HE WHO MUST NOT BE NAMED RETURNS
“In a brief statement on Friday night, Minister for Magic Cornelius Fudge
confirmed that He Who Must Not Be Named has returned to this country and is once
more active.”
“It is with great regret that I must confirm that the wizard
styling himself Lord—well, you know who I mean—is alive and among us again,"
said Fudge, looking tired and flustered as he addressed reporters. "It is with
almost equal regret that we report the mass revolt of the Dementors of Azkaban,
who have shown themselves averse to continuing in the Ministry's employ. We
believe the Dementors are currently taking direction from Lord—Thingy.
“We
urge the magical population to remain vigilant. The Ministry is currently
publishing guides to elementary home and personal defence which will be
delivered free to all wizarding homes within the coming month.”
“The
Minister's statement was met with dismay and alarm from the wizarding community,
which as recently as last Wednesday was receiving Ministry assurances that there
was "no truth whatsoever in these persistent rumours that You-Know-Who is
operating amongst us once more".
“Details of the events that led to the
Ministry turnaround are still hazy, though it is believed that He Who Must Not
Be Named and a select band of followers (known as Death Eaters) gained entry to
the Ministry of Magic itself on Thursday evening.
“Albus Dumbledore, newly
reinstated Headmaster of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, reinstated
member of the International Confederation of Wizards and reinstated Chief
Warlock of the Wizengamot, has so far been unavailable for comment. He has
insisted over the past year that You-Know-Who is not dead, as was widely hoped
and believed, but is recruiting followers once more for afresh attempt to seize
power. Meanwhile, the ‘Boy Who Lived’”—
“There you are, Harry, I knew they'd
drag you into it somehow,” said Hermione, looking over the top of the paper at
him.
They were in the hospital wing. Harry was sitting on the end of Ron's
bed and they were both listening to Hermione read the front page of the Sunday
Prophet. Ginny, whose ankle had been mended in a trice by Madam Pomfrey, was
curled up at the foot of Hermione's bed; Neville, whose nose had likewise been
returned to its normal size and shape, was in a chair between the two beds; and
Luna, who had dropped in to visit, clutching the latest edition of The Quibbler,
was reading the magazine upside-down and apparently not taking in a word
Hermione was saying.
“He's the "boy who lived" again now, though, isn't he?”
said Ron darkly. “Not such a deluded show-off any more, eh?”
He helped
himself to a handful of Chocolate Frogs from the immense pile on his bedside
cabinet, threw a few to Harry, Ginny and Neville and ripped off the wrapper of
his own with his teeth. There were still deep welts on his forearms where the
brain's tentacles had wrapped around him. According to Madam Pomfrey, thoughts
could leave deeper scarring than almost anything else, though since she had
started applying copious amounts of Dr Ubbly's Oblivious Unction there seemed to
have been some improvement.
“Yes, they're very complimentary about you now,
Harry,” said Hermione, scanning down the article. "Alone voice of
truth...perceived as unbalanced, yet never wavered in his story...forced to bear
ridicule and slander..." H mmm,” she said, frowning, “I notice they don't
mention the fact that it was them doing all the ridiculing and slandering in the
Prophet...”
She winced slightly and put a hand to her ribs. The curse Dolohov
had used on her, though less effective than it would have been had he been able
to say the incantation aloud, had nevertheless caused, in Madam Pomfrey's words,
“quite enough damage to be going on with'. Hermione was having to take ten
different types of potion every day, was improving greatly, and was already
bored with the hospital wing.
“You-Know-Who's Last Attempt to Take Over,
pages two to four, What the Ministry Should Have Told Us, page five, Why Nobody
Listened to Albus Dumbledore, pages six to eight, Exclusive Interview with Harry
Potter, page nine...Well,” said Hermione, folding up the newspaper and throwing
it aside, “it's certainly given them lots to write about. And that interview
with Harry isn't exclusive, it's the one that was in The Quibbler months
ago...”
“Daddy sold it to them,” said Luna vaguely, turning a page of The
Quibbler. “He got a very good price for it, too, so we're going to go on an
expedition to Sweden this summer to see if we can catch a Crumple-Horned
Snorkack.”
Hermione seemed to struggle with herself for a moment, then said,
“That sounds lovely”
Ginny caught Harry's eye and looked away quickly,
grinning.
“So, anyway,” said Hermione, sitting up a little straighter and
wincing again, “what's going on in school?”
“Well, Flitwick's got rid of Fred
and George's swamp,” said Ginny, “he did it in about three seconds. But he left
a tiny patch under the window and he's roped it off”
“Why?” said Hermione,
looking startled.
“Oh, he just says it was a really good bit of magic,” said
Ginny, shrugging.
“I think he left it as a monument to Fred and George,” said
Ron, through a mouthful of chocolate. “They sent me all these, you know,” he
told Harry, pointing at the small mountain of Frogs beside him. “Must be doing
all right out of that joke shop, eh?”
Hermione looked rather disapproving and
asked, “So has all the trouble stopped now Dumbledore's back?”
“Yes,” said
Neville, “everything's settled right back to normal.”
“I's'pose Filch is
happy, is he?” asked Ron, propping a Chocolate Frog Card featuring Dumbledore
against his water jug.
“Not at all,” said Ginny “He's really, really
miserable, actually...” She lowered her voice to a whisper. “He keeps saying
Umbridge was the best thing that ever happened to Hogwarts...”
All six of
them looked around. Professor Umbridge was lying in a bed opposite them, gazing
up at the ceiling. Dumbledore had strode alone into the Forest to rescue her
from the centaurs; how he had done it—how he had emerged from the trees
supporting Professor Umbridge without so much as a scratch on him—nobody knew,
and Umbridge was certainly not telling. Since she had returned to the castle she
had not, as far as any of them knew, uttered a single word. Nobody really knew
what was wrong with her, either. Her usually neat mousy hair was very untidy and
there were still bits of twigs and leaves in it, but otherwise she seemed to be
quite unscathed.
“Madam Pomfrey says she's just in shock,” whispered
Hermione.
“Sulking, more like,” said Ginny
“Yeah, she shows signs of life
if you do this,” said Ron, and with his tongue he made soft clip-clopping
noises. Umbridge sat bolt upright, looking around wildly.
“Anything wrong,
Professor?” called Madam Pomfrey, poking her head around her office
door.
“No...no...” said Umbridge, sinking back into her pillows. “No, I must
have been dreaming...”
Hermione and Ginny muffled their laughter in the
bedclothes.
“Speaking of centaurs,” said Hermione, when she had recovered a
little, “who's Divination teacher now? Is Firenze staying?”
“He's got to,”
said Harry, “the other centaurs won't take him back, will they?”
“It looks
like he and Trelawney are both going to teach,” said Ginny
“Bet Dumbledore
wishes he could've got rid of Trelawney for good,” said Ron, now munching on his
fourteenth Frog. “Mind you, the whole subject's useless if you ask me, Firenze
isn't a lot better...”
“How can you say that?” Hermione demanded. “After
we've just found out that there are real prophecies?”
Harry's heart began to
race. He had not told Ron, Hermione or anyone else what the prophecy had
contained. Neville had told them it had smashed while Harry was pulling him up
the steps in the Death Room and Harry had not yet corrected this impression. He
was not ready to see their expressions when he told them that he must be either
murderer or victim, there was no other way...
“It is a pity it broke,” said
Hermione quietly, shaking her head.
“Yeah, it is,” said Ron. “Still, at least
You-Know-Who never found out what was in it either—where are you going?” he
added, looking both surprised and disappointed as Harry stood
up.
“Er—Hagrid's,” said Harry. “You know, he just got back and I promised I'd
go down and see him and tell him how you two are.”
“Oh, all right then,” said
Ron grumpily, looking out of the dormitory window at the patch of bright blue
sky beyond. “Wish we could come.”
“Say hello to him fir us!” called Hermione,
as Harry proceeded down the ward. “And ask him what's happening about...about
his little friend!”
Harry gave a wave of his hand to show he had heard and
understood as he left the dormitory.
The castle seemed very quiet even for a
Sunday. Everybody was clearly out in the sunny grounds, enjoying the end of
their exams and the prospect of a last few days of term unhampered by revision
or homework. Harry walked slowly along the deserted corridor, peering out of
windows as he went; he could see people messing around in the air over the
Quidditch pitch and a couple of students swimming in the lake, accompanied by
the giant squid.
He was finding it hard to decide whether he wanted to be
with people or not; whenever he was in company he wanted to get away and
whenever he was alone he wanted company. He thought he might really go and visit
Hagrid, though, as he had not talked to him properly since he'd
returned...
Harry had just descended the last marble step into the Entrance
Hall when Malloy, Crabbe and Goyle emerged from a door on the right that Harry
knew led down to the Slytherin common room. Harry stopped dead; so did Malfoy
and the others. The only sounds were the shouts, laughter and splashes drifting
into the Hall from the grounds through the open front doors.
Malfoy glanced
around—Harry knew he was checking for signs of teachers—then he looked back at
Harry and said in a low voice, “You're dead, Potter.”
Harry raised his
eyebrows.
“Funny” he said, “you'd think I'd have stopped walking
around...”
Malloy looked angrier than Harry had ever seen him; he felt a kind
of detached satisfaction at the sight of his pale, pointed face contorted with
rage.
“You're going to pay,” said Malloy in a voice barely louder than a
whisper. “I'm going to make you pay for what you've done to my
father...”
“Well, I'm terrified now,” said Harry sarcastically. “I's'pose
Lord Voldemort's just a warm-up act compared to you three—what's the matter?” he
added, for Malfoy Crabbe and Goyle had all looked stricken at the sound of the
name. “He's a mate of your dad, isn't he? Not scared of him, are you?”
“You
think you're such a big man, Potter,” said Malfoy, advancing now, Crabbe and
Goyle flanking him. “You wait. I'll have you. You can't land my father in
prison”
“I thought I just had,” said Harry.
“The Dementors have left
Azkaban,” said Malfoy quietly. “Dad and the others'll be out in no
time...”
“Yeah, I expect they will,” said Harry “Still, at least everyone
knows what scumbags they are now”
Malfoy's hand flew towards his wand, but
Harry was too quick for him; he had drawn his own wand before Malfoy's fingers
had even entered the pocket of his robes.
“Potter!”
The voice rang across
the Entrance Hall. Snape had emerged from the staircase leading down to his
office and at the sight of him Harry felt a great rush of hatred beyond anything
he felt towards Malloy...whatever Dumbledore said, he would never forgive
Snape...never...
“What are you doing, Potter?” said Snape, as coldly as ever,
as he strode over to the four of them.
“I'm trying to decide what curse to
use on Malloy, sir,” said Harry fiercely.
Snape stared at him.
“Put that
wand away at once,” he said curtly. “Ten points from Gryff-”
Snape looked
towards the giant hour-glasses on the walls and gave a sneering smile.
“Ah. I
see there are no longer any points left in the Gryffindor hour-glass to take
away. In that case, Potter, we will simply have to—
“Add some
more?”
Professor McGonagall had just stumped up the stone steps into the
castle; she was carrying a tartan carpetbag in one hand and leaning heavily on a
walking stick with her other, but otherwise looked quite well.
“Professor
McGonagall!” said Snape, striding forwards. “Out of St Mungo's, I see!”
“Yes,
Professor Snape,” said Professor McGonagall, shrugging off her travelling cloak,
“I'm quite as good as new. You two—Crabbe—Goyle =
She beckoned them forwards
imperiously and they came, shuffling their large feet and looking
awkward.
“Here,” said Professor McGonagall, thrusting her carpetbag into
Crabbe's chest and her cloak into Goyle's; “take these up to my office for
me.”
They turned and stumped away up the marble staircase.
“Right then,”
said Professor McGonagall, looking up at the hourglasses on the wall. “Well, I
think Potter and his friends ought to have fifty points apiece for alerting the
world to the return of YouKnow-Who! What say you, Professor Snape?”
What?”
snapped Snape, though Harry knew he had heard perfectly well. “Oh—well—I
suppose...”
“So that's fifty each for Potter, the two Weasleys, Longbottom
and Miss Granger,” said Professor McGanagall, and a shower of rubies fell down
into the bottom bulb of Gryffindor's hour-glass as she spoke. “Oh—and fifty for
Miss Lovegood, I suppose,” she added, and a number of sapphires fell into
Ravenclaw's glass. “Now, you wanted to take ten from Mr Potter, I think,
Professor Snape—so there we are...”
A few rubies retreated into the upper
bulb, leaving a respectable amount below nevertheless.
“Well, Potter, Malloy
I think you ought to be outside on a glorious day like this,” Professor
McGonagall continued briskly.
Harry did not need telling twice- he thrust his
wand back inside his robes and headed straight for the front doors without
another glance at Snape and Malfoy.
The hot sun hit him with a blast as he
walked across the lawns towards Hagrid'scabin. Students lying around on the
grass sunbathing, talking, reading the Sunday Prophet and eating sweets, looked
up at him as he passed; some called out to him, or else waved, clearly eager to
show that they, like the Prophet, had decided he was something of a hero. Harry
said nothing to any of them. He had no idea how much they knew of what had
happened three days ago, but he had so far avoided being questioned and
preferred to keep it that way.
He thought at first when he knocked on
Hagrid's cabin door that he was out, but then Fang came charging around the
corner and almost bowled him over with the enthusiasm of his welcome. Hagrid, it
transpired, was picking runner beans in his back garden.
“All righ', Harry!”
he said, beaming, when Harry approached the fence. “Come in, come in, we'll have
a cup o’ dandelion juice...”
“How's things?” Hagrid asked him, as they
settled down at his wooden table with a glass apiece of iced juice.
“Yeh—er—feelin” all righ', are yeh?”
Harry knew from the look of concern on
Hagrid's face that he was not referring to Harry's physical well-being.
“I'm
fine,” Harry said quickly, because he could not bear to discuss the thing that
he knew was in Hagrid's mind. “So, where're you been?”
“Bin hidin” out in the
mountains,” said Hagrid. “Up in a cave, like Sirius did when he”
Hagrid broke
off, cleared his throat gruffly, looked at Harry, and took a long draught of
juice.
“Anyway, back now,” he said feebly.
“You -you look better,” said
Harry, who was determined to keep the conversation moving away from
Sirius.
“Wha'?” said Hagrid, raising a massive hand and feeling his face.
“Oh—oh yeah. Well, Grawpy's loads better behaved now, loads. Seemed right
pleased ter see me when I got back, ter tell yeh the truth. He's a good lad,
really...I've bin thinkin” abou” tryin” ter find him a lady friend,
actually...”
Harry would normally have tried to persuade Hagrid out of this
idea at once; the prospect of a second giant taking up residence in the Forest,
possibly even wilder and more brutal than Grawp, was positively alarming, but
somehow Harry could not muster the energy necessary to argue the point. He was
starting to wish he was alone again, and with the idea of hastening his
departure he took several large gulps of his dandelion juice, half-emptying his
glass.
“Ev'ryone knows yeh've bin tellin’ the truth now, Harry,” said Hagrid
softly and unexpectedly. He was watching Harry closely. “Tha's gotta be better,
hasn’ it?”
Harry shrugged.
“Look...” Hagrid leaned towards him across the
table, “I knew Sirius longer ‘n yeh did...he died in battle, an’ tha's the way
he'd've wanted ter go”
“He didn't want to go at all!” said Harry
angrily.
Hagrid bowed his great shaggy head...
“Nah, I don’ reckon he
did,” he said quietly. “But still, Harry...he was never one ter sit aroun’ at
home an’ let other people do the fightin'. He couldn've lived with himself if he
hadn” gone ter help”
Harry leapt up.
“I've got to go and visit Ron and
Hermione in the hospital wing,” he said mechanically.
“Oh,” said Hagrid,
looking rather upset. “Oh...all righ’ then, Harry...take care o’ yerself then,
an’ drop back in if yeh've got a”
“Yeah...right...”
Harry crossed to the
door as fast as he could and pulled it open; he was out in the sunshine again
before Hagrid had finished saying goodbye, and walking away across the lawn.
Once again, people called out to him as he passed. He closed his eyes for a few
moments, wishing they would all vanish, that he could open his eyes and find
himself alone in the grounds...
A few days ago, before his exams had finished
and he had seen the vision Voldemort had planted in his mind, he would have
given almost anything for the wizarding world to know he had been telling the
truth, for them to believe that Voldemort was back, and to know that he was
neither a liar nor mad. Now, however...
He walked a short way around the
lake, sat down on its bank, sheltered from the gaze of passers-by behind a
tangle of shrubs, and stared out over the gleaming water, thinking...
Perhaps
the reason he wanted to be alone was because he had felt isolated from everybody
since his talk with Dumbledore. An invisible barrier separated him from the rest
of the world. He was—he had always been—a marked man. It was just that he had
never really understood what that meant...
And yet sitting here on the edge
of the lake, with the terrible weight of grief dragging at him, with the loss of
Sirius so raw and fresh inside, he could not muster any great sense of fear. It
was sunny, and the grounds around him were full of laughing people, and even
though he felt as distant from them as though he belonged to a different race,
it was still very hard to believe as he sat here that his life must include, or
end in, murder...
He sat there for a long time, gazing out at the water,
trying not to think about his godfather or to remember that it was directly
across from here, on the opposite bank, that Sirius had once collapsed trying to
fend off a hundred Dementors...
The sun had set before he realised he was
cold. He got up and returned to the castle, wiping his face on his sleeve as he
went.
Ron and Hermione left the hospital wing completely cured three days
before the end of term. Hermione kept showing signs of wanting to talk about
Sirius, but Ron tended to make hushing noises every time she mentioned his name.
Harry was still not sure whether or not he wanted to talk about his godfather
yet; his wishes varied with his mood. He knew one thing, though: unhappy as he
felt at the moment, he would greatly miss Hogwarts in a few days’ time when he
was back at number four, Privet Drive. Even though he now understood exactly why
he had to return there every summer, he did not feel any better about it.
Indeed, he had never dreaded his return more.
Professor Umbridge left
Hogwarts the day before the end of term. It seemed she had crept out of the
hospital wing during dinnertime, evidently hoping to depart undetected, but
unfortunately for her, she met Peeves on the way, who seized his last chance to
do as Fred had instructed, and chased her gleefully from the premises whacking
her alternately with a walking stick and a sock full of chalk. Many students ran
out into the Entrance Hall to watch her running away down the path and the Heads
of Houses tried only half-heartedly to restrain them. Indeed, Professor
McGonagall sank back into her chair at the staff table after a few feeble
remonstrances and was clearly heard to express a regret that she could not run
cheering after Umbridge herself, because Peeves had borrowed her walking
stick.
Their last evening at school arrived; most people had finished packing
and were already heading down to the end-of-term leaving feast, but Harry had
not even started.
“Just do it tomorrow!” said Ron, who was waiting by the
door of their dormitory. “Come on, I'm starving.”
“I won't be long...look,
you go ahead...”
But when the dormitory door closed behind Ron, Harry made no
effort to speed up his packing. The very last thing he wanted to do was to
attend the Leaving Feast. He was worried that Dumbledore would make some
reference to him in his speech. He was sure to mention Voldemort's return; he
had talked to them about it last year, after all...
Harry pulled some
crumpled robes out of the very bottom of his trunk to make way for folded ones
and, as he did so, noticed a badly wrapped package lying in a corner of it. He
could not think what it was doing there. He bent down, pulled it out from
underneath his trainers and examined it.
He realised what it was within
seconds. Sirius had given it to him just inside the front door of number twelve
Grimmauld Place. “Use it if you need me, all right?”
Harry sank down on to
his bed and unwrapped the package. Out fell a small, square mirror. It looked
old; it was certainly dirty. Harry held it up to his face and saw his own
reflection looking back at him
He turned the mirror over. There on the
reverse side was a scribbled note from Sirius.
This is a two-way mirror, I've got the other one of the pair. If
you
need to speak to me, just say my name into it; you'll appear in
my
mirror and I'll be able to talk in yours. James and I used to
use them when
we were in separate detentions.
Harry's heart began to race. He remembered
seeing his dead parents in the Mirror of Erised four years ago. He was going to
be able to talk to Sirius again, right now, he knew it—
He looked around to
make sure there was nobody else there; the dormitory was quite empty. He looked
back at the mirror, raised it in front of his face with trembling hands and
said, loudly and clearly, “Sirius.”
His breath misted the surface of the
glass. He held the mirror even closer, excitement flooding through him, but the
eyes blinking back at him through the fog were definitely his own.
He wiped
the mirror clear again and said, so that every syllable rang clearly through the
room:
“Sirius Black!”
Nothing happened. The frustrated face looking back
out of the mirror was still, definitely, his own...
Sirius didn't have his
mirror on him when he went through the archway, said a small voice in Harry's
head. That's why it's not working...
Harry remained quite still for a moment,
then hurled the mirror back into the trunk where it shattered. He had been
convinced, for a whole, shining minute, that he was going to see Sirius, talk to
him again...
Disappointment was burning in his throat; he got up and began
throwing his things pell-mell into the trunk on top of the broken mirror—
But
then an idea struck him...a better idea than a mirror...a much bigger, more
important idea...how had he never thought of it before—why had he never
asked?
He was sprinting out of the dormitor't and down the spiral staircase
hitting the walls as he ran and barely noticing; he hurtled across the empty
common room, through the portrait hole and off along the corridor, ignoring the
Fat Lady, who called after him: “The feast is about to start, you know, you're
cutting it very fine!”
But Harry had no intention of going to the
feast...
How could it be that the place was full of ghosts whenever you
didn't need one, yet now...
He ran down staircases and along corridors and
met nobody either alive or dead. They were all, clearly, in the Great Hall.
Outside his Charms classroom he came to a halt, panting and thinking
disconsolately that he would have to wait until later, until after the end of
the feast...
But just as he had given up hope, he saw it—a translucent
somebody drifting across the end of the corridor.
“Hey—hey Nick!
NICK!”
The ghost stuck its head back out of the wall, revealing the
extravagantly plumed hat and dangerously wobbling head of Sir Nicholas de
Mimsy-Porpington.
“Good evening,” he said, withdrawing the rest of his body
from the solid stone and smiling at Harry “I am not the only one who is late,
then? Though,” he sighed, “in a rather different sense, of course...”
“Nick,
can I ask you something?”
A most peculiar expression stole over Nearly
Headless Nick's face as he inserted a finger in the stiff ruff at his neck and
tugged it a little straighter, apparently to give himself thinking time. He
desisted only when his partially severed neck seemed about to give way
completely.
“Er—now, Harry?” said Nick, looking discomfited. “Can't it wait
until after the feast?”
“No—Nick—please,” said Harry, “I really need to talk
to you. Can we go in here?”
Harry opened the door of the nearest classroom
and Nearly Headless Nick sighed.
“Oh, very well,” he said, looking resigned.
“I can't pretend I haven't been expecting it.”
Harry was holding the door
open for him, but he drifted through the wall instead.
“Expecting what?”
Harry asked, as he closed the door.
“You to come and find me,” said Nick, now
gliding over to the window and looking out at the darkening grounds. “It
happens, sometimes...when somebody has suffered a...loss.”
“Well,” said
Harry, refusing to be deflected. “You were right, I've—I've come to find
you.”
Nick said nothing.
“It's –”said Harry, who was finding this more
awkward than he had anticipated, “it's just—you're dead. But you're still here,
aren't you?”
Nick sighed and continued to gaze out at the grounds.
“That's
right, isn't it?” Harry urged him. “You died, but I'm talking to you...you can
walk around Hogwarts and everything, can't you?”
“Yes,” said Nearly Headless
Nick quietly, “I walk and talk, yes.”
“So, you came back, didn't you?” said
Harry urgently. “People can come back, right? As ghosts. They don't have to
disappear completely. Well?” he added impatiently, when Nick continued to say
nothing.
Nearly Headless Nick hesitated, then said, “Not everyone can come
back as a ghost.”
“What d'you mean?” said Harry quickly
“Only...only
wizards.”
“Oh,” said Harry, and he almost laughed with relief. “Well, that's
OK then, the person I'm asking about is a wizard. So he can come back,
right?”
Nick turned away from the window and looked mournfully at
Harry.
“He won't come back.”
“Who?”
“Sinus Black,” said Nick.
“But
you did!” said Harry angrily. “You came back -you're dead and you didn't
disappear—”
“Wizards can leave an imprint of themselves upon the earth, to
walk palely where their living selves once trod,” said Nick miserably. “But very
few wizards choose that path.”
“Why not?” said Harry. “Anyway—it doesn't
matter—Sirius won't care if it's unusual, he'll come back, I know he
will!”
And so strong was his belief, Harry actually turned his head to check
the door, sure, for a split second, that he was going to see Sirius,
pearly-white and transparent but beaming, walking through it towards him.
“He
will not come back,” repeated Nick. “He will have...gone on.”
“What d'you
mean, "gone on"?” said Harry quickly “Gone on where? Listen—what happens when
you die, anyway? Where do you go? Why doesn't everyone come back? Why isn't this
place full of ghosts? Why -?”
“I cannot answer,” said Nick.
“You're dead,
aren't you?” said Harry exasperatedly. “Who can answer better than you?”
“I
was afraid of death,” said Nick softly. “I chose to remain behind. I sometimes
wonder whether I oughtn't to have...well, that is neither here nor there...in
fact, I am neither here nor there...” He gave a small sad chuckle. “I know
nothing of the secrets of death, Harry, for I chose my feeble imitation of life
stead. I believe learned wizards study the matter in the Department of
Mysteries—”
“Don't talk to me about that place!” said Harry fiercely.
“I
am sorry not to have been more help,” said Nick gently “Well...well, do excuse
me...the feast, you know...”
And he left the room, leaving Harry there alone,
gazing blankly at the wall through which Nick had disappeared.
Harry felt
almost as though he had lost his godfather all over again in losing the hope
that he might be able to see or speak to him once more. He walked slowly and
miserably back up through the empty castle, wondering whether he would ever feel
cheerful again.
He had turned the corner towards the Fat Lady's corridor when
he saw somebody up ahead fastening a note to a board on the wall. A second
glance showed him it was Luna. There were no good hiding places nearby, she was
bound to have heard his footsteps, and in any case, Harry could hardly muster
the energy to avoid anyone at the moment.
“Hello,” said Luna vaguely,
glancing around at him as she stepped back from the notice.
“How come you're
not at the feast?” Harry asked.
“Well, I've lost most of my possessions,”
said Luna serenely. “People take them and hide them, you know. But as it's the
last night, I really do need them back, so I've been putting up signs.”
She
gestured towards the noticeboard, upon which, sure enough, she had pinned a list
of all her missing books and clothes, with a plea for their return.
An odd
feeling rose in Harry; an emotion quite different from the anger and grief that
had filled him since Sirius's death. It was a few moments before he realised
that he was feeling sorry for Luna.
“How come people hide your stuff?” he
asked her, frowning.
“Oh...well...” she shrugged. “I think they think I'm a
bit odd, you know. Some people call me "Loony" Lovegood, actually.”
Harry
looked at her and the new feeling of pity intensified rather
painfully.
“That's no reason for them to take your things,” he said flatly.
“D'you want help finding them?”
“Oh, no,” she said, smiling at him. “They'll
come back, they always do in the end. It was just that I wanted to pack tonight.
Anyway...why aren't you at the feast?”
Harry shrugged. “Just didn't feel like
it.”
“No,” said Luna, observing him with those oddly misty, protuberant eyes.
“I don't suppose you do. That man the Death Eaters killed was your godfather,
wasn't he? Ginny told me.”
Harry nodded curtly, but found that for some
reason he did not mind Luna talking about Sirius. He had just remembered that
she, too, could see Thestrals.
“Have you...” he began. “I mean, who...has
anyone you known ever died?”
“Yes,” said Luna simply, “my mother. She was a
quite extraordinary witch, you know, but she did like to experiment and one of
her spells went rather badly wrong one day. I was nine.”
“I'm sorry” Harry
mumbled.
“Yes, it was rather horrible,” said Luna conversationally. “I still
feel very sad about it sometimes. But I've still got Dad. And anyway, it's not
as though I'll never see Mum again, is it?”
“Er—isn't it?” said Harry
uncertainly.
She shook her head in disbelief.
“Oh, come on. You heard
them, just behind the veil, didn't you?”
“You mean...”
“In that room with
the archway. They were just lurking out of sight, that's all. You heard
them.”
They looked at each other. Luna was smiling slightly. Harry did not
know what to say, or to think; Luna believed so many extraordinary things...yet
he had been sure he had heard voices behind the veil, too.
“Are you sure you
don't want me to help you look for your stuff?” he said.
“Oh, no,” said Luna.
“No, I think I'll just go down and have some pudding and wait for it all to turn
up...it always does in the end...well, have a nice holiday
Harry”
“Yeah...yeah, you too.”
She walked away from him and, as he watched
her go, he found that the terrible weight in his stomach- seemed to have
lessened slightly.
The journey home on the Hogwarts Express next day was
eventful in several ways. Firstly Malfoy, Crabbe and Goyle, who had clearly been
waiting all week for the opportunity to strike without teacher witnesses,
attempted to ambush Harry halfway down the train as he made his way back from
the toilet. The attack might have succeeded had it not been for the fact that
they unwittingly chose to stage the attack right outside a compartment full of
DA members, who saw what was happening through the glass and rose as one to rush
to Harry's aid. By the time Ernie Macmillan, Hannah Abbott, Susan Bones, Justin
Finch-Fletchley Anthony Goldstein and Terry Boot had finished using a wide
variety of the hexes and jinxes Harry had taught them, Malfoy, Crabbe and Goyle
resembled nothing so much as three gigantic slugs squeezed into Hogwarts uniform
as Harry, Ernie and Justin hoisted them into the luggage rack and left them
there to ooze.
“I must say, I'm looking forward to seeing Malfoy's mother's
face when he gets off the train,” said Ernie, with some satisfaction, as he
watched Malloy squirm above him. Ernie had never quite got over the indignity of
Malloy docking points from Hufflepuff during his brief spell as a member of the
Inquisitorial Squad.
“Goyle's mum'll be really pleased, though,” said Ron,
who had come to investigate the source of the commotion. “He's loads
betterlooking now...anyway, Harry, the food trolley's just stopped if you want
anything...”
Harry thanked the others and accompanied Ron back to their
compartment, where he bought a large pile of cauldron cakes and pumpkin pasties.
Hermione was reading the Daily Prophet again, Ginny was doing a quiz in The
Quibbler and Neville was stroking his Mimbulus mimbletonia, which had grown a
great deal over the year and now made odd crooning noises when touched.
Harry
and Ron whiled away most of the journey playing wizard chess while Hermione read
out snippets from the Prophet. It was now full of articles about how to repel
Dementors, attempts by the Ministry to track down Death Eaters and hysterical
letters claiming that the writer had seen Lord Voldemort walking past their
house that very morning...
“It hasn't really started yet,” sighed Hermione
gloomily, folding up the newspaper again. “But it won't be long now...”
“Hey,
Harry” said Ron softly, nodding towards the glass window on to the
corridor.
Harry looked around. Cho was passing, accompanied by Marietta
Edgecombe, who was wearing a balaclava. His and Cho's eyes met for a moment. Cho
blushed and kept walking. Harry looked back down at the chessboard just in time
to see one of his pawns chased off its square by Ron's
knight.
“What's—er—going on with you and her, anyway?” Ron asked
quietly
“Nothing,” said Harry truthfully.
“I—er—heard she's going out with
someone else now,” said Hermione tentatively.
Harry was surprised to find
that this information did not hurt at all. Wanting to impress Cho seemed to
belong to a past that was no longer quite connected with him; so much of what he
had wanted before Sirius',” death felt that these days...the week that had
elapsed since he had last seen Sirius seemed to have lasted much, much longer;
it stretched across two universes, the one with Sirius in it, and the one
without.
“You're well out of it, mate,” said Ron forcefully. “I mean, she's
quite good-looking and all that, but you want someone a bit more
cheerful.”
“She's probably cheerful enough with someone else,” said Harry,
shrugging.
“Who's she with now, anyway?” Ron asked Hermione, but it was Ginny
who answered.
“Michael Corner,” she said.
“Michael—but” maid Ron, craning
around in his seat to stare at her. “But you were going out with him!”
“Not
any more,” said Ginny resolutely. “He didn't like Gryffindor beating Ravenclaw
at Quidditch, and got really sulky, so I ditched him and he ran off to comfort
Cho instead.” She scratched her nose absently with the end of her quill, turned
The Quibbler upsidedown and began marking her answers. Ron looked highly
delighted.
“Well, I always thought he was a bit of an idiot,” he said,
prodding his queen forwards towards Harry's quivering castle. “Good for you.
Just choose someone—better—next time.”
He cast Harry an oddly furtive look as
he said it.
“Well, I've chosen Dean Thomas, would you say he's better?” asked
Ginny vaguely.
“WHAT?” shouted Ron, upending the chessboard: Crookshanks went
plunging after the pieces and Hedwig and Pigwidgeon twittered and hooted angrily
from overhead.
As the train slowed down in the approach to King's Cross,
Harry thought he had never wanted to leave it less. He even wondered fleetingly
what would happen if he simply refused to get off, but remained stubbornly
sitting there until the first of September, when it would take him back to
Hogwarts. When it finally puffed to a standstill, however, he lifted down
Hedwig's cage and prepared to drag his trunk from the train as usual.
When
the ticket inspector signalled to Harry, Ron and Hermione that it was safe to
walk through the magical barrier between platforms nine and ten, however, he
found a surprise awaiting him on the other side: a group of people standing
there to greet him who he had not expected at all.
There was Mad-Eye Moody,
looking quite as sinister with his bowler hat pulled low over his magical eye as
he would have done without it, his gnarled hands clutching a long staff, his
body wrapped in a voluminous travelling cloak. Tonks stood just behind him, her
bright bubble-gum-pink hair gleaming in the sunlight filtering through the dirty
glass of the station ceiling, wearing heavily patched jeans and a bright purple
T-shirt bearing the legend The Weird Sisters. Next to Tonks was Lupin, his face
pale, his hair greying, a long and threadbare overcoat covering a shabby jumper
and trousers. At the front of the group stood Mr and Mrs Weasley, dressed in
their Muggle best, and Fred and George, who were both wearing brand-new jackets
in some lurid green, scaly material.
“Ron, Ginny!” called Mrs Weasley,
hurrying forwards and hugging her children tightly “Oh, and Harry dear—how are
you?”
“Fine,” lied Harry, as she pulled him into a tight embrace. Over her
shoulder he saw Ron goggling at the twins’ new clothes.
“What are they
supposed to be?” he asked, pointing at the jackets.
“Finest dragonskin,
little bro',” said Fred, giving his zip a little tweak. “Business is booming and
we thought we'd treat ourselves.”
“Hello, Harry” said Lupin, as Mrs Weasley
let go of Harry and turned to greet Hermione.
“Hi,” said Harry “I didn't
expect ...what are you all doing here?”
“Well,” said Lupin with a slight
smile, “we thought we might have a little chat with your aunt and uncle before
letting them take you home.”
“I dunno if that's a good idea,” said Harry at
once.
“Oh, I think it is,” growled Moody, who had limped a little closer.
“That'll be them, will it, Potter?”
He pointed with his thumb over his
shoulder; his magical eye was evidently peering through the back of his head and
his bowler hat. Harry leaned an inch or so to the left to see where Mad-Eye was
pointing and there, sure enough, were the three Dursleys, who looked positively
appalled to see Harry's reception committee.
“Ah, Harry” said Mr Weasley,
turning from Hermione's parents, who he had just greeted enthusiastically, and
who were now taking it in turns to hug Hermione. “Well—shall we do it,
then?”
“Yeah, I reckon so, Arthur,” said Moody.
He and Mr Weasley took the
lead across the station towards the Dursleys, who were apparently rooted to the
floor. Hermione disengaged herself gently from her mother to join the
group.
“Good afternoon,” said Mr Weasley pleasantly to Uncle Vernon as he
came to a halt right in front of him. “You might remember me, my name's Arthur
Weasley”
As Mr Weasley had single-handedly demolished most of the Dursleys’
living room two years previously, Harry would have been very surprised if Uncle
Vernon had forgotten him. Sure enough, Uncle Vernon turned a deeper shade of
puce and glared at Mr Weasley, but chose not to say anything, partly, perhaps,
because the Dursleys were outnumbered two to one. Aunt Petunia looked both
frightened and embarrassed; she kept glancing around, as though terrified
somebody she knew would see her in such company. Dudley, meanwhile, seemed to be
trying to look small and insignificant, a feat at which he was failing
extravagantly.
“We thought we'd just have a few words with you about Harry”,
said Mr Weasley, still smiling.
“Yeah,” growled Moody. “About how he's
treated when he's at your place.”
Uncle Vernon's moustache seemed to bristle
with indignation. Possibly because the bowler hat gave him the entirely mistaken
impression that he was dealing with a kindred spirit, he addressed himself to
Moody.
“I am not aware that it is any of your business what goes on in my
house—”
“I expect what you're not aware of would fill several books,
Dursley,” growled Moody.
“Anyway, that's not the point,” interjected Tonks,
whose pink hair seemed to offend Aunt Petunia more than all the rest put
together, for she closed her eyes rather than look at her. “The point is, if we
find out you've been horrible to Harry =
“—And make no mistake, we'll hear
about it,” added Lupin pleasantly.
“Yes,” said Mr Weasley, “even if you won't
let Harry use the fellytone”
“Telephone,” whispered Hermione.
“—Yeah, if
we get any hint that Potter's been mistreated in any way, you'll have us to
answer to,” said Moody.
Uncle Vernon swelled ominously. His sense of outrage
seemed to outweigh even his fear of this bunch of oddballs.
“Are you
threatening me, sir?” he said, so loudly that passers-by actually turned to
stare.
“Yes, I am,” said Mad-Eye, who seemed rather pleased that Uncle Vernon
had grasped this fact so quickly.
“And do I look like the kind of man who can
be intimidated?” barked Uncle Vernon.
“Well...” said Moody, pushing back his
bowler hat to reveal his sinisterly revolving magical eye. Uncle Vernon leapt
backwards in horror and collided painfully with a luggage trolley. “Yes, I'd
have to say you do, Dursley”
He turned away from Uncle Vernon to survey
Harry.
“So, Potter...give us a shout if you need us. If we don't hear from
you for three days in a row, we'll send someone along...”
Aunt Petunia
whimpered piteously. It could not have been plainer that she was thinking of
what the neighbours would say if the't caught sight of these people marching up
the garden path.
“Bye, then, Potter,” said Moody, grasping Harry's shoulder
for a moment with a gnarled hand.
“Take care, Harry,” said Lupin quietly.
“Keep in touch.”
“Harry, we'll have you away from there as soon as we can,”
Mrs Weasley whispered, hugging him again.
“We'll see you soon, mate,” said
Ron anxiously, shaking Harry's hand.
“Really soon, Harry” said Hermione
earnestly. “We promise.”
Harry nodded. He somehow could not find words to
tell them what it meant to him, to see them all ranged there, on his side.
Instead, he smiled, raised a hand in farewell, turned around and led the way out
of the station towards the sunlit street, with Uncle Vernon, Aunt Petunia and
Dudley hurrying along in his wake.