“Your -?”
“My dear old
mum, yeah,” said Sirius. “We've been trying to get her down for a month but we
think she put a Permanent Sticking Charm on the back of the canvas. Let's get
downstairs, quick, before they all wake up again.”
“But what's a portrait of
your mother doing here?” Harry asked, bewildered, as they went through the door
from the hall and led the way down a flight of narrow stone steps, the others
just behind them.
“Hasn't anyone told you? This was my parents’ house,” said
Sirius. “But I'm the last Black left, so it's mine now. I offered it to
Dumbledore for Headquarters—about the only useful thing I've been able to
do.”
Harry, who had expected a better welcome, noted how hard and bitter
Sirius's voice sounded. He followed his godfather to the bottom of the steps and
through a door leading into the basement kitchen.
It was scarcely less gloomy
than the hall above, a cavernous room with rough stone walls. Most of the light
was coming from a large fire at the far end of the room. A haze of pipe smoke
hung in the air like battle fumes, through which loomed the menacing shapes of
heavy iron pots and pans hanging from the dark ceiling. Many chairs had been
crammed into the room for the meeting and a long wooden table stood in the
middle of them, littered with rolls of parchment, goblets, empty wine bottles,
and a heap of what appeared to be rags. Mr Weasley and his eldest son Bill were
talking quietly with their heads together at the end of the table.
Mrs
Weasley cleared her throat. Her husband, a thin, balding, red-haired man who
wore horn-rimmed glasses, looked around and jumped to his feet.
“Harry!” Mr
Weasley said, hurrying forward to greet him, and shaking his hand vigorously.
“Good to see you!”
Over his shoulder Harry saw Bill, who still wore his long
hair in a ponytail, hastily rolling up the lengths of parchment left on the
table.
“Journey all right, Harry?” Bill called, trying to gather up twelve
scrolls at once. “Mad-Eye didn't make you come via Greenland, then?”
“He
tried,” said Tonks, striding over to help Bill and immediately toppling a candle
on to the last piece of parchment. “Oh no—sorry—”
“Here, dear,” said Mrs
Weasley, sounding exasperated, and she repaired the parchment with a wave of her
wand. In the flash of light caused by Mrs Weasley's charm Harry caught a glimpse
of what looked like the plan of a building.
Mrs Weasley had seen him looking.
She snatched the plan off the table and stuffed it into Bill's already overladen
arms.
“This sort of thing ought to be cleared away promptly at the end of
meetings,” she snapped, before sweeping off towards an ancient dresser from
which she started unloading dinner plates.
Bill took out his wand, muttered,
“Evanesco!” and the scrolls vanished.
“Sit down, Harry,” said Sirius. “You've
met Mundungus, haven't you?”
The thing Harry had taken to be a pile of rags
gave a prolonged, grunting snore, then jerked awake.
“Some'n say m'name?”
Mundungus mumbled sleepily. “I ‘gree with Sirius...” He raised a very grubby
hand in the air as though voting, his droopy, bloodshot eyes unfocused.
Ginny
giggled.
“The meeting's over, Dung,” said Sirius, as they all sat down around
him at the table. “Harry's arrived.”
“Eh?” said Mundungus, peering balefully
at Harry through his matted ginger hair. “Blimey, so ‘e ‘as. Yeah...you all
right, ‘Any?”
“Yeah,” said Harry.
Mundungus fumbled nervously in his
pockets, still staring at Harry, and pulled out a grimy black pipe. He stuck it
in his mouth, ignited the end of it with his wand and took a deep pull on it.
Great billowing clouds of greenish smoke obscured him within seconds.
“Owe
you a ‘pology,” grunted a voice from the middle of the smelly cloud.
“For the
last time, Mundungus,” called Mrs Weasley, “will you please not smoke that thing
in the kitchen, especially not when we're about to eat!”
“Ah,” said
Mundungus. “Right. Sorry, Molly.”
The cloud of smoke vanished as Mundungus
stowed his pipe back in his pocket, but an acrid smell of burning socks
lingered.
“And if you want dinner before midnight I'll need a hand,” Mrs
Weasley said to the room at large. “No, you can stay where you are, Harry dear,
you've had a long journey.”
“What can I do, Molly?” said Tonks
enthusiastically, bounding forwards.
Mrs Weasley hesitated, looking
apprehensive.
“Er—no, it's all right, Tonks, you have a rest too, you've done
enough today.”
“No, no, I want to help!” said Tonks brightly, knocking over a
chair as she hurried towards the dresser, from which Ginny was collecting
cutlery.
Soon, a series of heavy knives were chopping meat and vegetables of
their own accord, supervised by Mr Weasley, while Mrs Weasley stirred a cauldron
dangling over the fire and the others took out plates, more goblets and food
from the pantry. Harry was left at the table with Sirius and Mundungus, who was
still blinking at him mournfully.
“Seen old Figgy since?” he asked.
“No,”
said Harry, “I haven't seen anyone.”
“See, I wouldn't ‘ave left,” said
Mundungus, leaning forward, a pleading note in his voice, “but I ‘ad a business
opportunity –“
Harry felt something brush against his knees and started, but it
was only Crookshanks, Hermione's bandy-legged ginger cat, who wound himself once
around Harry's legs, purring, then jumped on to Sirius's lap and curled up.
Sirius scratched him absent-mindedly behind the ears as he turned, still
grim-faced, to Harry.
“Had a good summer so far?”
“No, it's been lousy,”
said Harry.
For the first time, something like a grin flitted across Sirius's
face.
“Don't know what you're complaining about, myself.”
“What?” said
Harry incredulously.
“Personally, I'd have welcomed a Dementor attack. A
deadly struggle for my soul would have broken the monotony nicely. You think
you've had it bad, at least you've been able to get out and about, stretch your
legs, get into a few fights...I've been stuck inside for a month.”
“How
come?” asked Harry, frowning.
“Because the Ministry of Magic's still after
me, and Voldemort will know all about me being an Animagus by now, Wormtail will
have told him, so my big disguise is useless. There's not much I can do for the
Order of the Phoenix...or so Dumbledore feels.”
There was something about the
slightly flattened tone of voice in which Sirius uttered Dumbledore's name that
told Harry that Sirius, too, was not very happy with the Headmaster. Harry felt
a sudden upsurge of affection for his godfather.
“At least you've known
what's been going on,” he said bracingly.
“Oh yeah,” said Sirius
sarcastically. “Listening to Snape's reports, having to take all his snide hints
that he's out there risking his life while I'm sat on my backside here having a
nice comfortable time...asking me how the cleanings going—”
“What cleaning?”
asked Harry.
“Trying to make this place fit for human habitation,” said
Sirius, waving a hand around the dismal kitchen. “No one's lived here for ten
years, not since my dear mother died, unless you count her old house-elf, and
he's gone round the twist—hasn't cleaned anything in ages.”
“Sirius,” said
Mundungus, who did not appear to have paid any attention to the conversation,
but had been closely examining an empty goblet. “This solid silver,
mate?”
“Yes,” said Sirius, surveying it with distaste. “Finest
fifteenth-century goblin-wrought silver, embossed with the Black family
crest.”
“That'd come orf, though,” muttered Mundungus, polishing it with his
cuff.
“Fred—George—NO, JUST CARRY THEM!” Mrs Weasley shrieked.
Harry,
Sirius and Mundungus looked round and, within a split second, they had dived
away from the table. Fred and George had bewitched a large cauldron of stew, an
iron flagon of Butterbeer and a heavy wooden breadboard, complete with knife, to
hurtle through the air towards them. The stew skidded the length of the table
and came to a halt just before the end, leaving a long black burn on the wooden
surface; the flagon of Butterbeer fell with a crash, spilling its contents
everywhere; the bread knife slipped off the board and landed, point down and
quivering ominously, exactly where Sirius's right hand had been seconds
before.
“FOR HEAVEN'S SAKE!” screamed Mrs Weasley. “THERE WAS NO NEED—I'VE
HAD ENOUGH OF THIS—JUST BECAUSE YOU'RE ALLOWED TO USE MAGIC NOW, YOU DON'T HAVE
TO WHIP YOUR WANDS OUT FOR EVERY TINY LITTLE THING!”
“We were just trying to
save a bit of time!” said Fred, hurrying forward to wrench the bread knife out
of the table. “Sorry, Sirius, mate—didn't mean to—”
Harry and Sirius were
both laughing; Mundungus, who had toppled backwards off his chair, was swearing
as he got to his feet; Crookshanks had given an angry hiss and shot off under
the dresser, from where his large yellow eyes glowed in the darkness.
“Boys,”
Mr Weasley said, lifting the stew back into the middle of the table, “your
mother's right, you're supposed to show a sense of responsibility now you've
come of age—”
“None of your brothers caused this sort of trouble!” Mrs
Weasley raged at the twins as she slammed a fresh flagon of Butterbeer on to the
table, and spilling almost as much again. “Bill didn't feel the need to Apparate
every few feet! Charlie didn't charm everything he met! Percy—”
She stopped
dead, catching her breath with a frightened look at her husband, whose
expression was suddenly wooden.
“Let's eat,” said Bill quickly.
“It looks
wonderful, Molly,” said Lupin, ladling stew on to a plate for her and handing it
across the table.
For a few minutes there was silence but for the chink of
plates and cutlery and the scraping of chairs as everyone settled down to their
food. Then Mrs Weasley turned to Sirius.
“I've been meaning to tell you,
Sirius, there's something trapped in that writing desk in the drawing room, it
keeps rattling and shaking. Of course, it could just be a Boggart, but I thought
we ought to ask Alastor to have a look at it before we let it out.”
“Whatever
you like,” said Sirius indifferently.
“The curtains in there are full of
Doxys, too,” Mrs Weasley went on. “I thought we might try and tackle them
tomorrow.”
“I look forward to it,” said Sirius. Harry heard the sarcasm in
his voice, but he was not sure that anyone else did.
Opposite Harry, Tonks
was entertaining Hermione and Ginny by transforming her nose between mouthfuls.
Screwing up her eyes each time with the same pained expression she had worn back
in Harry's bedroom, her nose swelled to a beak-like protuberance that resembled
Snape's, shrank to the size of a button mushroom and then sprouted a great deal
of hair from each nostril. Apparently this was a regular mealtime entertainment,
because Hermione and Ginny were soon requesting their favourite noses.
“Do
that one like a pig snout, Tonks.”
Tonks obliged, and Harry, looking up, had
the fleeting impression that a female Dudley was grinning at him from across the
table.
Mr Weasley, Bill and Lupin were having an intense discussion about
goblins.
“They're not giving anything away yet,” said Bill. “I still can't
work out whether or not they believe he's back. Course, they might prefer not to
take sides at all. Keep out of it.”
“I'm sure they'd never go over to
You-Know-Who,” said Mr Weasley, shaking his head. “They've suffered losses too;
remember that goblin family he murdered last time, somewhere near
Nottingham?”
“I think it depends what they're offered,” said Lupin. “And I'm
not talking about gold. If they're offered the freedoms we've been denying them
for centuries they're going to be tempted. Have you still not had any luck with
Ragnok, Bill?”
“He's feeling pretty anti-wizard at the moment,” said Bill,
“he hasn't stopped raging about the Bagman business, he reckons the Ministry did
a cover-up, those goblins never got their gold from him, you know—”
A gale of
laughter from the middle of the table drowned the rest of Bill's words. Fred,
George, Ron and Mundungus were rolling around in their seats.
“...and then,”
choked Mundungus, tears running down his face, “and then, if you'll believe it,
‘e says to me, ‘e says, "'Ere, Dung, where didja get all them toads from? ‘Cos
some son of a Bludger's gone and nicked all mine!" And I says, "Nicked all your
toads, Will, what next? So you'll be wanting some more, then?" And if you'll
believe me, lads, the gormless gargoyle buys all is own toads back of me for a
lot more'n what ‘e paid in the first place—”
“I don't think we need to hear
any more of your business dealings, thank you very much, Mundungus,” said Mrs
Weasley sharply, as Ron slumped forwards on to the table, howling with
laughter.
“Beg pardon, Molly,” said Mundungus at once, wiping his eyes and
winking at Harry. “But, you know, Will nicked ‘em of Warty Harris in the first
place so I wasn't really doing nothing wrong.”
“I don't know where you
learned about right and wrong, Mundungus, but you seem to have missed a few
crucial lessons,” said Mrs Weasley coldly.
Fred and George buried their faces
in their goblets of Butterbeer; George was hiccoughing. For some reason, Mrs
Weasley threw a very nasty look at Sirius before getting to her feet and going
to fetch a large rhubarb crumble for pudding. Harry looked round at his
godfather.
“Molly doesn't approve of Mundungus,” said Sirius in an
undertone.
“How come he's in the Order?” Harry said, very quietly.
“He's
useful,” Sirius muttered. “Knows all the crooks—well, he would, seeing as he's
one himself. But he's also very loyal to Dumbledore, who helped him out of a
tight spot once. It pays to have someone like Dung around, he hears things we
don't. But Molly thinks inviting him to stay for dinner is going too far. She
hasn't forgiven him for slipping off duty when he was supposed to be tailing
you.”
Three helpings of rhubarb crumble and custard later and the waistband
on Harry’s jeans was feeling uncomfortably tight (which was saying something as
the jeans had once been Dudley's). As he laid down his spoon there was a lull in
the general conversation: Mr Weasley was leaning back in his chair, looking
replete and relaxed; Tonks was yawning widely, her nose now back to normal; and
Ginny who had lured Crookshanks out from under the dresser, was sitting
cross-legged on the floor, rolling Butterbeer corks for him to chase.
“Nearly
time for bed, I think,” said Mrs Weasley with a yawn.
“Not just yet, Molly”
said Sirius, pushing away his empty plate and turning to look at Harry. “You
know, I'm surprised at you. I thought the first thing you'd do when you got here
would be to start asking questions about Voldemort.”
The atmosphere in the
room changed with the rapidity Harry associated with the arrival of Dementors.
Where seconds before it had been sleepily relaxed, it was now alert, even tense.
A frisson had gone around the table at the mention of Voldemort's name. Lupin,
who had been about to take a sip of wine, lowered his goblet slowly, looking
wary.
“I did!” said Harry indignantly. “I asked Ron and Hermione but they
said we're not allowed in the Order, so—”
“And they're quite right,” said Mrs
Weasley. “You're too young.”
She was sitting bolt upright in her chair, her
fists clenched on its arms, every trace of drowsiness gone.
“Since when did
someone have to be in the Order of the Phoenix to ask questions?” asked Sirius.
“Harry's been trapped in that Muggle house for a month. He's got the right to
know what's been happen—”
“Hang on!” interrupted George loudly.
“How come
Harry gets his questions answered?” said Fred angrily.
“We've been trying to
get stuff out of you for a month and you haven't told us a single stinking
thing!” said George.
“"You're too young, you're not in the Order,'" said
Fred, in a high-pitched voice that sounded uncannily like his mother's. “Harry's
not even of age!”
“It's not my fault you haven't been told what the Order's
doing,” said Sirius calmly, “that's your parents’ decision. Harry, on the other
hand—”
“It's not down to you to decide what's good for Harry!” said Mrs
Weasley sharply. The expression on her normally kind face looked dangerous. “You
haven't forgotten what Dumbledore said, I suppose?”
“Which bit?” Sirius asked
politely, but with the air of a man readying himself for a fight.
“The bit
about not telling Harry more than he needs to know,” said Mrs Weasley, placing a
heavy emphasis on the last three words.
Ron, Hermione, Fred and George's
heads swivelled from Sirius to Mrs Weasley as though they were following a
tennis rally. Ginny was kneeling amid a pile of abandoned Butterbeer corks,
watching the conversation with her mouth slightly open. Lupin's eyes were fixed
on Sirius.
“I don't intend to tell him more than he needs to know, Molly,”
said Sirius. “But as he was the one who saw Voldemort come back” (again, there
was a collective shudder around the table at the name) “he has more right than
most to—”
“He's not a member of the Order of the Phoenix!” said Mrs Weasley.
“He's only fifteen and—”
“And he's dealt with as much as most in the Order,”
said Sirius, “and more than some.”
“No one's denying what he's done!” said
Mrs Weasley, her voice rising, her fists trembling on the arms of her chair.
“But he's still—”
“He's not a child!” said Sirius impatiently.
“He's not
an adult either!” said Mrs Weasley, the colour rising in her cheeks. “He's not
James, Sirius!”
“I'm perfectly clear who he is, thanks, Molly,” said Sirius
coldly.
“I'm not sure you are!” said Mrs Weasley. “Sometimes, the way you
talk about him, it's as though you think you've got your best friend
back!”
“What's wrong with that?” said Harry.
“What's wrong, Harry, is that
you are not your father, however much you might look like him!” said Mrs
Weasley, her eyes still boring into Sirius. “You are still at school and adults
responsible for you should not forget it!”
“Meaning I'm an irresponsible
godfather?” demanded Sirius, his voice rising.
“Meaning you have been known
to act rashly, Sirius, which is why Dumbledore keeps reminding you to stay at
home and—”
“We'll leave my instructions from Dumbledore out of this, if you
please!” said Sirius loudly.
“Arthur!” said Mrs Weasley, rounding on her
husband. “Arthur, back me up!”
Mr Weasley did not speak at once. He took off
his glasses and cleaned them slowly on his robes, not looking at his wife. Only
when he had replaced them carefully on his nose did he reply.
“Dumbledore
knows the position has changed, Molly. He accepts that Harry will have to be
filled in, to a certain extent, now that he is staying at
Headquarters.”
“Yes, but there's a difference between that and inviting him
to ask whatever he likes!”
“Personally,” said Lupin quietly, looking away
from Sirius at last, as Mrs Weasley turned quickly to him, hopeful that finally
she was about to get an ally, “I think it better that Harry gets the facts -not
all the facts, Molly, but the general picture—from us, rather than a garbled
version from...others.”
His expression was mild, but Harry felt sure Lupin,
at least, knew that some Extendable Ears had survived Mrs Weasley's
purge.
“Well,” said Mrs Weasley, breathing deeply and looking around the
table for support that did not come, “well...I can see I'm going to be
overruled. I'll just say this: Dumbledore must have had his reasons for not
wanting Harry to know too much, and speaking as someone who has Harry's best
interests at heart—”
“He's not your son,” said Sirius quietly.
“He's as
good as,” said Mrs Weasley fiercely. “Who else has he got?”
“He's got
me!”
“Yes,” said Mrs Weasley, her lip curling, “the thing is, it's been
rather difficult for you to look after him while you've been locked UP in
Azkaban, hasn't it?”
Sirius started to rise from his chair.
“Molly, you're
not the only person at this table who cares about Harry,” said Lupin sharply.
“Sirius, sit down.”
Mrs Weasley's lower lip was trembling. Sirius sank slowly
back into his chair, his face white.
“I think Harry ought to be allowed a say
in this,” Lupin continued, “he's old enough to decide for himself.”
“I want
to know what's been going on,” Harry said at once.
He did not look at Mrs
Weasley. He had been touched by what she had said about his being as good as a
son, but he was also impatient with her mollycoddling. Sirius was right, he was
not a child.
“Very well,” said Mrs Weasley, her voice cracking.
“Ginny—Ron—Hermione—Fred—George—I want you out of this kitchen, now.”
There
was instant uproar.
“We're of age!” Fred and George bellowed together.
“If
Harry's allowed, why can't I?” shouted Ron.
“Mum, I want to hear!” wailed
Ginny.
“NO!” shouted Mrs Weasley, standing up, her eyes overbright. “I
absolutely forbid—”
“Molly, you can't stop Fred and George,” said Mr Weasley
wearily. “They are of age.”
“They're still at school.”
“But they're
legally adults now,” said Mr Weasley, in the same tired voice.
Mrs Weasley
was now scarlet in the face.
“I—oh, all right then, Fred and George can stay,
but Ron—”
“Harry'll tell me and Hermione everything you say anyway!” said Ron
hotly. “Won't—won't you?” he added uncertainly, meeting Harry's eyes.
For a
split second, Harry considered telling Ron that he wouldn't tell him a single
word, that he could try a taste of being kept in the dark and see how he liked
it. But the nasty impulse vanished as they looked at each other.
“Course I
will,” Harry said.
Ron and Hermione beamed.
“Fine!” shouted Mrs Weasley.
“Fine! Ginny—BED!”
Ginny did not go quietly. They could hear her raging and
storming at her mother all the way up the stairs, and when she reached the hall
Mrs Blacks ear-splitting shrieks were added to the din. Lupin hurried off to the
portrait to restore calm. It was only after he had returned, closing the kitchen
door behind him and taking his seat at the table again, that Sirius
spoke.
“OK, Harry...what do you want to know?”
Harry took a deep breath
and asked the question that had obsessed him for the last month.
“Where's
Voldemort?” he said, ignoring the renewed shudders and winces at the name.
“What's he doing? I've been trying to watch the Muggle news, and there hasn't
been anything that looks like him yet, no funny deaths or anything.”
“That's
because there haven't been any funny deaths yet,” said Sirius, “not as far as we
know, anyway...and we know quite a lot.”
“More than he thinks we do, anyway,”
said Lupin.
“How come he's stopped killing people?” Harry asked. He knew
Voldemort had murdered more than once in the last year alone.
“Because he
doesn't want to draw attention to himself,” said Sirius. “It would be dangerous
for him. His comeback didn't come off quite the way he wanted it to, you see. He
messed it up.”
“Or rather, you messed it tip for him,” said Lupin, with a
satisfied smile.
“How?” Harry asked, perplexed.
“You weren't supposed to
survive!” said Sirius. “Nobody apart from his Death Eaters was supposed to know
he'd come back. But you survived to bear witness.”
“And the very last person
he wanted alerted to his return the moment he got back was Dumbledore,” said
Lupin. “And you made sure Dumbledore knew at once.”
“How has that helped?”
Harry asked.
“Are you kidding?” said Bill incredulously. “Dumbledore was the
only one You-Know-Who was ever scared of!”
“Thanks to you, Dumbledore was
able to recall the Order of the Phoenix about an hour after Voldemort returned,”
said Sirius.
“So, what's the Order been doing?” said Harry, looking around at
them all.
“Working as hard as we can to make sure Voldemort can't carry out
his plans,” said Sirius.
“How d'you know what his plans are?” Harry asked
quickly.
“Dumbledore's got a shrewd idea,” said Lupin, “and Dumbledore's
shrewd ideas normally turn out to be accurate.”
“So what does Dumbledore
reckon he's planning?”
“Well, firstly, he wants to build up his army again,”
said Sirius. “In the old days he had huge numbers at his command: witches and
wizards he'd bullied or bewitched into following him, his faithful Death Eaters,
a great variety of Dark creatures. You heard him planning to recruit the giants;
well, they'll be just one of the groups he's after. He's certainly not going to
try and take on the Ministry of Magic with only a dozen Death Eaters.”
“So
you're trying to stop him getting more followers?”
“We're doing our best,”
said Lupin.
“How?”
“Well, the main thing is to try and convince as many
people as possible that You-Know-Who really has returned, to put them on their
guard,” said Bill. “It's proving tricky, though.”
“Why?”
“Because of the
Ministry's attitude,” said Tonks. “You saw Cornelius Fudge after You-Know-Who
came back, Harry. Well, he hasn't shifted his position at all. He's absolutely
refusing to believe it's happened.”
“But why?” said Harry desperately. “Why's
he being so stupid? If Dumbledore—”
“Ah, well, you've put your finger on the
problem,” said Mr Weasley with a wry smile. “Dumbledore.”
“Fudge is
frightened of him, you see,” said Tonks sadly.
“Frightened of Dumbledore?”
said Harry incredulously.
“Frightened of what he's up to,” said Mr Weasley.
“Fudge thinks Dumbledore's plotting to overthrow him. He thinks Dumbledore wants
to be Minister for Magic.”
“But Dumbledore doesn't want—”
“Of course he
doesn't,” said Mr Weasley. “He's never wanted the Minister's job, even though a
lot of people wanted him to take it when Millicent Bagnold retired. Fudge came
to power instead, but -he's never quite forgotten how much popular support
Dumbledore had, even though Dumbledore never applied for the job.”
“Deep
down, Fudge knows Dumbledore's much cleverer than he is a much more powerful
wizard, and in the early days of his Ministry he was forever asking Dumbledore
for help and advice,” said Lupin. “But it seems he's become fond of power, and
much more confident. He loves being Minister for Magic and he's managed to
convince himself that he's the clever one and Dumbledore's simply stirring up
trouble for the sake of it.”
“How can he think that?” said Harry angrily.
“How can he think Dumbledore would just make it all up—that I'd make it all
up?”
“Because accepting that Voldemort's back would mean trouble like the
Ministry hasn't had to cope with for nearly fourteen years,” said Sirius
bitterly. “Fudge just can't bring himself to face it. It's so much more
comfortable to convince himself Dumbledore's lying to destabilise him.”
“You
see the problem,” said Lupin. “While the Ministry insists there is nothing to
fear from Voldemort it's hard to convince people he's back, especially as they
really don't want to believe it in the first place. What's more, the Ministry's
leaning heavily on the Daily Prophet not to report any of what they're calling
Dumbledore's rumour-mongering, so most of the wizarding community are completely
unaware any things happened, and that makes them easy targets for the Death
Eaters if they're using the Imperius Curse.”
“But you're telling people,
aren't you?” said Harry, looking around at Mr Weasley, Sirius, Bill, Mundungus,
Lupin and Tonks. “You're letting people know he's back?”
They all smiled
humourlessly.
“Well, as everyone thinks I'm a mad mass-murderer and the
Ministry's put a ten thousand Galleon price on my head, I can hardly stroll up
the street and start handing out leaflets, can I?” said Sirius
restlessly.
“And I'm not a very popular dinner guest with most of the
community,” said Lupin. “It's an occupational hazard of being a
werewolf.”
“Tonks and Arthur would lose their jobs at the Ministry if they
started shooting their mouths off,” said Sirius, “and it's very important for us
to have spies inside the Ministry, because you can bet Voldemort will have
them.”
“We've managed to convince a couple of people, though,” said Mr
Weasley. “Tonks here, for one—she's too young to have been in the Order of the
Phoenix last time, and having Aurors on our side is a huge advantage—Kingsley
Shacklebolt's been a real asset, too; he's in charge of the hunt for Sirius, so
he's been feeding the Ministry information that Sirius is in Tibet.”
“But if
none of you are putting the news out that Voldemorts back—” Harry began.
“Who
said none of us are putting the news out?” said Sirius. “Why d'you think
Dumbledore's in such trouble?”
“What d'you mean?” Harry asked.
“They're
trying to discredit him,” said Lupin. “Didn't you see the Daily Prophet last
week? They reported that he'd been voted out of the Chairmanship of the
International Confederation of Wizards because he's getting old and losing his
grip, but it's not true; he was voted out by Ministry wizards after he made a
speech announcing Voldemort’s return. They've demoted him from Chief Warlock on
the Wizengamot—that's the Wizard High Court—and they're talking about taking
away his Order of Merlin, First Class, too.”
“But Dumbledore says he doesn't
care what they do as long as they don't take him off the Chocolate Frog Cards,”
said Bill, grinning.
“It's no laughing matter,” said Mr Weasley sharply. “If
he carries on defying the Ministry like this he could end up in Azkaban, and the
last thing we want is to have Dumbledore locked up. While You-Know-Who knows
Dumbledore's out there and wise to what he's up to he's going to go cautiously.
If Dumbledore's out of the way—well, You-Know-Who will have a clear
field.”
“But if Voldemort's trying to recruit more Death Eaters it's bound to
get out that he's come back, isn't it?” asked Harry desperately.
“Voldemort
doesn't march up to people's houses and bang on their front doors, Harry,” said
Sirius. “He tricks, jinxes and blackmails them. He's well-practised at operating
in secret. In any case, gathering followers is only one thing he's interested
in. He's got other plans too, plans he can put into operation very quietly
indeed, and he's concentrating on those for the moment.”
“What's he after
apart from followers?” Harry asked swiftly. He thought he saw Sirius and Lupin
exchange the most fleeting of looks before Sirius answered.
“Stuff he can
only get by stealth.”
When Harry continued to look puzzled, Sirius said,
“Like a weapon. Something he didn't have last time.”
“When he was powerful
before?”
“Yes.”
“Like what kind of weapon?” said Harry. “Something worse
than the Avada Kedavra -?”
“That's enough!”
Mrs Weasley spoke from the
shadows beside the door. Harry hadn't noticed her return from taking Ginny
upstairs. Her arms were crossed and she looked furious.
“I want you in bed,
now. All of you,” she added, looking around at Fred, George, Ron and
Hermione.
“You can't boss us—” Fred began.
“Watch me,” snarled Mrs
Weasley. She was trembling slightly as she looked at Sirius. “You've given Harry
plenty of information. Any more and you might just as well induct him into the
Order straightaway.”
“Why not?” said Harry quickly. “Til join, I want to
join, I want to fight.”
“No.”
It was not Mrs Weasley who spoke this time,
but Lupin.
The Order is comprised only of overage wizards,” he said. “Wizards
who have left school,” he added, as Fred and George opened their mouths. There
are dangers involved of which you can have no idea, any of you...I think Molly's
right, Sirius. We've said enough.”
Sirius half-shrugged but did not argue.
Mrs Weasley beckoned imperiously to her sons and Hermione. One by one they stood
up and Harry, recognising defeat, followed suit.