Black shapes were emerging out of thin air all around them, blocking
their way left and right; eyes glinted through slits in hoods, a dozen lit wand
tips were pointing directly at their hearts; Ginny gave a gasp of horror.
“To
me, Potter,” repeated the drawling voice of Lucius Malfoy as he held out his
hand, palm up.
Harry’s insides plummeted sickeningly. They were trapped, and
outnumbered two to one.
“To me,” said Malfoy yet again.
“Where's Sirius?”
Harry said.
Several of the Death Eaters laughed; a harsh female voice from
the midst of the shadowy figures to Harry's left said triumphantly, “The Dark
Lord always knows!”
“Always,” echoed Malfoy softly. “Now, give me the
prophecy Potter.”
“I want to know where Sirius is!”
“I want to know where
Sirius is!” mimicked the woman to his left.
She and her fellow Death Eaters
had closed in so that they were mere feet away from Harry and the others, the
light from their wands dazzling Harry's eyes.
“You've got him,” said Harry,
ignoring the rising panic in his chest, the dread he had been fighting since
they had first entered the ninety-seventh row. “He's here. I know he
is.”
“The little baby woke up jwightened and fort what it dweamed was twoo,”
said the woman in a horrible, mock baby voice. Harry felt Ron stir beside
him.
“Don't do anything,” Harry muttered. “Not yet—”
The woman who had
mimicked him let out a raucous scream of laughter.
“You hear him? You hear
him? Giving instructions to the other children as though he thinks of fighting
us!”
“Oh, you don't know Potter as I do, Bellatrix,” said Malfoy softly. “He
has a great weakness for heroics; the Dark Lord understands this about him. Now
give me the prophecy, Potter.”
“I know Sirius is here,” said Harry, though
panic was causing his chest to constrict and he felt as though he could not
breathe properly. “I know you've got him!”
More of the Death Eaters laughed,
though the woman laughed loudest of all.
“It's time you learned the
difference between life and dreams, Potter,” said Malfoy. “Now give me the
prophecy, or we start using wands.”
“Go on, then,” said Harry, raising his
own wand to chest height. As he did so, the five wands of Ron, Hermione,
Neville, Ginny and Luna rose on either side of him. The knot in Harry's stomach
tightened. If Sirius really was not here, he had led his friends to their deaths
for no reason at all...
But the Death Eaters did not strike.
“Hand over
the prophecy and no one need get hurt,” said Malfoy coolly.
It was Harry's
turn to laugh.
“Yeah, right!” he said. “I give you this—prophecy, is it? And
you'll just let us skip off home, will you?”
The words were hardly out of his
mouth when the female Death Eater shrieked: “Accto proph—”
Harry was just
ready for her: he shouted “Protego!” before she had finished her spell, and
though the glass sphere slipped to the tips of his fingers he managed to cling
on to it.
“Oh, he knows how to play, little bitty baby Potter,” she said, her
mad eyes staring through the slits in her hood. “Very well, then—”
“I TOLD
YOU, NO!” Lucius Malfoy roared at the woman. “If you smash it -!”
Harry's
mind was racing. The Death Eaters wanted this dusty spun-glass sphere. He had no
interest in it. He just wanted to get them all out of this alive, to make sure
none of his friends paid a terrible price for his stupidity...
The woman
stepped forward, away from her fellows, and pulled off her hood. Azkaban had
hollowed Bellatrix Lestrange's face, making it gaunt and skull-like, but it was
alive with a feverish, fanatical glow.
“You need more persuasion?” she said,
her chest rising and falling rapidly. “Very well—take the smallest one,” she
ordered the Death Eaters beside her. “Let him watch while we torture the little
girl. I'll do it.”
Harry felt the others close in around Ginny; he stepped
sideways so that he was right in front of her, the prophecy held up to his
chest.
“You'll have to smash this if you want to attack any of us,” he told
Bellatrix. “I don't think your boss will be too pleased if you come back without
it, will he?”
She did not move; she merely stared at him, the tip of her
tongue moistening her thin mouth.
“So,” said Harry, “what kind of prophecy
are we talking about, anyway?”
He could not think what to do but to keep
talking. Neville's arm was pressed against his, and he could feel him shaking;
he could feel one of the others’ quickened breath on the back of his head. He
was hoping they were all thinking hard about ways to get out of this, because
his mind was blank.
“What kind of prophecy?” repeated Bellatrix, the grin
fading from her face. “You jest, Harry Potter.”
“Nope, not jesting,” said
Harry, his eyes flicking from Death Eater to Death Eater, looking for a weak
link, a space through which they could escape. “How come Voldemort wants
it?”
Several of the Death Eaters let out low hisses.
“You dare speak his
name?” whispered Bellatrix.
“Yeah,” said Harry, maintaining his tight grip on
the glass ball, expecting another attempt to bewitch it from him. “Yeah, I've
got no problem with saying Vol—”
“Shut your mouth!” Bellatrix shrieked. “You
dare speak his name with your unworthy lips, you dare besmirch it with your
half-blood's tongue, you dare—”
“Did you know he's a half-blood too?” said
Harry recklessly. Hermione gave a little moan in his ear. “Voldemort? Yeah, his
mother was a witch but his dad was a Muggle—or has he been telling you lot he's
pure-blood?”
“STUPEFY—”
“NO!”
A jet of red light had shot from the end
of Bellatrix Lestrange's wand, but Malfoy had deflected it; his spell caused
hers to hit the shelf a foot to the left of Harry and several of the glass orbs
there shattered.
Two figures, pearly-white as ghosts, fluid as smoke,
unfurled themselves from the fragments of broken glass upon the floor and each
began to speak; their voices vied with each other, so that only fragments of
what they were saying could be heard over Malfoy and Bellatrix's
shouts.
“...at the solstice will come a new ...” said the figure of an old,
bearded man.
“DO NOT ATTACK! WE NEED THE PROPHECY!”
“He dared—he dares—”
shrieked Bellatrix incoherently, “he stands there—filthy half-blood—”
“WAIT
UNTIL WE'VE GOT THE PROPHECY!” bawled Malfoy.
“...and none will come
after...” said the figure of a young woman.
The two figures that had burst
from the shattered spheres had melted into thin air. Nothing remained of them or
their erstwhile homes but fragments of glass upon the floor. They had, however,
given Harry an idea. The problem was going to be conveying it to the
others.
“You haven't told me what's so special about this prophecy I'm
supposed to be handing over,” he said, playing for time. He moved his foot
slowly sideways, feeling around for someone else's.
“Do not play games with
us, Potter,” said Malfoy.
“I'm not playing games,” said Harry, half his mind
on the conversation, half on his wandering foot. And then he found someone's
toes and pressed down upon them. A sharp intake of breath behind him told him
they were Hermione’s.
“What?” she whispered.
“Dumbledore never told you
the reason you bear that scar was hidden in the bowels of the Department of
Mysteries?” Malfoy sneered.
“I—what?” said Harry. And for a moment he quite
forgot his plan. “What about my scar?”
“What?” whispered Hermione more
urgently behind him.
“Can this be?” said Malfoy, sounding maliciously
delighted; some of the Death Eaters were laughing again, and under cover of
their laughter, Harry hissed to Hermione, moving his lips as little as possible,
“Smash shelves—”
“Dumbledore never told you?” Malfoy repeated. “Well, this
explains why you didn't come earlier, Potter, the Dark Lord wondered
why—”
“—when I say now—”
“—you didn't come running when he showed you the
place where it was hidden in your dreams. He thought natural curiosity would
make you want to hear the exact wording...”
“Did he?” said Harry. Behind him
he felt rather than heard Hermione passing his message to the others and he
sought to keep talking, to distract the Death Eaters. “So he wanted me to come
and get it, did he? Why?”
“Why?” Malfoy sounded incredulously delighted.
“Because the only people who are permitted to retrieve a prophecy from the
Department of Mysteries, Potter, are those about whom it was made, as the Dark
Lord discovered when he attempted to use others to steal it for him.”
“And
why did he want to steal a prophecy about me?”
“About both of you, Potter,
about both of you...haven't you ever wondered why the Dark Lord tried to kill
you as a baby?”
Harry stared into the slitted eye-holes through which
Malfoy's grey eyes were gleaming. Was this prophecy the reason Harry's parents
had died, the reason he carried his lightning-bolt scar? Was the answer to all
of this clutched in his hand?
“Someone made a prophecy about Voldemort and
me?” he said quietly, gazing at Lucius Malfoy, his fingers tightening over the
warm glass sphere in his hand. It was hardly larger than a Snitch and still
gritty with dust. “And he's made me come and get it for him? Why couldn't he
come and get it himself?”
“Get it himself?” shrieked Bellatrix, over a cackle
of mad laughter.
“The Dark Lord, walk into the Ministry of Magic, when they
are so sweetly ignoring his return? The Dark Lord, reveal himself to the Aurors,
when at the moment they are wasting their time on my dear cousin?”
“So, he's
got you doing his dirty work for him, has he?” said Harry. “Like he tried to get
Sturgis to steal it—and Bode?”
“Very good, Potter, very good...” said Malfoy
slowly. “But the Dark Lord knows you are not unintell—”
“NOW!” yelled
Harry.
Five different voices behind him bellowed, “REDUCTO!” Five curses flew
in five different directions and the shelves opposite them exploded as they hit;
the towering structure swayed as a hundred glass spheres burst apart,
pearly-white figures unfurled into the air and floated there, their voices
echoing from who knew what long-dead past amid the torrent of crashing glass and
splintered wood now raining down upon the floor—
“RUN!” Harry yelled, as the
shelves swayed precariously and more glass spheres began to fall from above. He
seized a handful of Hermione's robes and dragged her forwards, holding one arm
over his head as chunks of shelf and shards of glass thundered down upon them. A
Death Eater lunged forwards through the cloud of dust and Harry elbowed him hard
in the masked face; they were all yelling, there were cries of pain, and
thunderous crashes as the shelves collapsed upon themselves, weirdly echoing
fragments of the Seers unleashed from their spheres—
Harry found the way
ahead clear and saw Ron, Ginny and Luna sprint past him, their arms over their
heads; something heavy struck him on the side of the face but he merely ducked
his head and sprinted onwards; a hand caught him by the shoulder; he heard
Hermione shout, “Stupefy!” The hand released him at once—
They were at the
end of row ninety-seven; Harry turned right and began to sprint in earnest; he
could hear footsteps right behind him and Hermione's voice urging Neville on;
straight ahead, the door through which they had come was ajar; Harry could see
the glittering light of the bell jar; he pelted through the doorway, the
prophecy still clutched tight and safe in his hand, and waited for the others to
hurtle over the threshold before slamming the door behind
them—
“Colloportus!” gasped Hermione and the door sealed itself with an odd
squelching noise.
“Where—where are the others?” gasped Harry.
He had
thought Ron, Luna and Ginny were ahead of them, that they would be waiting in
this room, but there was nobody there.
“They must have gone the wrong way!”
whispered Hermione, terror in her face.
“Listen!” whispered
Neville.
Footsteps and shouts echoed from behind the door they had just
sealed; Harry put his ear close to the door to listen and heard Lucius Malfoy
roar, “Leave Nott, leave him, I say—his injuries will be nothing to the Dark
Lord compared to losing that prophecy. Jugson, come back here, we need to
organise! We'll split into pairs and search, and don't forget, be gentle with
Potter until we've got the prophecy, you can kill the others if necessary
-Bellatrix, Rodolphus, you take the left; Crabbe, Rabastan, go right -Jugson,
Dolohov, the door straight ahead—Macnair and Avery, through here—Rookwood, over
there—Mulciber, come with me!”
“What do we do?” Hermione asked Harry,
trembling from head to foot.
“Well, we don't stand here waiting for them to
find us, for a start,” said Harry. “Let's get away from this door.” They ran as
quietly as they could, past the shimmering bell jar where the tiny egg was
hatching and unhatching, towards the exit into the circular hallway at the far
end of the room. They were I almost there when Harry heard something large and
heavy collide with the door Hermione had charmed shut.
“Stand aside!” said a
rough voice. “Alahomora!”
As the door flew open, Harry, Hermione and Neville
dived under desks. They could see the bottom of the two Death Eaters’ robes
drawing nearer, their feet moving rapidly.
“They might've run straight
through to the hall,” said the rough voice.
“Check under the desks,” said
another.
Harry saw the knees of the Death Eaters bend; poking his wand out
from under the desk, he shouted, “STUPEFY!”
A jet of red light hit the
nearest Death Eater; he fell backwards into a grandfather clock and knocked it
over; the second Death Eater, however, had leapt aside to avoid Harry's spell
and was pointing his own wand at Hermione, who was crawling out from under the
desk to get a better aim.
“Avada—”
Harry launched himself across the floor
and grabbed the Death Eater around the knees, causing him to topple and his aim
to go awry. Neville overturned a desk in his anxiety to help; and pointing his
wand wildly at the struggling pair, he cried:
“EXPELLIARMUS!”
Both Harry's
and the Death Eater's wands flew out of their hands and soared back towards the
entrance to the Hall of Prophecy; both scrambled to their feet and charged after
them, the Death Eater in front, Harry hot on his heels, and Neville bringing up
the rear, plainly horrorstruck by what he had done.
“Get out of the way,
Harry!” yelled Neville, clearly determined to repair the damage.
Harry flung
himself sideways as Neville took aim again and shouted:
“STUPEFY!”
The jet
of red light flew right over the Death Eater's shoulder and hit a glass-fronted
cabinet on the wall full of variously shaped hour-glasses; the cabinet fell to
the floor and burst apart, glass flying everywhere, sprang back up on to the
wall, fully mended, then fell down again, and shattered—
The Death Eater had
snatched up his wand, which lay on the floor beside the glittering bell jar.
Harry ducked down behind another desk as the man turned; his mask had slipped so
that he couldn't see. He ripped it off with his free hand and shouted:
“STUP—”
“STUPEFY!” screamed Hermione, who had just caught up with them. The
jet of red light hit the Death Eater in the middle of his chest: he froze, his
arm still raised, his wand fell to the floor with a clatter and he collapsed
backwards towards the bell jar. Harry expected to hear a dunk, for the man to
hit solid glass and slide off the jar on to the floor, but instead, his head
sank through the surface of the bell jar as though it were nothing but a soap
bubble and he came to rest, sprawled on his back on the table, with his head
lying inside the jar full of glittering wind.
“Accio wand!” cried Hermione.
Harry's wand flew from a dark corner into her hand and she threw it to
him.
“Thanks,” he said. “Right, let's get out of—”
“Look out!” said
Neville, horrified. He was staring at the Death Eater's head in the bell
jar.
All three of them raised their wands again, but none of them struck:
they were all gazing, open-mouthed, appalled, at what was happening to the man's
head.
It was shrinking very fast, growing balder and balder, the black hair
and stubble retracting into his skull; his cheeks becoming smooth, his skull
round and covered with a peachlike fuzz...
A baby's head now sat grotesquely
on top of the thick, muscled neck of the Death Eater as he struggled to get up
again; but even as they watched, their mouths open, the head began to swell to
its previous proportions again; thick black hair was sprouting from the pate and
chin...
“It's Time,” said Hermione in an awestruck voice. “Time...”
The
Death Eater shook his ugly head again, trying to clear it, but before he could
pull himself together it began to shrink back to babyhood once more...
There
was a shout from a room nearby, then a crash and a scream.
“RON?” Harry
yelled, turning quickly from the monstrous transformation taking place before
them. “GINNY? LUNA?”
“Harry!” Hermione screamed.
The Death Eater had
pulled his head out of the bell jar. His appearance was utterly bizarre, his
tiny baby's head bawling loudly while his thick arms flailed dangerously in all
directions, narrowly missing Harry, who had ducked. Harry raised his wand but to
his amazement Hermione seized his arm.
“You can't hurt a baby!”
There was
no time to argue the point; Harry could hear more footsteps growing louder from
the Hall of Prophecy and knew, too late, that he ought not to have shouted and
given away their position.
“Come on!” he said, and leaving the ugly
baby-headed Death Eater staggering behind them they took off for the door that
stood open at the other end of the room, leading back into the black
hallway.
They had run halfway towards it when Harry saw through the open door
two more Death Eaters running across the black room towards them; veering left,
he burst instead into a small, dark, cluttered office and slammed the door
behind them.
“Collo—” began Hermione, but before she could complete the spell
the door had burst open and the two Death Eaters had come hurtling
inside.
With a cry of triumph, both yelled:
“IMPEDIMENTA!”
Harry,
Hermione and Neville were all knocked backwards off their feet; Neville was
thrown over the desk and disappeared from view; Hermione smashed into a bookcase
and was promptly deluged in a cascade of heavy books; the back of Harry's head
slammed into the stone wall behind him, tiny lights burst in front of his eyes
and for a moment he was too dizzy and bewildered to react.
“WE'VE GOT HIM!”
yelled the Death Eater nearest Harry. “IN AN OFFICE OFF—”
“Silencio!” cried
Hermione and the man's voice was extinguished. He continued to mouth through the
hole in his mask, but no sound came out. He was thrust aside by his fellow Death
Eater.
“Petrificus Totalus!” shouted Harry, as the second Death Eater raised
his wand. His arms and legs snapped together and he fell forwards, face down on
to the rug at Harry's feet, stiff as a board and unable to move.
“Well done,
Ha—”
But the Death Eater Hermione had just struck dumb made a sudden slashing
movement with his wand; a streak of what looked like purple flame passed right
across Hermione's chest. She gave a tiny “Oh!” as though of surprise and
crumpled on to the floor, where she lay motionless.
“HERMIONE!”
Harry fell
to his knees beside her as Neville crawled rapidly towards her from under the
desk, his wand held up in front of him. The Death Eater kicked out hard at
Neville's head as he emerged—his foot broke Neville's wand in two and connected
with his face. Neville gave a howl of pain and recoiled, clutching his mouth and
nose. Harry twisted around, his own wand held high, and saw that the Death Eater
had ripped off his mask and was pointing his wand directly at Harry, who
recognised the long, pale, twisted face from the Daily Prophet: Antonin Dolohov,
the wizard who had murdered the Prewetts.
Dolohov grinned. With his free
hand, he pointed from the prophecy still clutched in Harry’s hand, to himself,
then at Hermione. Though he could no longer speak, his meaning could not have
been clearer. Give me the prophecy, or you get the same as her...
“Like you
won't kill us all anyway, the moment I hand it over!” said Harry.
A whine of
panic inside his head was preventing him thinking properly: he had one hand on
Hermione's shoulder, which was still warm, yet did not dare look at her
properly. Don't let her be dead, don't let her be dead, it's my fault if she's
dead...
“Whaddever you do, Harry,” said Neville fiercely from under the desk,
lowering his hands to show a clearly broken nose and blood pouring down his
mouth and chin, “don'd gib it to him!”
Then there was a crash outside the
door and Dolohov looked over his shoulder—the baby-headed Death Eater had
appeared in the doorway, his head bawling, his great fists still flailing
uncontrollably at everything around him. Harry seized his chance:
“PETRIFICUS
TOTALUS!”
The spell hit Dolohov before he could block it and he toppled
forwards across his comrade, both of them rigid as boards and unable to move an
inch.
“Hermione,” Harry said at once, shaking her as the baby-headed Death
Eater blundered out of sight again. “Hermione, wake up...”
“Whaddid he do to
her?” said Neville, crawling out from under the desk to kneel at her other side,
blood streaming from his rapidly swelling nose.
“I dunno...”
Neville
groped for Hermione's wrist.
“Dat's a pulse, Harry, I'b sure id is.”
Such
a powerful wave of relief swept through Harry that for a moment he felt
light-headed.
“She's alive?”
“Yeah, I dink so.”
There was a pause in
which Harry listened hard for the sound of more footsteps, but all he could hear
were the whimpers and blunderings of the baby-headed Death Eater in the next
room.
“Neville, we're not far from the exit,” Harry whispered, “we're right
next to that circular room...if we can just get you across it and find the right
door before any more Death Eaters come, I'll bet you can get Hermione up the
corridor and into the lift...then you could find someone...raise the
alarm...”
“And whad are you going do do?” said Neville, mopping his bleeding
nose with his sleeve and frowning at Harry.
“I've got to find the others,”
said Harry.
“Well, I'b going do find dem wid you,” said Neville
firmly.
“But Hermione —”
“We'll dake her wid us,” said Neville firmly.
“I'll carry her—you're bedder at fighding dem dan I ab—”
He stood up and
seized one of Hermione's arms, glaring at Harry, who hesitated, then grabbed the
other and helped hoist Hermione's limp form over Neville's shoulders.
“Wait,”
said Harry, snatching up Hermione's wand from the floor and shoving it into
Neville's hand, “you'd better take this.”
Neville kicked aside the broken
fragments of his own wand as they walked slowly towards the door.
“My gran's
going do kill be,” said Neville thickly, blood spattering from his nose as he
spoke, “dat was by dad's old wand.”
Harry stuck his head out of the door and
looked around cautiously. The baby-headed Death Eater was screaming and banging
into things, toppling grandfather clocks and overturning desks, bawling and
confused, while the glass-fronted cabinet that Harry now suspected had contained
Time-Turners continued to fall, shatter and repair itself on the wall behind
them.
“He's never going to notice us,” he whispered. “C'mon...keep close
behind me...”
They crept out of the office and back towards the door into the
black hallway, which now seemed completely deserted. They walked a few steps
forwards, Neville tottering slightly due to Hermione's weight; the door of the
Time Room swung shut behind them and the walls began to rotate once more. The
recent blow on the back of Harry’s head seemed to have unsteadied him; he
narrowed his eyes, swaying slightly, until the walls stopped moving again. With
a sinking heart, Harry saw that Hermione's fiery crosses had faded from the
doors.
“So which way d'you reck—?”
But before they could make a decision
as to which way to try, a door to their right sprang open and three people fell
out of it.
“Ron!” croaked Harry, dashing towards them. “Ginny—are you all
-?”
“Harry,” said Ron, giggling weakly, lurching forwards, seizing the front
of Harry's robes and gazing at him with unfocused eyes, “there you are...ha ha
ha...you look funny, Harry...you're all messed up...”
Ron's face was very
white and something dark was trickling from the corner of his mouth. Next moment
his knees had given way, but he still clutched the front of Harry's robes, so
that Harry was pulled into a kind of bow.
“Ginny?” Harry said fearfully.
“What happened?”
But Ginny shook her head and slid down the wall into a
sitting position, panting and holding her ankle.
“I think her ankle's broken,
I heard something crack,” whispered Luna, who was bending over her and who alone
seemed to be unhurt. “Four of them chased us into a dark room full of planets;
it was a very odd place, some of the time we were just floating in the
dark—”
“Harry, we saw Uranus up close!” said Ron, still giggling feebly. “Get
it, Harry? We saw Uranus—ha ha ha—”
A bubble of blood grew at the corner of
Ron's mouth and burst.
“—anyway, one of them grabbed Ginny's foot, I used the
Reductor Curse and blew up Pluto in his face, but...”
Luna gestured
hopelessly at Ginny, who was breathing in a very shallow way, her eyes still
closed.
“And what about Ron?” said Harry fearfully, as Ron continued to
giggle, still hanging off the front of Harry's robes.
“I don't know what they
hit him with,” said Luna sadly, “but he's gone a bit funny, I could hardly get
him along at all.”
“Harry,” said Ron, pulling Harry's ear down to his mouth
and still giggling weakly, “you know who this girl is, Harry? She's
Loony...Loony Lovegood...ha ha ha”
“We've got to get out of here,” said Harry
firmly. “Luna, can you help Ginny?”
“Yes,” said Luna, sticking her wand
behind her ear for safekeeping, then putting an arm around Ginny’s waist and
pulling her up.
“It's only my ankle, I can do it myself!” said Ginny
impatiently, but next moment she had collapsed sideways and grabbed Luna for
support. Harry pulled Ron's arm over his shoulder just as, so many months ago,
he had pulled Dudley's. He looked around: they had a one in twelve chance of
getting the exit right first time—
He heaved Ron towards a door; they were
within a few feet of it when another door across the hall burst open and three
Death Eaters sped in, led by Bellatrix Lestrange.
“There they are!” she
shrieked.
Stunning Spells shot across the room: Harry smashed his way through
the door ahead, flung Ron unceremoniously from him and ducked back to help
Neville in with Hermione: they were all over the threshold just in time to slam
the door against Bellatrix.
“Colloportus!” shouted Harry, and he heard three
bodies slam into the door on the other side.
“It doesn't matter!” said a
man's voice. “There are other ways in—WE'VE GOT THEM, THEY'RE HERE!”
Harry
span around; they were back in the Brain Room and, sure enough, there were doors
all around the walls. He could hear footsteps in the hall behind them as more
Death Eaters came running to join the first.
“Luna—Neville—help me!”
The
three of them tore around the room, sealing the doors as they went; Harry
crashed into a table and rolled over the top of it in his haste to reach the
next door:
“Colloportus!”
There were footsteps running along behind the
doors, every now and then another heavy body would launch itself against one, so
it creaked and shuddered; Luna and Neville were bewitching the doors along the
opposite wall—then, as Harry reached the very top of the room, he heard Luna
cry:
“Collo— aaaaaaaaargh...”
He turned in time to see her flying through
the air; five Death Eaters were surging into the room through the door she had
not reached in time; Luna hit a desk, slid over its surface and on to the floor
on the other side where she lay sprawled, as still as Hermione.
“Get Potter!”
shrieked Bellatrix, and she ran at him; he dodged her and sprinted back up the
room; he was safe as long as they thought they might hit the prophecy—
“Hey!”
said Ron, who had staggered to his feet and was now tottering drunkenly towards
Harry, giggling. “Hey Harry, there are brains in here, ha ha ha, isn't that
weird, Harry?”
“Ron, get out of the way, get down—”
But Ron had already
pointed his wand at the tank.
“Honest, Harry, they're brains—look—Accio
brain!”
The scene seemed momentarily frozen. Harry, Ginny and Neville and
each of the Death Eaters turned in spite of themselves to watch the top of the
tank as a brain burst from the green liquid like a leaping fish: for a moment it
seemed suspended in midair, then it soared towards Ron, spinning as it came, and
what looked like ribbons of moving images flew from it, unravelling like rolls
of film-
“Ha ha ha, Harry, look at it—” said Ron, watching it disgorge its
gaudy innards, “Harry come and touch it; bet it's weird—”
“RON, NO!”
Harry
did not know what would happen if Ron touched the tentacles of thought now
flying behind the brain, but he was sure it would not be anything good. He
darted forwards but Ron had already caught the brain in his outstretched
hands.
The moment they made contact with his skin, the tentacles began
wrapping themselves around Ron's arms like ropes.
“Harry, look what's happen—
No—no—I don't like it—no, stop—stop—”
But the thin ribbons were spinning
around Ron's chest now; he tugged and tore at them as the brain was pulled tight
against him like an octopus's body.
“Diffindo!” yelled Harry, trying to sever
the feelers wrapping themselves tightly around Ron before his eyes, but they
would not break. Ron fell over, still thrashing against his bonds.
“Harry,
it'll suffocate him!” screamed Ginny, immobilised by her broken ankle on the
floor—then a jet of red light flew from one of the Death Eater's wands and hit
her squarely in the face. She keeled over sideways and lay there
unconscious.
“STUBEFY!” shouted Neville, wheeling around and waving
Hermione's wand at the oncoming Death Eaters, “STUBEFY, STUBEFY!”
But nothing
happened.
One of the Death Eaters shot their own Stunning Spell at Neville;
it missed him by inches. Harry and Neville were now the only two left fighting
the five Death Eaters, two of whom sent off streams of silver light like arrows
which missed but left craters in the wall behind them. Harry ran for it as
Bellatrix Lestrange raced right at him: holding the prophecy high above his
head, he sprinted back up the room; all he could think of doing was to draw the
Death Eaters away from the others.
It seemed to have worked; they streaked
after him, knocking chairs and tables flying but not daring to bewitch him in
case they hurt the prophecy, and he dashed through the only door still open, the
one through which the Death Eaters themselves had come; inwardly praying that
Neville would stay with Ron and find some way of releasing him. He ran a few
feet into the new room and felt the floor vanish—
He was falling down steep
stone step after steep stone step, bouncing on every tier until at last, with a
crash that knocked all the breath out of his body, he landed flat on his back in
the sunken pit where the stone archway stood on its dais. The whole room was
ringing with the Death Eaters’ laughter: he looked up and saw the five who had
been in the Brain Room descending towards him, while as many more emerged
through other doorways and began leaping from bench to bench towards him. Harry
got to his feet though his legs were trembling so badly they barely supported
him: the prophecy was still miraculously unbroken in his left hand, his wand
clutched tightly in his right. He backed away, looking around, trying to keep
all the Death Eaters within his sight. The back of his legs hit something solid:
he had reached the dais where the archway stood. He climbed backwards onto
it.
The Death Eaters all halted, gazing at him. Some were panting as hard as
he was. One was bleeding badly; Dolohov, freed of the Body-Bind Curse, was
leering, his wand pointing straight at Harry’s face.
“Potter, your race is
run,” drawled Lucius Malfoy, pulling off his mask, “now hand me the prophecy
like a good boy.”
“Let—let the others go, and I'll give it to you!” said
Harry desperately.
A few of the Death Eaters laughed.
“You are not in a
position to bargain, Potter,” said Lucius Malfoy, his pale face flushed with
pleasure. “You see, there are ten of us and only one of you...or hasn't
Dumbledore ever taught you how to count?”
“He's dot alone!” shouted a voice
from above them. “He's still god be!”
Harry's heart sank: Neville was
scrambling down the stone benches towards them, Hermione’s wand held fast in his
trembling hand.
“Neville—no—go back to Ron—”
“STUBEFY!” Neville shouted
again, pointing his wand at each Death Eater in turn. “STUBEFY!
STUBE...—”
One of the largest Death Eaters seized Neville from behind,
pinioning his arms to his sides. He struggled and kicked; several of the Death
Eaters laughed.
“It's Longbottom, isn't it?” sneered Lucius Malfoy. “Well,
your grandmother is used to losing family members to our cause...your death will
not come as a great shock.”
“Longbottom?” repeated Bellatrix, and a truly
evil smile lit her gaunt face. “Why, I have had the pleasure of meeting your
parents, boy,”
“I DOE YOU HAB!” roared Neville, and he fought so hard against
his captors encircling grip that the Death Eater shouted, “Someone Stun
him!”
“No, no, no,” said Bellatrix. She looked transported, alive with
excitement as she glanced at Harry, then back at Neville. “No, let's see how
long Longbottom lasts before he cracks like his parents...unless Potter wants to
give us the prophecy.”
“DON'D GIB ID DO DEM!” roared Neville, who seemed
beside himself, kicking and writhing as Bellatrix drew nearer to him and his
captor, her wand raised. “DON'D GIB ID DO DEM, HARRY!”
Bellatrix raised her
wand. “Crude!”
Neville screamed, his legs drawn up to his chest so that the
Death Eater holding him was momentarily holding him off the ground. The Death
Eater dropped him and he fell to the floor, twitching and screaming in
agony.
“That was just a taster!” said Bellatrix, raising her wand so that
Neville's screams stopped and he lay sobbing at her feet. She turned and gazed
up at Harry. “Now, Potter, either give us the prophecy, or watch your little
friend die the hard way!”
Harry did not have to think; there was no choice.
The prophecy was hot with the heat of his clutching hand as he held it out.
Malfoy jumped forwards to take it.
Then, high above them, two more doors
burst open and five more people sprinted into the room: Sirius, Lupin, Moody,
Tonks and Kingsley.
Malfoy turned, and raised his wand, but Tonks had already
sent a Stunning Spell right at him. Harry did not wait to see whether it had
made contact, but dived off the dais out of the way. The Death Eaters were
completely distracted by the appearance of the members of the Order, who were
now raining spells down upon them as they jumped from step to step towards the
sunken floor. Through the darting bodies, the flashes of light, Harry could see
Neville crawling along. He dodged another jet of red light and flung himself
flat on the ground to reach Neville.
“Are you OK?” he yelled, as another
spell soared inches over their heads.
“Yes,” said Neville, trying to pull
himself up.
“And Ron?”
“I dink he's all righd—he was still fighding de
brain when I lefd—”
The stone floor between them exploded as a spell hit it,
leaving a crater right where Neville’s hand had been only seconds before; both
scrambled away from the spot, then a thick arm came out of nowhere, seized Harry
around the neck and pulled him upright, so that his toes were barely touching
the floor.
“Give it to me,” growled a voice in his ear, “give me the
prophecy—”
The man was pressing so tightly on Harry's windpipe that he could
not breathe. Through watering eyes he saw Sirius duelling with a Death Eater
some ten feet away; Kingsley was fighting two at once; Tonks, still halfway up
the tiered seats, was firing spells down at Bellatrix—nobody seemed to realise
that Harry was dying. He turned his wand backwards towards the man's side, but
had no breath to utter an incantation, and the man's free hand was groping
towards the hand in which Harry was grasping the
prophecy—
“AARGH!”
Neville had come lunging out of nowhere; unable to
articulate a spell, he had jabbed Hermione's wand hard into the eyehole of the
Death Eaters mask. The man relinquished Harry at once with a howl of pain. Harry
whirled around to face him and gasped:
“STUPEFY!”
The Death Eater keeled
over backwards and his mask slipped off: it was Macnair, Buckbeak's would-be
killer, one of his eyes now swollen and bloodshot.
“Thanks!” Harry said to
Neville, pulling him aside as Sirius and his Death Eater lurched past, duelling
so fiercely that their wands were blurs; then Harry's foot made contact with
something round and hard and he slipped. For a moment he thought he had dropped
the prophecy, but then he saw Moody's magical eye spinning away across the
floor.
Its owner was lying on his side, bleeding from the head, and his
attacker was now bearing down upon Harry and Neville: Dolohov, his long pale
face twisted with glee.
“Tarantallegra!” he shouted, his wand pointing at
Neville, whose legs went immediately into a kind of frenzied tap-dance,
unbalancing him and causing him to fall to the floor again. “Now, Potter—”
He
made the same slashing movement with his wand that he had used on Hermione just
as Harry yelled, “Protege!”
Harry felt something streak across his face like
a blunt knife; the force of it knocked him sideways and he fell over Neville's
jerking legs, but the Shield Charm had stopped the worst of the
spell.
Dolohov raised his wand again. “Accio proph—”
Sirius had hurtled
out of nowhere, rammed Dolohov with his shoulder and sent him flying out of the
way. The prophecy had again flown to the tips of Harry's fingers but he had
managed to cling on to it. Now Sirius and Dolohov were duelling, their wands
flashing like swords, sparks flying from their wand-tips—
Dolohov drew back
his wand to make the same slashing movement he had used on Harry and Hermione.
Springing up, Harry yelled, “Petrificus Totalus!” Once again, Dolohov's arms and
legs snapped together and he keeled over backwards, landing with a crash on his
back.
“Nice one!” shouted Sirius, forcing Harry's head down as a pair of
Stunning Spells flew towards them. “Now I want you to get out of-”
They both
ducked again; a jet of green light had narrowly missed Sirius. Across the room
Harry saw Tonks fall from halfway up the stone steps, her limp form toppling
from stone seat to stone seat and Bellatrix, triumphant, running back towards
the fray.
“Harry, take the prophecy, grab Neville and run!” Sirius yelled,
dashing to meet Bellatrix. Harry did not see what happened next: Kingsley swayed
across his field of vision, battling with the pockmarked and no longer masked
Rookwood; another jet of green light flew over Harry's head as he launched
himself towards Neville—
“Can you stand?” he bellowed in Neville's ear, as
Neville's legs jerked and twitched uncontrollably. “Put your arm round my
neck—”
Neville did so—Harry heaved—Neville's legs were still flying in every
direction, they would not support him, and then, out of nowhere, a man lunged at
them: both fell backwards, Neville's legs waving wildly like an overturned
beetle's, Harry with his left arm held up in the air to try to save the small
glass ball from being smashed.
“The prophecy, give me the prophecy, Potter!”
snarled Lucius Malfoy's voice in his ear, and Harry felt the tip of Malfoy's
wand pressing hard between his ribs.
“No—get—off—me...Neville—catch
it!”
Harry flung the prophecy across the floor, Neville span himself around
on his back and scooped the ball to his chest. Malfoy pointed the wand instead
at Neville, but Harry jabbed his own wand back over his shoulder and yelled,
“Impedimenta!”
Malfoy was blasted off his back. As Harry scrambled up again
he looked around and saw Malfoy smash into the dais on which Sirius and
Bellatrix were now duelling. Malfoy aimed his wand at Harry and Neville again,
but before he could draw breath to strike, Lupin had jumped between
them.
“Harry, round up the others and GO!”
Harry seized Neville by the
shoulder of his robes and lifted him bodily on to the first tier of stone steps;
Neville's legs twitched and jerked and would not support his weight; Harry
heaved again with all the strength he possessed and they climbed another
step—
A spell hit the stone bench at Harry’s heel; it crumbled away and he
fell back to the step below. Neville sank to the ground, his legs still jerking
and thrashing, and he thrust the prophecy into his pocket.
“Come on!” said
Harry desperately, hauling at Nevilles robes. “Just try and push with your
legs—”
He gave another stupendous heave and Neville’s robes tore all along
the left seam—the small spun-glass ball dropped from his pocket and, before
either of them could catch it, one of Neville's floundering feet kicked it: it
flew some ten feet to their right and smashed on the step beneath them. As both
of them stared at the place where it had broken, appalled at what had happened,
a pearly-white figure with hugely magnified eyes rose into the air, unnoticed by
any but them..Harry could see its mouth moving, but in all the crashes and
screams and yells surrounding them, not one word of the prophecy could he hear.
The figure stopped speaking and dissolved into nothingness.
“Harry, Fb
sorry!” cried Neville, his face anguished as his legs continued to flounder. Tb
so sorry, Harry, I didn'd bean do –“
“It doesn't matter!” Harry shouted.
“Just try and stand, let's get out of—”
“Dubbledore!” said Neville, his
sweaty face suddenly transported, staring over Harry's
shoulder.
“What?”
“DUBBLEDORE!”
Harry turned to look where Neville was
staring. Directly above them, framed in the doorway from the Brain Room, stood
Albus Dumbledore, his wand aloft, his face white and furious. Harry felt a kind
of electric charge surge through every particle of his body—they were
saved.
Dumbledore sped down the steps past Neville and Harry, who had no more
thoughts of leaving. Dumbledore was already at the foot of the steps when the
Death Eaters nearest realised he was there and yelled to the others. One of the
Death Eaters ran for it, scrabbling like a monkey up the stone steps opposite.
Dumbledore's spell pulled him back as easily and effortlessly as though he had
hooked him with an invisible line—
Only one pair was still battling,
apparently unaware of the new arrival. Harry saw Sirius duck Bellatrix's jet of
red light: he was laughing at her.
“Come on, you can do better than that!” he
yelled, his voice echoing around the cavernous room.
The second jet of light
hit him squarely on the chest.
The laughter had not quite died from his face,
but his eyes widened in shock.
Harry released Neville, though he was unaware
of doing so. He was jumping down the steps again, pulling out his wand, as
Dumbledore, too, turned towards the dais.
It seemed to take Sirius an age to
fall: his body curved in a graceful arc as he sank backwards through the ragged
veil hanging from the arch.
Harry saw the look of mingled fear and surprise
on his godfather's wasted, once-handsome face as he fell through the ancient
doorway and disappeared behind the veil, which fluttered for a moment as though
in a high wind, then fell back into place.
Harry heard Bellatrix Lestrange's
triumphant scream, but knew it meant nothing—Sirius had only just fallen through
the archway, he would reappear from the other side any second...
But Sirius
did not reappear.
“SIRIUS!” Harry yelled. “SIRIUS!”
He had reached the
floor, his breath coming in searing gasps. Sirius must be just behind the
curtain, he, Harry, would pull him back out...
But as he reached the ground
and sprinted towards the dais, Lupin grabbed Harry around the chest, holding him
back.
“There's nothing you can do, Harry—”
“Get him, save him, he's only
just gone through!”
“—it's too late, Harry.”
“We can still reach him—”
Harry struggled hard and viciously, but Lupin would not let go...
“There's
nothing you can do, Harry...nothing...he's gone.”