he put down his bag.
“Oh, Harry, it's
you...good about Ron, isn't it?” she said blearily. “I'm just so-so—so tired,”
she yawned. “I was up until one o'clock making more hats. They're disappearing
like mad!”
And sure enough, now that he looked, Harry saw that there were
woolly hats concealed all around the room where unwary elves might accidentally
pick them up.
“Great,” said Harry distractedly; if he did not tell somebody
soon, he would burst. “Listen, Hermione, I was just up in Umbridge's office and
she touched my arm” Hermione listened closely. When Harry had finished, she said
slowly “You're worried You-Know-Who's controlling her like he controlled
Quirrell?”
“Well,” said Harry, dropping his voice, “it's a possibility, isn't
it?”
“I suppose so,” said Hermione, though she sounded unconvinced. “But I
don't think he can be possessing her the way he possessed Quirrell, I mean, he's
properly alive again now, isn't he, he's got his own body, he wouldn't need to
share someone else's. He could have her under the Imperius Curse, I
suppose...”
Harry watched Fred, George and Lee Jordan juggling empty
Butterbeer bottles for a moment. Then Hermione said, “But last year your scar
hurt when nobody was touching you, and didn't Dumbledore say it had to do with
what You-Know-Who was feeling at the time? I mean, maybe this hasn't got
anything to do with Umbridge at all, maybe it's just coincidence it happened
while you were with her?”
“She's evil,” said Harry flatly.
“Twisted.”
“She's horrible, yes, but...Harry, I think you ought to tell
Dumbledore your scar hurt.”
It was the second time in two days he had been
advised to go to Dumbledore and his answer to Hermione was just the same as his
answer to Ron.
“I'm not bothering him with this. Like you just said, its not
a big deal. It's been hurting on and off all summer—it was just a bit worse
tonight, that's all—”
“Harry, I'm sure Dumbledore would want to be bothered
by this—”
“Yeah,” said Harry, before he could stop himself, “that's the only
bit of me Dumbledore cares about, isn't it, my scar?”
“Don't say that, it's
not true!”
“I think I'll write and tell Sirius about it, see what he
thinks—”
“Harry, you can't put something like that in a letter!” said
Hermione, looking alarmed. “Don't you remember, Moody told us to be careful what
we put in writing! We just can't guarantee owls aren't being intercepted any
more!”
“All right, all right, I won't tell him, then!” said Harry irritably.
He got to his feet. “I'm going to bed. Tell Ron for me, will you?”
“Oh no,”
said Hermione, looking relieved, “if you're going that means I can go too,
without being rude. I'm absolutely exhausted and I want to make some more hats
tomorrow. Listen, you can help me if you like, it's quite fun, I'm getting
better, I can do patterns and bobbles and all sorts of things now.”
Harry
looked into her face, which was shining with glee, and tried to look as though
he was vaguely tempted by this offer.
“Er...no, I don't think I will,
thanks,” he said. “Er- not tomorrow. I've got loads of homework to do...”
And
he traipsed off to the boys’ stairs, leaving her looking slightly
disappointed.