Harry awoke at half past five the next morning as abruptly
and completely as if somebody had yelled in his ear. For a few moments he lay
immobile as the prospect of the disciplinary hearing filled every tiny particle
of his brain, then, unable to bear it, he leapt out of bed and put on his
glasses. Mrs Weasley had laid out his freshly laundered jeans and T-shirt at the
foot of his bed. Harry scrambled into them. The blank picture on the wall
sniggered.
Ron was lying sprawled on his back with his mouth wide open, fast
asleep. He did not stir as Harry crossed the room, stepped out on to the landing
and closed the door softly behind him. Trying not to think of the next time he
would see Ron, when they might no longer be fellow students at Hogwarts, Harry
walked quietly down the stairs, past the heads of Kreacher's ancestors, and down
into the kitchen.
He had expected it to be empty, but when he reached the
door he heard the soft rumble of voices on the other side. He pushed it open and
saw Mr and Mrs Weasley, Sirius, Lupin and Tonks sitting there almost as though
they were waiting for him. All were fully dressed except Mrs Weasley, who was
wearing a quilted purple dressing gown. She leapt to her feet the moment Harry
entered.
"Breakfast," she said as she pulled out her wand and hurried over to
the fire.
"M—m—morning, Harry," yawned Tonks. Her hair was blonde and curly
this morning. "Sleep all right?”
"Yeah," said Harry.
"I've b—b—been up all
night," she said, with another shuddering yawn. "Come and sit down ...”
She
drew out a chair, knocking over the one beside it in the process.
"What do
you want, Harry?" Mrs Weasley called. "Porridge? Muffins? Kippers? Bacon and
eggs? Toast?”
"Just—just toast, thanks," said Harry.
Lupin glanced at
Harry, then said to Tonks, "What were you saying about Scrimgeour?”
"Oh ...
yeah ... well, we need to be a bit more careful, he's been asking Kingsley and
me funny questions ...”
Harry felt vaguely grateful that he was not required
to join in the conversation. His insides were squirming. Mrs Weasley placed a
couple of pieces of toast and marmalade in front of him; he tried to eat, but it
was like chewing carpet. Mrs Weasley sat down on his other side and started
fussing with his T-shirt, tucking in the label and smoothing out the creases
across his shoulders. He wished she wouldn't.
"... and I'll have to tell
Dumbledore I can't do night duty tomorrow, I'm just too tired," Tonks finished,
yawning hugely again.
"I'll cover for you," said Mr Weasley. "I'm OK, I've
got a report to finish anyway”
Mr Weasley was not wearing wizards’ robes but
a pair of pinstriped trousers and an old bomber jacket. He turned from Tonks to
Harry.
"How are you feeling?”
Harry shrugged.
"It'll all be over soon,"
Mr Weasley said bracingly. In a few hours’ time you'll be cleared.”
Harry
said nothing.
The hearing's on my floor, in Amelia Bones' office. She's Head
of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement, and the one who'll be questioning
you.”
"Amelia Bones is OK, Harry," said Tonks earnestly. "She's fair, she'll
hear you out.”
Harry nodded, still unable to think of anything to
say.
"Don't lose your temper," said Sirius abruptly. "Be polite and stick to
the facts.”
Harry nodded again.
"The law's on your side," said Lupin
quietly. "Even underage wizards are allowed to use magic in life-threatening
situations.”
Something very cold trickled down the back of Harry’s neck; for
a moment he thought someone was putting a Disillusionment Charm on him, then he
realised that Mrs Weasley was attacking his hair with a wet comb. She pressed
hard on the top of his head.
"Doesn't it ever lie flat?" she said
desperately.
Harry shook his head.
Mr Weasley checked his watch and looked
up at Harry.
"I think we'll go now," he said. "We're a bit early but I think
you'll be better off at the Ministry than hanging around here.”
"OK," said
Harry automatically, dropping his toast and getting to his feet.
"You'll be
all right, Harry," said Tonks, patting him on the arm.
"Good luck," said
Lupin. “I'm sure it will be fine.”
"And if it's not," said Sirius grimly
"I'll see to Amelia Bones for you ...”
Harry smiled weakly. Mrs Weasley
hugged him.
"We've all got our fingers crossed," she said.
"Right," said
Harry. "Well ... see you later then.”
He followed Mr Weasley upstairs and
along the hall. He could hear Sirius's mother grunting in her sleep behind her
curtains. Mr Weasley unbolted the door and they stepped out into the cold, grey
dawn.
"You don't normally walk to work, do you?" Harry asked him, as they set
off briskly around the square.
"No, I usually Apparate," said Mr Weasley,
"but obviously you can't, and I think it's best we arrive in a thoroughly
non-magical fashion ... makes a better impression, given what you're being
disciplined for ...”
Mr Weasley kept his hand inside his jacket as they
walked. Harry knew it was clenched around his wand. The run-down streets were
almost deserted, but when they arrived at the miserable little underground
station they found it already full of early-morning commuters. As ever when he
found himself in close proximity to Muggles going about their daily business, Mr
Weasley was hard put to contain his enthusiasm.
"Simply fabulous," he
whispered, indicating the automatic ticket machines. "Wonderfully
ingenious.”
"They're out of order," said Harry, pointing at the
sign.
"Yes, but even so ..." said Mr Weasley, beaming at them fondly.
They
bought their tickets instead from a sleepy-looking guard (Harry handled the
transaction, as Mr Weasley was not very good with Muggle money) and five minutes
later they were boarding an underground train that rattled them off towards the
centre of London. Mr Weasley kept anxiously checking and re-checking the
Underground Map above the windows.
"Four more stops, Harry ... Three stops
left now ... Two stops to go, Harry ...”
They got off at a station in the
very heart of London, and were swept from the train in a tide of besuited men
and women carrying briefcases. Up the escalator they went, through the ticket
barrier (Mr Weasley delighted with the way the stile swallowed his ticket), and
emerged on to a broad street lined with imposing-looking buildings and already
full of traffic.
"Where are we?" said Mr Weasley blankly, and for one
heart-stopping moment Harry thought they had got off at the wrong station
despite Mr Weasley's continual references to the map; but a second later he
said, "Ah yes ... this way, Harry," and led him down a side road.
"Sorry," he
said, "but I never come by train and it all looks rather different from a Muggle
perspective. As a matter of fact, I've never even used the visitors’ entrance
before.”
The further they walked, the smaller and less imposing the buildings
became, until finally they reached a street that contained several rather
shabby-looking offices, a pub and an overflowing skip. Harry had expected a
rather more impressive location for the Ministry of Magic.
"Here we are,"
said Mr Weasley brightly, pointing at an old red telephone box, which was
missing several panes of glass and stood before a heavily graffitied wall.
"After you, Harry.”
He opened the telephone-box door.
Harry stepped
inside, wondering what on earth this was about. Mr Weasley folded himself in
beside Harry and closed the door. It was a tight fit; Harry was jammed against
the telephone apparatus, which was hanging crookedly from the wall as though a
vandal had tried to rip it off. Mr Weasley reached past Harry for the
receiver.
"Mr Weasley, I think this might be out of order, too," Harry
said.
"No, no, I'm sure it's fine," said Mr Weasley, holding the receiver
above his head and peering at the dial. "Let's see ... six ..." he dialled the
number, "two ... four ... and another four ... and another two ...”
As the
dial whirred smoothly back into place, a cool female voice sounded inside the
telephone box, not from the receiver in Mr Weasley's hand, but as loudly and
plainly as though an invisible woman were standing right beside
them.
"Welcome to the Ministry of Magic. Please state your name and
business.”
"Er ..." said Mr Weasley, clearly uncertain whether or not he
should talk into the receiver. He compromised by holding the mouthpiece to his
ear, "Arthur Weasley, Misuse of Muggle Artefacts Office, here to escort Harry
Potter, who has been asked to attend a disciplinary hearing ...”
"Thank you,"
said the cool female voice. "Visitor, please take the badge and attach it to the
front of your robes.”
There was a click and a rattle, and Harry saw something
slide out of the metal chute where returned coins usually appeared. He picked it
up: it was a square silver badge with Harry Potter, Disciplinary Hearing on it.
He pinned it to the front of his T-shirt as the female voice spoke
again.
"Visitor to the Ministry, you are required to submit to a search and
present your wand for registration at the security desk, which is located at the
far end of the Atrium.”
The floor of the telephone box shuddered. They were
sinking slowly into the ground. Harry watched apprehensively as the pavement
seemed to rise up past the glass windows of the telephone box until darkness
closed over their heads. Then he could see nothing at all; he could hear only a
dull grinding noise as the telephone box made its way down through the earth.
After about a minute, though it felt much longer to Harry, a chink of golden
light illuminated his feet and, widening, rose up his body, until it hit him in
the face and he had to blink to stop his eyes watering.
"The Ministry of
Magic wishes you a pleasant day," said the woman's voice.
The door of the
telephone box sprang open and Mr Weasley stepped out of it, followed by Harry,
whose mouth had fallen open.
They were standing at one end of a very long and
splendid hall with a highly polished, dark wood floor. The peacock blue ceiling
was inlaid with gleaming golden symbols that kept moving and changing like some
enormous heavenly noticeboard. The walls on each side were panelled in shiny
dark wood and had many gilded fireplaces set into them. Every few seconds a
witch or wizard would emerge from one of the left-hand fireplaces with a soft
whoosh. On the right-hand side, short queues were forming before each fireplace,
waiting to depart.
Halfway down the hall was a fountain. A group of golden
statues, larger than life-size, stood in the middle of a circular pool. Tallest
of them all was a noble-looking wizard with his wand pointing straight up in the
air. Grouped around him were a beautiful witch, a centaur, a goblin and a
house-elf. The last three were all looking adoringly up at the witch and wizard.
Glittering jets of water were flying from the ends of their wands, the point of
the centaur's arrow, the tip of the goblins hat and each of the house-elf's
ears, so that the tinkling hiss of falling water was added to the pops and
cracks of the Apparators and the clatter of footsteps as hundreds of witches and
wizards, most of whom were wearing glum, early-morning looks, strode towards a
set of golden gates at the far end of the hall.
"This way," said Mr
Weasley.
They joined the throng, wending their way between the Ministry
workers, some of whom were carrying tottering piles of parchment, others
battered briefcases; still others were reading the Daily Prophet while they
walked. As they passed the fountain Harry saw silver Sickles and bronze Knuts
glinting up at him from the bottom of the pool. A small smudged sign beside it
read:
ALL PROCEEDS FROM THE FOUNTAIN OF MAGICAL BRETHREN WILL BE GIVEN TO ST
MUNGO'S HOSPITAL FOR MAGICAL MALADIES AND INJURIES.
“If I'm not expelled from
Hogwarts, I'll put in ten Galleons,” Harry found himself thinking
desperately.
"Over here, Harry," said Mr Weasley, and they stepped out of the
stream of Ministry employees heading for the golden gates. Seated at a desk to
the left, beneath a sign saying Security, a badly-shaven wizard in peacock blue
robes looked up as they approached and put down his Daily Prophet.
"I'm
escorting a visitor," said Mr Weasley, gesturing towards Harry.
"Step over
here," said the wizard in a bored voice.
Harry walked closer to him and the
wizard held up a long golden rod, thin and flexible as a car aerial, and passed
it up and down Harry’s front and back.
"Wand," grunted the security wizard at
Harry, putting down the golden instrument and holding out his hand.
Harry
produced his wand. The wizard dropped it on to a strange brass instrument, which
looked something like a set of scales with only one dish. It began to vibrate. A
narrow strip of parchment came speeding out of a slit in the base. The wizard
tore this off and read the writing on it.
"Eleven inches, phoenix-feather
core, been in use four years. That correct?”
"Yes," said Harry
nervously.
"I keep this," said the wizard, impaling the slip of parchment on
a small brass spike. "You get this back," he added, thrusting the wand at
Harry.
"Thank you.”
"Hang on ..." said the wizard slowly.
His eyes had
darted from the silver visitors badge on Harry's chest to his
forehead.
"Thank you, Eric," said Mr Weasley firmly, and grasping Harry by
the shoulder he steered him away from the desk and back into the stream of
wizards and witches walking through the golden gates.
Jostled slightly by the
crowd, Harry followed Mr Weasley through the gates into the smaller hall beyond,
where at least twenty lifts stood behind wrought golden grilles. Harry and Mr
Weasley joined the crowd around one of them. Nearby, stood a big bearded wizard
holding a large cardboard box which was emitting rasping noises.
"All right,
Arthur?" said the wizard, nodding at Mr Weasley.
"What've you got there,
Bob?" asked Mr Weasley, looking at the box.
"We're not sure," said the wizard
seriously. “We thought it was a bog-standard chicken until it started breathing
fire. Looks like a serious breach of the Ban on Experimental Breeding to
me.”
With a great jangling and clattering a lift descended in front of them;
the golden grille slid back and Harry and Mr Weasley stepped into the lift with
the rest of the crowd and Harry found himself jammed against the back wall.
Several witches and wizards were looking at him curiously; he stared at his feet
to avoid catching anyone's eye, flattening his fringe as he did so. The grilles
slid shut with a crash and the lift ascended slowly, chains rattling, while the
same cool female voice Harry had heard in the telephone box rang out
again.
"Level Seven, Department of Magical Games and Sports, incorporating
the British and Irish Quidditch League Headquarters, Official Gobstones Club and
Ludicrous Patents Office.”
The lift doors opened. Harry glimpsed an
untidy-looking corridor, with various posters of Quidditch teams tacked
lopsidedly on the walls. One of the wizards in the lift, who was carrying an
armful of broomsticks, extricated himself with difficulty and disappeared down
the corridor. The doors closed, the lift juddered upwards again and the woman's
voice announced:
"Level Six, Department of Magical Transportation,
incorporating the Floo Network Authority, Broom Regulatory Control, Portkey
Office and Apparation Test Centre.”
Once again the lift doors opened and four
or five witches and wizards got out; at the same time, several paper aeroplanes
swooped into the lift. Harry stared up at them as they flapped idly around above
his head; they were a pale violet colour and he could see Ministry of Magic
stamped along the edge of their wings.
"Just inter-departmental memos," Mr
Weasley muttered to him. "We used to use owls, but the mess was unbelievable ...
droppings all over the desks ...”
As they clattered upwards again the memos
flapped around the lamp swaying from the lift's ceiling.
"Level Five,
Department of International Magical Co-operation, incorporating the
International Magical Trading Standards Body, the International Magical Office
of Law and the International Confederation of Wizards, British Seats.”
When
the doors opened, two of the memos zoomed out with a few more of the witches and
wizards, but several more memos zoomed in, so that the light from the lamp
flickered and flashed overhead as they darted around it.
"Level Four,
Department for the Regulation and Control of Magical Creatures, incorporating
Beast, Being and Spirit Divisions, Goblin Liaison Office and Pest Advisory
Bureau.”
"S'cuse," said the wizard carrying the fire-breathing chicken and he
left the lift pursued by a little flock of memos. The doors clanged shut yet
again.
"Level Three, Department of Magical Accidents and Catastrophes,
including the Accidental Magic Reversal Squad, Obliviator Headquarters and
Muggle-Worthy Excuse Committee.”
Everybody left the lift on this floor except
Mr Weasley, Harry and a witch who was reading an extremely long piece of
parchment that was trailing on the floor. The remaining memos continued to soar
around the lamp as the lift juddered upwards again, then the doors opened and
the voice made its announcement.
"Level Two, Department of Magical Law
Enforcement, including the Improper Use of Magic Office, Auror Headquarters and
Wizengamot Administration Services.”
"This is us, Harry," said Mr Weasley,
and they followed the witch out of the lift into a corridor lined with doors.
"My office is on the other side of the floor.”
"Mr Weasley" said Harry, as
they passed a window through which sunlight was streaming, "aren't we still
underground?”
"Yes, we are," said Mr Weasley. "Those are enchanted windows.
Magical Maintenance decide what weather we'll get every day. We had two months
of hurricanes last time they were angling for a pay rise ... Just round here,
Harry.”
They turned a corner, walked through a pair of heavy oak doors and
emerged in a cluttered open area divided into cubicles, which was buzzing with
talk and laughter. Memos were zooming in and out of cubicles like miniature
rockets. A lopsided sign on the nearest cubicle read: Auror
Headquarters.
Harry looked surreptitiously through the doorways as they
passed. The Aurors had covered their cubicle walls with everything from pictures
of wanted wizards and photographs of their families, to posters of their
favourite Quidditch teams and articles from the Daily Prophet. A scarlet-robed
man with a ponytail longer than Bill's was sitting with his boots up on his
desk, dictating a report to his quill. A little further along, a witch with a
patch over one eye was talking over the top of her cubicle wall to Kingsley
Shacklebolt.
"Morning, Weasley," said Kingsley carelessly, as they drew
nearer. "I've been wanting a word with you, have you got a second?”
"Yes, if
it really is a second," said Mr Weasley, "I'm in rather a hurry.”
They were
talking as though they hardly knew each other and when Harry opened his mouth to
say hello to Kingsley, Mr Weasley stood on his foot. They followed Kingsley
along the row and into the very last cubicle.
Harry received a slight shock;
blinking down at him from every direction was Sirius's face. Newspaper cuttings
and old photographs—even the one of Sirius being best man at the Potters’
wedding - papered the walls. The
onl–???—‘‚?’Szy’Szy“?|?“?|?“?|?”?}?’Szy’Szy™’??™“??™“??™“??“‹{y“‹{yins were
glowing like jewels.
"Here," said Kingsley brusquely to Mr Weasley, shoving a
sheaf of parchment into his hand. "I need as much information as possible on
flying Muggle vehicles sighted in the last twelve months. We've received
information that Black might still be using his old motorcycle.”
Kingsley
tipped Harry an enormous wink and added, in a whisper, "Give him the magazine,
he might find it interesting." Then he said in normal tones, "And don't take too
long, Weasley, the delay on that firelegs report held our investigation up for a
month.”
"If you had read my report you would know that the term is firearms,"
said Mr Weasley coolly. "And I'm afraid you'll have to wait for information on
motorcycles; we're extremely busy at the moment." He dropped his voice and said,
"If you can get away before seven, Molly's making meatballs.”
He beckoned to
Harry and led him out of Kingsley's cubicle, through a second set of oak doors,
into another passage, turned left, marched along another corridor, turned right
into a dimly lit and distinctly shabby corridor, and finally reached a dead end,
where a door on the left stood ajar, revealing a broom cupboard, and a door on
the right bore a tarnished brass plaque reading: Misuse of Muggle
Artefacts.
Mr Weasley's dingy office seemed to be slightly smaller than the
broom cupboard. Two desks had been crammed inside it and there was barely space
to move around them because of all the overflowing filing cabinets lining the
walls, on top of which were tottering piles of files. The little wall space
available bore witness to Mr Weasley's obsessions: several posters of cars,
including one of a dismantled engine; two illustrations of postboxes he seemed
to have cut out of Muggle children's books; and a diagram showing how to wire a
plug.
Sitting on top of Mr Weasley's overflowing in-tray was an old toaster
that was hiccoughing in a disconsolate way and a pair of empty leather gloves
that were twiddling their thumbs. A photograph of the Weasley family stood
beside the in-tray. Harry noticed that Percy appeared to have walked out of
it.
"We haven't got a window," said Mr Weasley apologetically, taking off his
bomber jacket and placing it on the back of his chair. "We've asked, but they
don't seem to think we need one. Have a seat, Harry, doesn't look as if Perkins
is in yet.”
Harry squeezed himself into the chair behind Perkins's desk while
Mr Weasley riffled through the sheaf of parchment Kingsley Shacklebolt had given
him.
"Ah," he said, grinning, as he extracted a copy of a magazine entitled
The Quibbler from its midst, "yes ..." He flicked through it. "Yes, he's right,
I'm sure Sirius will find that very amusing—oh dear, what's this now?”
A memo
had just zoomed in through the open door and fluttered to rest on top of the
hiccoughing toaster. Mr Weasley unfolded it and read it aloud.
"Third
regurgitating public toilet reported in Bethnal Green, kindly investigate
immediately.” This is getting ridiculous ...”
"A regurgitating
toilet?”
"Anti-Muggle pranksters," said Mr Weasley, frowning. "We had two
last week, one in Wimbledon, one in Elephant and Castle. Muggles are pulling the
flush and instead of everything disappearing—well, you can imagine. The poor
things keep calling in those—pumbles, I think they're called—you know, the ones
who mend pipes andst, whether to wait here for
you or not. I've just sent an owl to your home but you've obviously missed it—an
urgent message came ten minutes ago -”
"I know about the regurgitating
toilet," said Mr Weasley.
"No, no, it's not the toilet, it's the Potter boy's
hearing—they've changed the time and venue—it starts at eight o'clock now and
it's down in old Courtroom Ten -”
"Down in old—but they told me—Merlin's
beard!”
Mr Weasley looked at his watch, let out a yelp and leapt from his
chair.
"Quick, Harry, we should have been there five minutes ago!”
Perkins
flattened himself against the filing cabinets as Mr Weasley left the office at a
run, Harry close on his heels.
"Why have they changed the time?" Harry said
breathlessly, as they hurtled past the Auror cubicles; people poked out their
heads and stared as they streaked past. Harry felt as though he'd left all his
insides back at Perkins's desk.
"I've no idea, but thank goodness we got here
so early, if you'd missed it, it would have been catastrophic!”
Mr Weasley
skidded to a halt beside the lifts and jabbed impatiently at the “down”
button.
"Come ON!”
The lift clattered into view and they hurried inside.
Every time it stopped Mr Weasley cursed furiously and pummelled the number nine
button.
“Those courtrooms haven't been used in years," said Mr Weasley
angrily. "I can't think why they're doing it down there—unless -but no -”
A
plump witch carrying a smoking goblet entered the lift at that moment, and Mr
Weasley did not elaborate.
"The Atrium," said the cool female voice and the
golden grilles slid open, showing Harry a distant glimpse of the golden statues
in the fountain. The plump witch got out and a sallow-skinned wizard with a very
mournful face got in.
"Morning, Arthur," he said in a sepulchral voice as the
lift began to descend. "Don't often see you down here.”
"Urgent business,
Bode," said Mr Weasley, who was bouncing on the balls of his feet and throwing
anxi things.”
"Plumbers?”
"Exactly, yes, but of course
they're flummoxed. I only hope we can catch whoever's doing it.”
"Will it be
Aurors who catch them?”
"Oh no, this is too trivial for Aurors, it'll be the
ordinary Magical Law Enforcement Patrol—ah, Harry, this is Perkins.”
A
stooped, timid-looking old wizard with fluffy white hair had just entered the
room, panting.
"Oh, Arthur!" he said desperately, without looking at Harry.
"Thank goodness, I didn't know what to do for the beous looks over at Harry.
"Ah, yes," said Bode, surveying Harry
unblinkingly. "Of course.”
Harry barely had emotion to spare for Bode, but
his unfaltering gaze did not make him feel any more comfortable.
"Department
of Mysteries," said the cool female voice, and left it at that.
"Quick,
Harry," said Mr Weasley as the lift doors rattled open, and they sped up a
corridor that was quite different from those above. The walls were bare; there
were no windows and no doors apart from a plain black one set at the very end of
the corridor. Harry expected them to go through it, but instead Mr Weasley
seized him by the arm and dragged him to the left, where there was an opening
leading to a flight of steps.
"Down here, down here," panted Mr Weasley,
taking two steps at a time. The lift doesn't even come down this far ... why
they're doing it down there I ...”
They reached the bottom of the steps and
ran along yet another corridor, which bore a great resemblance to the one that
led to Snape's dungeon at Hogwarts, with rough stone walls and torches in
brackets. The doors they passed here were heavy wooden ones with iron bolts and
keyholes.
"Courtroom ... Ten ... I think ... we're nearly ... yes.”
Mr
Weasley stumbled to a halt outside a grimy dark door with an immense iron lock
and slumped against the wall, clutching at a stitch in his chest.
"Go on," he
panted, pointing his thumb at the door. "Get in there.”
"Aren't—aren't you
coming with -?”
"No, no, I'm not allowed. Good luck!”
Harry's heart was
beating a violent tattoo against his Adam's apple. He swallowed hard, turned the
heavy iron door handle and stepped inside the courtroom.