THE ADVANCE
GUARD
I've just been attacked by Dementors and I might be
expelled from Hogwarts. I want to know what's going on and when I'm going to get
out of here.
Harry copied these words on to three separate pieces of
parchment the moment he reached the desk in his dark bedroom. He addressed the
first to Sirius, the second to Ron and the third to Hermione. His owl, Hedwig,
was off hunting; her cage stood empty on the desk. Harry paced the bedroom
waiting for her to come back, his head pounding, his brain too busy for sleep
even though his eyes stung and itched with tiredness. His back ached from
hauling Dudley home, and the two lumps on his head where the window and Dudley
had hit him were throbbing painfully.
Up and down he paced, consumed with
anger and frustration, grinding his teeth and clenching his fists, casting angry
looks out at the empty, star-strewn sky every time he passed the window.
Dementors sent to get him, Mrs Figg and Mundungus Fletcher tailing him in
secret, then suspension from Hogwarts and a hearing at the Ministry of Magic—and
still no one was telling him what was going on.
And what, what, had that
Howler been about? Whose voice had echoed so horribly, so menacingly, through
the kitchen?
Why was he still trapped here without information? Why was
everyone treating him like some naughty kid? Don't do any more magic, stay in
the house...
He kicked his school trunk as he passed it, but far from
relieving his anger he felt worse, as he now had a sharp pain in his toe to deal
with in addition to the pain in the rest of his body.
Just as he limped past
the window, Hedwig soared through it with a soft rustle of wings like a small
ghost.
“About time!” Harry snarled, as she landed lightly on top of her cage.
“You can put that down, I've got work for you!”
Hedwig's large, round, amber
eyes gazed at him reproachfully over the dead frog clamped in her beak.
“Come
here,” said Harry, picking up the three small rolls of parchment and a leather
thong and tying the scrolls to her scaly leg. Take these straight to Sirius, Ron
and Hermione and don't come back here without good long replies. Keep pecking
them till they've written decent-length answers if you've got to.
Understand?”
Hedwig gave a muffled hooting noise, her beak still full of
frog.
“Get going, then,” said Harry.
She took off immediately. The moment
she'd gone, Harry threw himself down on his bed without undressing and stared at
the dark ceiling. In addition to every other miserable feeling, he now felt
guilty that he'd been irritable with Hedwig; she was the only friend he had at
number four, Privet Drive. But he'd make it up to her when she came back with
the answers from Sirius, Ron and Hermione.
They were bound to write back
quickly; they couldn't possibly ignore a Dementor attack. He'd probably wake up
tomorrow to three fat letters full of sympathy and plans for his immediate
removal to The Burrow. And with that comforting idea, sleep rolled over him,
stifling all further thought.
***
But Hedwig didn't return next morning.
Harry spent the day in his bedroom, leaving it only to go to the bathroom. Three
times that day Aunt Petunia shoved food into his room through the cat-flap Uncle
Vernon had installed three summers ago. Every time Harry heard her approaching
he tried to question her about the Howler, but he might as well have
interrogated the doorknob for all the answers he got. Otherwise, the Dursleys
kept well clear of his bedroom. Harry couldn't see the point of forcing his
company on them; another row would achieve nothing except perhaps make him so
angry he'd perform more illegal magic.
So it went on for three whole days.
Harry was alternately filled with restless energy that made him unable to settle
to anything, during which time he paced his bedroom, furious at the whole lot of
them for leaving him to stew in this mess; and with a lethargy so complete that
he could lie on his bed for an hour at a time, staring dazedly into space,
aching with dread at the thought of the Ministry hearing.
What if they ruled
against him? What if he was expelled and his wand was snapped in half? What
would he do, where would he go? He could not return to living full-time with the
Dursleys, not now he knew the other world, the one to which he really belonged.
Might he be able to move into Sirius’s house, as Sirius had suggested a year
ago, before he had been forced to flee from the Ministry? Would Harry be allowed
to live there alone, given that he was still underage? Or would the matter of
where he went next be decided for him? Had his breach of the International
Statute of Secrecy been severe enough to land him in a cell in Azkaban? Whenever
this thought occurred, Harry invariably slid off his bed and began pacing
again.
On the fourth night after Hedwig's departure Harry was lying in one of
his apathetic phases, staring at the ceiling, his exhausted mind quite blank,
when his uncle entered his bedroom. Harry looked slowly around at him. Uncle
Vernon was wearing his best suit and an expression of enormous
smugness.
“We're going out,” he said.
“Sorry?”
“We—that is to say, your
aunt, Dudley and I—are going out.”
“Fine,” said Harry dully, looking back at
the ceiling.
“You are not to leave your bedroom while we are
away.”
“OK.”
“You are not to touch the television, the stereo, or any of
our possessions.”
“Right.”
“You are not to steal food from the
fridge.”
“OK.”
“I am going to lock your door.”
“You do that.”
Uncle
Vernon glared at Harry, clearly suspicious of this lack of argument, then
stomped out of the room and closed the door behind him. Harry heard the key turn
in the lock and Uncle Vernon's footsteps walking heavily down the stairs. A few
minutes later he heard the slamming of car doors, the rumble of an engine, and
the unmistakable sound of the car sweeping out of the drive.
Harry had no
particular feeling about the Dursleys leaving. It made no difference to him
whether they were in the house or not. He could not even summon the energy to
get up and turn on his bedroom light. The room grew steadily darker around him
as he lay listening to the night sounds through the window he kept open all the
time, waiting for the blessed moment when Hedwig returned. The empty house
creaked around him. The pipes gurgled. Harry lay there in a kind of stupor,
thinking of nothing, suspended in misery.
Then, quite distinctly, he heard a
crash in the kitchen below. He sat bolt upright, listening intently. The
Dursleys couldn't be back, it was much too soon, and in any case he hadn't heard
their car.
There was silence for a few seconds, then voices. Burglars, he
thought, sliding off the bed on to his feet—but a split second later it occurred
to him that burglars would keep their voices down, and whoever was moving around
in the kitchen was certainly not troubling to do so.
He snatched up his wand
from the bedside table and stood facing his bedroom door, listening with all his
might. Next moment, he jumped as the lock gave a loud click and his door swung
open. Harry stood motionless, staring through the open doorway at the dark
upstairs landing, straining his ears for further sounds, but none came. He
hesitated for a moment, then moved swiftly and silently out of his room to the
head of the stairs.
His heart shot upwards into his throat. There were people
standing in the shadowy hall below, silhouetted against the streetlight glowing
through the glass door; eight or nine of them, all, as far as he could see,
looking up at him.
“Lower your wand, boy, before you take someone's eye out,”
said a low, growling voice.
Harry's heart was thumping uncontrollably. He
knew that voice, but he did not lower his wand.
“Professor Moody?” he said
uncertainly.
“I don't know so much about "Professor",” growled the voice,
“never got round to much teaching, did I? Get down here, we want to see you
properly.”
Harry lowered his wand slightly but did not relax his grip on it,
nor did he move. He had very good reason to be suspicious. He had recently spent
nine months in what he had thought was Mad-Eye Moody's company only to find out
that it wasn't Moody at all, but an impostor; an impostor, moreover, who had
tried to kill Harry before being unmasked. But before he could make a decision
about what to do next, a second, slightly hoarse voice floated
upstairs.
“It's all right, Harry. We've come to take you away.”
Harry's
heart leapt. He knew that voice, too, though he hadn't heard it for over a
year.
“P-Professor Lupin?” he said disbelievingly. “Is that you?”
“Why are
we all standing in the dark?” said a third voice, this one completely
unfamiliar, a woman's. “Lumos.”
A wand-tip flared, illuminating the hall with
magical light. Harry blinked. The people below were crowded around the foot of
the stairs, gazing up at him intently, some craning their heads for a better
look.
Remus Lupin stood nearest to him. Though still quite young, Lupin
looked tired and rather ill; he had more grey hairs than when Harry had last
said goodbye to him and his robes were more patched and shabbier than ever.
Nevertheless, he was smiling broadly at Harry, who tried to smile back despite
his state of shock.
“Oooh, he looks just like I thought he would,” said the
witch who was holding her lit wand aloft. She looked the youngest there; she had
a pale heart-shaped face, dark twinkling eyes, and short spiky hair that was a
violent shade of violet. “Wotcher, Harry!”
“Yeah, I see what you mean,
Remus,” said a bald black wizard standing furthest back—he had a deep, slow
voice and wore a single gold hoop in his ear—“he looks exactly like
James.”
“Except the eyes,” said a wheezy-voiced, silver-haired wizard at the
back. “Lily's eyes.”
Mad-Eye Moody, who had long grizzled grey hair and a
large chunk missing from his nose, was squinting suspiciously at Harry through
his mismatched eyes. One eye was small, dark and beady, the other large, round
and electric blue—the magical eye that could see through walls, doors and the
back of Moody's own head. “Are you quite sure it's him, Lupin?” he growled.
“It'd be a nice lookout if we bring back some Death Eater impersonating him. We
ought to ask him something only the real Potter would know. Unless anyone
brought any Veritaserum?”
“Harry, what form does your Patronus take?” Lupin
asked. “A stag,” said Harry nervously. “That's him, Mad-Eye,” said
Lupin.
Very conscious of everybody still staring at him, Harry descended the
stairs, stowing his wand in the back pocket of his jeans as he came.
“Don't
put your wand there, boy!” roared Moody. “What if it ignited? Better wizards
than you have lost buttocks, you know!”
“Who d'you know who's lost a
buttock?” the violet-haired woman asked Mad-Eye interestedly.
“Never you
mind, you just keep your wand out of your back pocket!” growled Mad-Eye.
“Elementary wand-safety, nobody bothers about it any more.” He stumped off
towards the kitchen. “And I saw that,” he added irritably, as the woman rolled
her eyes towards the ceiling.
Lupin held out his hand and shook Harry's. “How
are you?” he asked, looking closely at Harry. “T-fine...”
Harry could hardly
believe this was real. Four weeks with nothing, not the tiniest hint of a plan
to remove him from Privet Drive, and suddenly a whole bunch of wizards was
standing matter-of-factly in the house as though this was a long-standing
arrangement. He glanced at the people surrounding Lupin; they were still gazing
avidly at him. He felt very conscious of the fact that he had not combed his
hair for four days.
“I'm—you're really lucky the Dursleys are out...” he
mumbled.
“Lucky, ha!” said the violet-haired woman. “It was me who lured them
out of the way. Sent a letter by Muggle post telling them they'd been
short-listed for the All-England Best Kept Suburban Lawn Competition. They're
heading off to the prize-giving right now...or they think they are.”
Harry
had a fleeting vision of Uncle Vernon's face when he realised there was no
All-England Best Kept Suburban Lawn Competition.
“We are leaving, aren't we?”
he asked. “Soon?”
“Almost at once,” said Lupin, “we're just waiting for the
all-clear.”
“Where are we going? The Burrow?” Harry asked hopefully.
“Not
The Burrow, no,” said Lupin, motioning Harry towards the kitchen; the little
knot of wizards followed, all still eyeing Harry curiously. “Too risky. We've
set up Headquarters somewhere un-detectable. It's taken a while...”
Mad-Eye
Moody was now sitting at the kitchen table swigging from a hip flask, his
magical eye spinning in all directions, taking in the Dursleys’ many
labour-saving appliances.
“This is Alastor Moody, Harry” Lupin continued,
pointing towards Moody.
“Yeah, I know,” said Harry uncomfortably. It felt odd
to be introduced to somebody he'd thought he'd known for a year.
“And this is
Nymphadora—”
“Don't call me Nymphadora, Remus,” said the young witch with a
shudder, “it's Tonks.”
“Nymphadora Tonks, who prefers to be known by her
surname only,” finished Lupin.
“So would you if your fool of a mother had
called you Nymphadora,” muttered Tonks.
“And this is Kingsley Shacklebolt.”
He indicated the tall black wizard, who bowed. “Elphias Doge.” The wheezy-voiced
wizard nodded. “Dedalus Diggle—”
“We've met before,” squeaked the excitable
Diggle, dropping his violet-coloured top hat.
“Emmeline Vance.” A
stately-looking witch in an emerald green shawl inclined her head. “Sturgis
Podmore.” A square-jawed wizard with thick straw-coloured hair winked. “And
Hestia Jones.” A pink-cheeked, black-haired witch waved from next to the
toaster.
Harry inclined his head awkwardly at each of them as they were
introduced. He wished they would look at something other than him; it was as
though he had suddenly been ushered on-stage. He also wondered why so many of
them were there.
“A surprising number of people volunteered to come and get
you,” said Lupin, as though he had read Harry's mind; the corners of his mouth
twitched slightly.
“Yeah, well, the more the better,” said Moody darkly.
“We're your guard, Potter.”
“We're just waiting for the signal to tell us
it's safe to set off,” said Lupin, glancing out of the kitchen window. “We've
got about fifteen minutes.”
“Very clean, aren't they, these Muggles?” said
the witch called Tonks, who was looking around the kitchen with great interest.
“My dad's Muggle-born and he's a right old slob. I suppose it varies, just as it
does with wizards?”
“Er—yeah,” said Harry. “Look—” he turned back to Lupin,
“what's going on, I haven't heard anything from anyone, what's Vol—?”
Several
of the witches and wizards made odd hissing noises; Dedalus Diggle dropped his
hat again and Moody growled, “Shut up!”
“What?” said Harry.
“We're not
discussing anything here, it's too risky,” said Moody, turning his normal eye on
Harry. His magical eye remained focused on the ceiling. “Damn it,” he added
angrily, putting a hand up to the magical eye, “it keeps getting stuck—ever
since that scum wore it.”
And with a nasty squelching sound much like a
plunger being pulled from a sink, he popped out his eye.
“Mad-Eye, you do
know that's disgusting, don't you?” said Tonks conversationally.
“Get me a
glass of water, would you, Harry,” requested Moody.
Harry crossed to the
dishwasher, took out a clean glass and filled it with water at the sink, still
watched eagerly by the band of wizards. Their relentless staring was starting to
annoy him.
“Cheers,” said Moody, when Harry handed him the glass. He dropped
the magical eyeball into the water and prodded it up and down; the eye whizzed
around, staring at them all in turn. “I want three hundred and sixty degrees
visibility on the return journey.”
“How're we getting—wherever we're going?”
Harry asked.
“Brooms,” said Lupin. “Only way. You're too young to Apparate,
they'll be watching the Floo Network and it's more than our life's worth to set
up an unauthorised Portkey.”
“Remus says you're a good flier,” said Kingsley
Shacklebolt in his deep voice.
“He's excellent,” said Lupin, who was checking
his watch. “Anyway, you'd better go and get packed, Harry, we want to be ready
to go when the signal comes.”
“I'll come and help you,” said Tonks
brightly.
She followed Harry back into the hall and up the stairs, looking
around with much curiosity and interest.
“Funny place,” she said. “It's a bit
too clean, d'you know what I mean? Bit unnatural. Oh, this is better,” she
added, as they entered Harry's bedroom and he turned on the light.
His room
was certainly much messier than the rest of the house. Confined to it for four
days in a very bad mood, Harry had not bothered tidying up after himself. Most
of the books he owned were strewn over the floor where he'd tried to distract
himself with each in turn and thrown it aside; Hedwig's cage needed cleaning out
and was starting to smell; and his trunk lay open, revealing a jumbled mixture
of Muggle clothes and wizards’ robes that had spilled on to the floor around
it.
Harry started picking up books and throwing them hastily into his trunk.
Tonks paused at his open wardrobe to look critically at her reflection in the
mirror on the inside of the door.
“You know, I don't think violet's really my
colour,” she said pen-sivey, tugging at a lock of spiky hair. “D'you think it
makes me look a bit peaky?”
“Er—” said Harry, looking up at her over the top
of Quidditch Teams of Britain and Ireland.
“Yeah, it does,” said Tonks
decisively. She screwed up her eyes in a strained expression as though she was
struggling to remember something. A second later, her hair had turned bubble-gum
pink.
“How did you do that?” said Harry, gaping at her as she opened her eyes
again.
“I'm a Metamorphmagus,” she said, looking back at her reflection and
turning her head so that she could see her hair from all directions. “It means I
can change my appearance at will,” she added, spotting Harry’s puzzled
expression in the mirror behind her. “I was born one. I got top marks in
Concealment and Disguise during Auror training without any study at all, it was
great.”
“You're an Auror?” said Harry, impressed. Being a Dark-wizard-catcher
was the only career he'd ever considered after Hogwarts.
“Yeah,” said Tonks,
looking proud. “Kingsley is as well, he's a bit higher up than me, though. I
only qualified a year ago. Nearly failed on Stealth and Tracking. I'm dead
clumsy, did you hear me break that plate when we arrived downstairs?”
“Can
you learn how to be a Metamorphmagus?” Harry asked her, straightening up,
completely forgetting about packing.
Tonks chuckled.
“Bet you wouldn't
mind hiding that scar sometimes, eh?”
Her eyes found the lightning-shaped
scar on Harry’s forehead.
“No, I wouldn't mind,” Harry mumbled, turning away.
He did not like people staring at his scar.
“Well, you'll have to learn the
hard way, I'm afraid,” said Tonks. “Metamorphmagi are really rare, they're born,
not made. Most wizards need to use a wand, or potions, to change their
appearance. But we've got to get going, Harry, we're supposed to be packing,”
she added guiltily, looking around at all the mess on the floor.
“Oh—yeah,”
said Harry, grabbing a few more books.
“Don't be stupid, it'll be much
quicker if I—pack!” cried Tonks, waving her wand in a long, sweeping movement
over the floor.
Books, clothes, telescope and scales all soared into the air
and flew pell-mell into the trunk.
“It's not very neat,” said Tonks, walking
over to the trunk and looking down at the jumble inside. “My mums got this knack
of getting stuff to fit itself in neatly—she even gets the socks to fold
themselves—but I've never mastered how she does it—it's a kind of flick—” She
flicked her wand hopefully.
One of Harry's socks gave a feeble sort of wiggle
and flopped back on top of the mess in the trunk.
“Ah, well,” said Tonks,
slamming the trunk's lid shut, “at least it's all in. That could do with a bit
of cleaning, too.” She pointed her wand at Hedwig's cage. “Scourgify.” A few
feathers and droppings vanished. “Well, that's a bit better—I've never quite got
the hang of these householdy sort of spells. Right—got everything? Cauldron?
Broom? Wow!—A Firebolt”
Her eyes widened as they fell on the broomstick in
Harry's right hand It was his pride and joy, a gift from Sirius, an
international-standard broomstick.
“And I'm still riding a Comet Two Sixty”
said Tonks enviously. “Ah well...wand still in your jeans? Both buttocks still
on? OK, let's go. Locomotor trunk.”
Harry's trunk rose a few inches into the
air. Holding her wand like a conductor's baton, Tonks made the trunk hover
across the room and out of the door ahead of them, Hedwig's cage in her left
hand. Harry followed her down the stairs carrying his broomstick.
Back in the
kitchen Moody had replaced his eye, which was spinning so fast after its
cleaning it made Harry feel sick to look at it. Kingsley Shacklebolt and Sturgis
Podmore were examining the microwave and Hestia Jones was laughing at a potato
peeler she had come across while rummaging in the drawers. Lupin was sealing a
letter addressed to the Dursleys.
“Excellent,” said Lupin, looking up as
Tonks and Harry entered. “We've got about a minute, I think. We should probably
get out into the garden so we're ready. Harry, I've left a letter telling your
aunt and uncle not to worry—”
“They won't,” said Harry.
“- that you're
safe –“That'll just depress them.”
“- and you'll see them next
summer.”
“Do I have to?”
Lupin smiled but made no answer.
“Come here,
boy,” said Moody gruffly, beckoning Harry towards him with his wand. “I need to
Disillusion you.”
“You need to what?” said Harry
nervously.
“Disillusionment Charm,” said Moody, raising his wand. “Lupin says
you've got an Invisibility Cloak, but it won't stay on while we're flying;
this'll disguise you better. Here you go—”
He rapped him hard on the top of
the head and Harry felt a curious sensation as though Moody had just smashed an
egg there; cold trickles seemed to be running down his body from the point the
wand had struck.
“Nice one, Mad-Eye,” said Tonks appreciatively, staring at
Harry's midriff.
Harry looked down at his body, or rather, what had been his
body, for it didn't look anything like his any more. It was not invisible; it
had simply taken on the exact colour and texture of the kitchen unit behind him.
He seemed to have become a human chameleon.
“Come on,” said Moody, unlocking
the back door with his wand.
They all stepped outside on to Uncle Vernon's
beautifully kept lawn.
“Clear night,” grunted Moody, his magical eye scanning
the heavens. “Could've done with a bit more cloud cover. Right, you,” he barked
at Harry, “we're going to be flying in close formation. Tonks'll be right in
front of you, keep close on her tail. Lupin'll be covering you from below I'm
going to be behind you. The rest'll be circling us. We don't break ranks for
anything, got me? If one of us is killed—”
“Is that likely?” Harry asked
apprehensively, but Moody ignored him.
“- the others keep flying, don't stop,
don't break ranks. If they take out all of us and you survive, Harry, the rear
guard are standing by to take over; keep flying east and they'll join
you.”
“Stop being so cheerful, Mad-Eye, he'll think we're not taking this
seriously” said Tonks, as she strapped Harry's trunk and Hedwig's cage into a
harness hanging from her broom.
“I'm just telling the boy the plan,” growled
Moody. “Our jobs to deliver him safely to Headquarters and if we die in the
attempt—”
“No one's going to die,” said Kingsley Shacklebolt in his deep,
calming voice.
“Mount your brooms, that's the first signal!” said Lupin
sharply pointing into the sky.
Far, far above them, a shower of bright red
sparks had flared among the stars, Harry recognised them at once as wand sparks.
He swung his right leg over his Firebolt, gripped its handle tightly and felt it
vibrating very slightly, as though it was as keen as he was to be up in the air
once more.
“Second signal, let's go!” said Lupin loudly as more sparks, green
this time, exploded high above them.
Harry kicked off hard from the ground.
The cool night air rushed through his hair as the neat square gardens of Privet
Drive fell away, shrinking rapidly into a patchwork of dark greens and blacks,
and every thought of the Ministry hearing was swept from his mind as though the
rush of air had blown it out of his head. He felt as though his heart was going
to explode with pleasure; he was flying again, flying away from Privet Drive as
he'd been fantasising about all summer, he was going home...for a few glorious
moments, all his problems seemed to recede to nothing, insignificant in the
vast, starry sky.
“Hard left, hard left, there's a Muggle looking up!”
shouted Moody from behind him. Tonks swerved and Harry followed her, watching
his trunk swinging wildly beneath her broom. “We need more height...give it
another quarter of a mile!”
Harry's eyes watered in the chill as they soared
upwards; he could see nothing below now but tiny pinpricks of light that were
car headlights and streetlamps. Two of those tiny lights might belong to Uncle
Vernon's car...the Dursleys would be heading back to their empty house right
now, full of rage about the non-existent Lawn Competition...and Harry laughed
aloud at the thought, though his voice was drowned by the flapping robes of the
others, the creaking of the harness holding his trunk and the cage, and the
whoosh of the wind in their ears as they sped through the air. He had not felt
this alive in a month, or this happy.
“Bearing south!” shouted Mad-Eye. “Town
ahead!”
They soared right to avoid passing directly over the glittering
spider's web of lights below.
“Bear southeast and keep climbing, there's some
low cloud ahead we can lose ourselves in!” called Moody.
“We're not going
through clouds!” shouted Tonks angrily, “we'll get soaked, Mad-Eye!”
Harry
was relieved to hear her say this; his hands were growing numb on the Firebolt's
handle. He wished he had thought to put on a coat; he was starting to
shiver.
They altered their course every now and then according to Mad-Eyes
instructions. Harry’s eyes were screwed up against the rush of icy wind that was
starting to make his ears ache; he could remember being this cold on a broom
only once before, during the Quidditch match against Hufflepuff in his third
year, which had taken place in a storm. The guard around him was circling
continuously like giant birds of prey. Harry lost track of time. He wondered how
long they had been flying, it felt like an hour at least.
“Turning
southwest!” yelled Moody “We want to avoid the motorway!”
Harry was now so
chilled he thought longingly of the snug, dry interiors of the cars streaming
along below, then, even more longingly, of travelling by Floo powder; it might
be uncomfortable to spin around in fireplaces but it was at least warm in the
flames...Kingsley Shacklebolt swooped around him, bald pate and earring gleaming
slightly in the moonlight...now Emmeline Vance was on his right, her wand out,
her head turning left and right...then she, too, swooped over him, to be
replaced by Sturgis Podmore...
“We ought to double back for a bit, just to
make sure we're not being followed!” Moody shouted.
“ARE YOU MAD, MAD-EYE?”
Tonks screamed from the front. We're all frozen to our brooms! If we keep going
off-course we're not going to get there until next week! Besides, we're nearly
there now!”
“Time to start the descent!” came Lupin's voice. “Follow Tonks,
Harry!”
Harry followed Tonks into a dive. They were heading for the largest
collection of lights he had yet seen, a huge, sprawling crisscrossing mass,
glittering in lines and grids, interspersed with patches of deepest black. Lower
and lower they flew, until Harry could see individual headlights and
streetlamps, chimneys and television aerials. He wanted to reach the ground very
much, though he felt sure someone would have to unfreeze him from his
broom.
“Here we go!” called Tonks, and a few seconds later she had
landed.
Harry touched down right behind her and dismounted on a patch of
unkempt grass in the middle of a small square. Tonks was already unbuckling
Harry's trunk. Shivering, Harry looked around. The grimy fronts of the
surrounding houses were not welcoming; some of them had broken windows,
glimmering dully in the light fro the streetlamps, paint was peeling from many
of the doors and heaps of rubbish lay outside several sets of front
steps.
“Where are we?” Harry asked, but Lupin said quietly, “In a
minute.”
Moody was rummaging in his cloak, his gnarled hands clumsy with
cold.
“Got it,” he muttered, raising what looked like a silver cigarette
lighter into the air and clicking it.
The nearest streetlamp went out with a
pop. He clicked the unlighter again; the next lamp went out; he kept clicking
until every lamp in the square was extinguished and the only remaining light
came from curtained windows and the sickle moon overhead.
“Borrowed it from
Dumbledore,” growled Moody, pocketing the Put-Outer. “That'll take care of any
Muggles looking out of the window, see? Now come on, quick.”
He took Harry by
the arm and led him from the patch of grass, across the road and on to the
pavement; Lupin and Tonks followed, carrying Harry's trunk between them, the
rest of the guard, all with their wands out, flanking them.
The muffled
pounding of a stereo was coming from an upper window in the nearest house. A
pungent smell of rotting rubbish came from the pile of bulging bin-bags just
inside the broken gate.
“Here,” Moody muttered, thrusting a piece of
parchment towards Harry's Disillusioned hand and holding his lit wand close to
it, so as to illuminate the writing. “Read quickly and memorise.”
Harry
looked down at the piece of paper. The narrow handwriting was vaguely familiar.
It said:
The Headquarters of the Order of the Phoenix may be found at number
twelve, Grimmauld Place, London.
© Ãàððè Ïîòòåð ôàí ñàéò
À êîãäà âûðàñòåøü Àðìèÿ Ðîññèè ñäåëàåò èç òåáÿ ìóæ÷èíó.